Pubdate: Tue, 15 Mar 2011 Source: Star-Banner, The (Ocala, FL) Copyright: 2011 The Star-Banner Contact: http://www.starbanner.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1533 ROADBLOCKS TO RESTORING RIGHTS Rick Scott, the governor who wants to remove regulatory hurdles, has helped put a big roadblock in the path of freed felons hoping to fully participate in civic life. The governor and Cabinet, sitting as Florida's executive clemency board, voted March 9 to toughen the process nonviolent felons must go through to get their civil rights restored. Before this change, the state used a reformed, streamlined process to restore rights for nonviolent felons who completed their sentence, finished probation and made full restitution. Under the new policy, they will now have to undergo a five-year waiting period, then begin what can be an arduous application process for rights restoration. Meanwhile, they can't vote, can't sit on a jury and can't get certain occupational licenses. It's a misguided step backward, making the road to reintegration unnecessarily long and difficult. When it comes to felons with records of violent, serious crime, heightened scrutiny for rights restoration is warranted. But the new policy unfairly sweeps nonviolent felony offenders into the net. We're talking about people who have already done their time, finished probation and made restitution. Obstructing their path back into society is not in the public interest. Furthermore, the change - promulgated by new state Attorney General Pam Bondi - was done too hastily and with too little input from the people who will be affected by the policy. It took Florida years to improve and streamline its burdensome rights restoration process, but it took Scott and Bondi just weeks to erase that progress. The speed with which they acted - on a matter involving other people's voting and other basic rights - doesn't make these politicians look decisive; it makes them look dictatorial. Under the new rules, nonviolent felons who want their rights restored must now begin the process by submitting a formal application involving considerable paperwork requirements. "Each application for clemency shall have attached to it a certified copy of the charging instrument (indictment, information, or warrant with supporting affidavit) for each felony conviction ... and a certified copy of the judgment and sentence for each felony conviction," the rules state. Obtaining the documentation can be daunting, especially if the records are old. Some felons may be unable to even finish the application. Applications are to be reviewed by the state's parole commission, which sends them on to the clemency board, where they need the approval of the governor plus two other members. Failing that, a felon can try an alternative route that involves a hearing process. If that is unsuccessful, the felon must wait years before trying again. Even under the previous, streamlined process, huge backlogs developed. The new system is more administratively intense, which suggests logjams will worsen. Why move the ballot box further out of reach for Americans who've paid for their crimes? Why make it harder for people to join the community dialogue that matters most? If nonviolent criminals have paid their price to society and paid restitution to their victims, it is unconscionable that the state of Florida, indeed the people representing the citizens of Florida, would enact policies that make more difficult their path back to respectable and productive citizenship. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake