PRISON REFORMS – LET'S TRY 'EM ALL

There’s plenty of agreement among conservatives, liberals and moderates alike that Michigan’s prison costs are unsustainable. Gov. Jennifer Granholm wants to release non-violent prisoners and reduce sentences. Republican leaders want to keep those doors locked on all those prisoners but otherwise find efficiencies in the system. The guv says her plan will save $122 million. The Republicans say their plan will save $200 million. The guv’s plan doesn’t sit well with the tough-on-crime crowds. The GOP plan won’t sit well with the guv’s supporters in labor. How ’bout if both sides swallow hard, accept each other’s reforms, and then cut some more. Instituting both of those reform packages only gets us one-sixth of the way to a solution for the $1.8 billion state budget deficit.

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3 Comments

  1. Linda Carroll
    Posted October 5, 2007 at 8:41 am | Permalink

    “Michigan’s incarceration rate is 40 percent higher than that of its Great Lakes neighbors, resulting in $500 million annually in higher costs.” We are also one of the few states to impose Truth in sentancing, for all prisoners, regardless of the crime.
    Is there any indication that any of this is solving our drug and crime problems?

  2. pwats6@yahoo.com
    Posted November 19, 2007 at 10:02 am | Permalink

    If we are to be honest with ourselves as a society, crimes deserve punishment that’s why laws are established. Silly laws, silly crimes? Yes. Serious laws, serious crimes? Certainly. If the Department of Corrections believes that serious rehabilitation is going to come at the hands of The Salvation Army then let us pray. Over a half a century ago the country determined there was a need to change from a penal system to a correctional system. Why was that? It was because there was a strong belief that you could not just send a criminal to an institution for punishment rather that the criminal was sent as punishment. Whatever portion of rehabilitation ever came with the reform from a penal system to a correctional system has seemed to disappear and is now being burdened back on society.

  3. Rose Miller
    Posted February 5, 2009 at 11:04 am | Permalink

    I believe that if a crime is committed and the person is convicted then by all means carry out the sentence however once that is fulfilled. I think there ought to be a way for the person to gain a skilled trade and become a productive member of society with mentoring programs to help them be successful. It is unbelievable that the prisons are outgrowing the educational institutions with no end in sight. We can’t continue in the 21st century with the mentality that we need to build more prisons. We need more education for both the person that had been incarcerated and the public. It is our obligation to make sure that we educate our children and society about the options we have.

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