24 March 2009

The Upside of the Financial Meltdown: Mindless Imprisonment Edition

It looks like the financial meltdown, and the reduction in tax revenues for local and state authorities have lead to a reevaluation of incarceration policies, which have led the US to have the largest prison population of any society in history: (Gulag nation)
For nearly three decades, most U.S. states have dealt with lawbreakers in two ways: Lock more of them up for longer periods, and build more prisons to hold them. Now many governments, out of money and buried under mounting prison costs, are reversing many of those policies and practices.

Some states, like Colorado and Nevada, are closing prisons. Others, like Kansas and New Jersey, have replaced jail time with community programs or other sanctions for people who violate parole. Kentucky lawmakers passed a bill this month that enhances the credits some inmates can earn toward release.
Obviously, it's depressing that it's taken a fiscal crisis to interject some sanity on the entire issue of over imprisoning our population, but I'll take what I can get.

Hopefully this can make a dent in the "prison-industrial complex."

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