Sen. Webb’s Call for Prison Reform
This country puts too many people behind bars for too long. Most elected officials,
afraid of being tarred as soft on crime, ignore these problems. Sen. Jim Webb,
a Democrat of Virginia, is now courageously stepping into the void,
calling for a national commission to re-assess criminal justice policy.
Other members of Congress should show the same courage and rally to the cause.
The United States has the world’s highest reported incarceration rate.
Although it has less than 5 percent of the world’s population, it has
almost one-quarter of the world’s prisoners. And for the first time in history,
more than 1 in 100 American adults are behind bars.
Many inmates are serving long sentences for nonviolent crimes,
including minor drug offenses. It also is extraordinarily expensive.
Billions of dollars now being spent on prisons each year could be used
in far more socially productive ways.
Senator Webb — a former Marine and secretary of the Navy
in the Reagan administration — is in many ways an unlikely person
to champion criminal justice reform.
But his background makes him an especially effective advocate for a cause
that has often been associated with liberals and academics.
In his two years in the Senate, Mr. Webb has held hearings on the
cost of mass incarceration and on the criminal justice system’s response
to the problems of illegal drugs. He also has called attention to the challenges
of prisoner re-entry and of the need to provide released inmates,
who have paid their debts to society, more help getting jobs and resuming productive lives.
Mr. Webb says he intends to introduce legislation to create a national commission
to investigate these issues. With Barack Obama in the White House, and
strong Democratic majorities in Congress, the political climate should be
more favorable than it has been in years.
And the economic downturn should make both federal and state lawmakers
receptive to the idea of reforming a prison system that is as wasteful as it is inhumane.
Copyright NY Times 2009
No comments:
Post a Comment