Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, March 06, 2013, Page 4, Image 4

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    Page 4
jilortlaub (Obscrln'r
March 6, 2013
Path Awayfrom Prisons
$ 120 m illion to build in 2008 and was nearly half, failed on pro b atio n o r h av io rs?” she said. “ W hy are drugs
m eant to house 1,228 inm ates, sits p o st-p riso n su p erv isio n .”
so p rev alen t? M ental illness has
m ent rate has grow n more, than three em pty w ithout funds to run it.
H ad the fo rm er inm ates been e n ­ b eco m e m ore o f an issue every day.
tim es the rate o f the national av er­
O re g o n ta x p a y e rs n o w sp en d rolled in com m unity corrections pro­ I w o n d er if w e p unish people if they
age in the last decade, locking up an m o re th an $1 .3 b illio n e ac h b ie n ­ gram s, the co st to supervise an in ­ have a p ro b lem by w hich they have
estim ated 14,000 inm ates.
n iu m to p ay fo r c o rre c tio n s, a c ­ dividual w ould be $ 12 a day as o p ­ very little c o n tro l.”
“W hat d oes that say about us as c o rd in g to the c o m m is s io n ’s re ­ pose to $85 a day o f incarceration.
B o sto n says m any people en ter
a people?” said C larin er B oston, p o rt. T h e state p ro je c ts p riso n s to
Justice D e M uniz cited a need for the crim inal ju stic e system as in ex ­
executive d irecto r o f B etter People, c o n tin u e to g ro w , fillin g b ed s w ith “robust re-entry p ro g ram s” to d e ­ perien ced youth. W hen they should
a P ortland non-profit w hose m is­ m o stly n o n v io le n t o ffe n d e rs and crease the recidivism rate across be learn in g skills and getting jo b s,
sion is to reduce recidivism and help c o stin g ta x p a y e rs an e x tra $ 6 0 0 O regon, save m oney, and “get a they are getting 5 to 10 years in ja il,
individuals w ith legal histories adapt m illio n dollars.
return on hum an cap ital.”
often fo r n o n v io len t crim es.
back into the com m unity.
W ith O re g o n ’s L egislature now
in session, the topic o f d ebate has
sparked a m ovem ent and new bills
that co n sid er the costs o f sen ten c­
ing— b oth in term s o f m oney and
hum an life.
B etter P eople held a public ed u ­
cational forum on the issue last w eek
at the M ultnom ah Public D efender’s
O ffice w here a panel and F orm er
C h ie f Justice Paul D e M uniz, ch air
- Clariner Boston, executive director of Better People
o f the Public S afety C om m ission,
d is c u s s e d w a y s to im p le m e n t
changes in state sentencing law s.
O regon offenders are also stay­
T ro u b led b y the statistics, and
“ H ow is that serving the in d i­
Panelists included M ultnom ah, ing lo n g er in prison today than they w orking on b eh alf o f form er inm ates vidual, th e ir fam ilies o r society in
C lackam as an d M arion county d is­ have e v er in the last decade, said the struggling to turn th eir lives around g e n e r a l? ” s a id B o sto n . “ W h e n
trict attorneys and represen tativ es report. M ean w h ile reso u rces fo r after prison, B o sto n argues h arsher p eo p le are y o u n g they m ake p o o r
o f the c ity ’s M ental H ealth and com m unity corrections program s an d lengthier sentencing do not al­ decisio n s, bu t unfortunately those
A ddiction S ervices and the D ep art­ and treatm ent have shrunk.
w ays erad icate crim e. She says that co n seq u en ces follow them fo r the
m ent o f C om m unity Justice.
E choing recom m endations from w e need to lo o k at the roots o f the re st o f th eir lives— in term s o f h o u s­
Justice D e M uniz opened w ith the c o m m issio n ’s report, Justice D e problem s am ong those w ho com m it ing, em p lo y m en t and even, so cial­
the m atter-of-fact statem ent: “T here M uniz said, “W e need re in v e st­ crim e instead o f to punishm ent.
ization.”
is no m o n ey .” A m o d em prison in m en t.” O n any given day, he said,
“W hat are the real p roblem s that
A t th e forum , a defense attorney
M adras, O re., w hich cost the state “O f 14,000 prisoners, 4 6 percent, are supporting those kinds o f be- spoke o f a 15-year-old client w ho
c o n t i n u e d f r o m fr o n t
Why are drugs so prevalent? Mental
illness has become more o f an issue every
day. I wonder if we punish people if they
have a problem by which they have very
little control.
à
w as sentenced to 70 m onths in ja il
f o r a c rim e h e c o m m itte d . H e
s a id , “ H is c a s e is o n e o f th o u ­
s a n d s w e a re p a y in g f o r in lo n g ­
te rm s e n te n c in g .”
T he attorney called for a return to
discretionary sentencing, w here a
ju d g e can decide to issue w hatever
sentence they believe fits the crim e.
W h e n a s k e d h o w $ 6 0 0 m illio n
o f ta x p a y e r ’s m o n e y c o u ld be
b e tte r s p e n t, p a n e lis t Je a n
D e n tin g e r , M u ltn o m a h C o u n ty
d iv e r s io n c o u r t m a n a g e r, s a id
sh e lo o k e d to c o m m u n ity p r o ­
g ra m s a s a g o o d a lte r n a tiv e to
in c a r c e r a tio n .
O th er panelists agreed that fund­
ing ev id en ce-b ased program s, like
B etter People, w ill help p eople stay
out o f prison.
“W e know that a large percent­
age o f p eo p le that are incarcerated
and re le a se d , re tu rn [to p riso n ]
w ithin three y e ars,” said B oston.
B e tte r P e o p le o ffe rs c o u n s e l­
in g a n d e m p lo y m e n t re a d in e s s -
p ro g ra m s fo r th e fo rm e rly c o n ­
v ic te d . O th e r tre a tm e n t p ro g ra m s
fo c u s o n re c o v e ry , m e n ta l h e a lth ,
an d h o u sin g .
B o sto n w as stu d y in g fo r h er
M asters D eg ree in B usiness A d ­
m in istratio n w h en she got in te r­
ested in crim in o lo g y , particu larly
the statistics w h ich show the d is­
p ro p o rtio n ate n u m b e r o f p e o p le in
p riso n w ith o u t m ean s— m inorities
and p eo p le w ho are poor.
“It is n o t som ething you can turn
y o u r b ack o n ,” said B oston. “It im ­
pacts y ou p erso n ally and y o u r tax
d o llars.”
A CENTER OF
EXCELLENCE FOR
WOMEN THROUGHOUT
ALL STAGES OF LIFE.
Same great people, great new name.
Make an appointment and come by to see
us in our Eastbank office and Tabor office.
EASTBANK
501 N. GRAHAM,
SUITE 525
PORTLAND, OR 97227
PHONE: (503) 249-5454
TABOR
5050 HOYT STREET,
SUITE 359
PORTLAND, OR 97213
PHONE: (503) 249-5454