Nappy Hair Blog

How to Defeat the Criminal-Justice Crisis

When I took office in 2011, Georgia was in the midst of a criminal-justice crisis. Our prison population had doubled in the past two decades to 56,000. Our incarceration budget had doubled to $1 billion per year and our recidivism rate was more than 30 percent, meaning that one in three released offenders would be back behind bars within three years. While it is important that our criminal-justice system punish those who have harmed the lives and property of our citizens, it should also seek to change the direction of their lives so that they will not repeat their criminal conduct upon release. To that end, a panel of experts was tasked with performing an exhaustive review of our…

When I took office in 2011, Georgia was in the midst of a criminal-justice crisis. Our prison population had doubled in the past two decades to 56,000. Our incarceration budget had doubled to $1 billion per year and our recidivism rate was more than 30 percent, meaning that one in three released offenders would be back behind bars within three years.

While it is important that our criminal-justice system punish those who have harmed the lives and property of our citizens, it should also seek to change the direction of their lives so that they will not repeat their criminal conduct upon release.

To that end, a panel of experts was tasked with performing an exhaustive review of our current system, identifying key areas of focus and providing recommendations for reforms. Their work resulted in bipartisan legislation that is paying dividends. Through these efforts, we’ve avoided the need for 5,000 additional prison beds over five years and saved taxpayers at least $264 million.

At the recent Bipartisan Summit on Criminal Justice Reform, I had the opportunity to share these results, particularly in regards to our accountability courts, juvenile-justice system and prisoner-re-entry initiatives.

Our message to those in our prison system and to their families is this: If you pay your dues to society, if you take advantage of the opportunities to better yourself, if you discipline yourself so that you can regain your freedom and live by the rules of society, you will be given the chance to reclaim your life. I intend for Georgia to continue leading the nation with meaningful justice reform.

This post is part of a Huffington Post What’s Working series, in partnership with #cut50, co-sponsors of the recent Bipartisan Summit on Criminal Justice Reform (Washington, D.C., March 26). The Summit was part of a movement to popularize support for criminal-justice reforms while also having comprehensive discussions about the policies, replicable models and data-driven solutions needed to achieve systemic changes. The series will focus on such solutions. For more information on #cut50, read here. And to read all the posts in the series, see our What’s Working coverage here.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

More – 

How to Defeat the Criminal-Justice Crisis

Exit mobile version