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![]() March-April 2000: Armed for Profit No More Prisons Resisting the Vietnam War Interview with Grace Paley Realities of a Booming Economy Letters Activist Reviews Homepages: War Resisters League The Nonviolent Activist | |
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By Christie Donner
and Gail Williamson
Activists are deeply concerned by the unabated expansion of the prison industrial complex over the last two decades. As many of this magazine’s readers know, the United States currently has more than two million people behind bars, the highest per capita incarceration rate in the history of the world, at a $100 billion annual price tag (see “Stopping the Prison- Industrial Juggernaut,” NVA, January-February 1999). Over the past 20 years, the nation’s elected officials have built a constantly increasing number of prisons in which they warehouse and exploit predominantly poor people of color, 75 percent of whom were convicted of nonviolent offenses. Poor, working-class and mostly minority communities—especially the African-American community—have been hardest hit by the “War on Crime,” especially its “War on Drugs” front, even though there is no evidence that people in those communities commit more than their share of crime. One out of three African-American youths and men between the ages of 20 and 29 are under some form of criminal justice supervision on any given day. Moratorium projects now exist in New York, California and Colorado with the common goal of generating a public consensus that current incarceration policies are unjust, misguided and ill-conceived. Community
Solutions The New York project is an all- volunteer organization formed by students and former prisoners in 1996 to push for a five-year moratorium on prison construction and for repeal of the draconian mandatory sentencing drug laws initiated by New York’s Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller in the 1970s. It seeks to educate the public about the dollar-for-dollar tradeoff between prison spending and moneys budgeted for higher education, showing how the engorgement of the prison industry contributes to the stripping down of our public education system. Since 1983, New York has added 33,458 beds to its already sizable prison system; construction costs and interest on those costs have reached almost $6 billion. In 1995 alone, the project reports, “national spending on prison construction grew by nearly a billion dollars while spending on school construction fell by an equal amount.” Families of color have been hit particularly hard by these actions. There are more Black and Latino youths in prison in New York State than there are students in all of the 64 schools of the State University of New York. Since 1991, state university students have experienced a 35 percent increase in the cost of obtaining a higher education. The share of funding for the City University of New York system that is covered by the state has declined from 77 percent to about 49 percent, a decrease that has forced a near-doubling of undergraduate tuition costs. Students are graduating from colleges and universities with massive personal debts, yet 80 percent of graduates cannot find jobs in the fields in which they were trained. The New York Prison Moratorium Project is building a statewide network among students, community and legal activists and policy makers to challenge uncontrolled prison expansion. It is also developing a grassroots community education project to reach youth specifically in New York City neighborhoods that “supply” the bulk of the state’s prisoners. Finally, the project is coordinating the “Not With Our Money: Students Stop For-Profit Prisons” campaign as part of a national coalition, the Public Safety and Justice Campaign. ‘We’ve
Got to Do Something’ Colorado Senate Bill 104 mandates both a three-year moratorium on both public and private prison expansion and the development of prevention, treatment and sentencing alternatives. At the center of the bill is a proposal for the creation of a legislative and community task force to evaluate current drug sentencing laws, the cost and effectiveness of alternatives, prevention and treatment options, the impact of incarceration on children, minority overrepresentation and issues affecting reintegration. The prison population in Colorado has exploded by more than 400 percent since 1984, at a cost of more than $3 billion. Projections indicate that the prison population will increase another 40 percent by 2005. Seventy percent of men and 80 percent of women who were sent to prison last year were convicted of nonviolent offenses, the majority for drug crimes; drug offenders are the largest and fastest-growing class of felons in prison, up 476 percent in the last 10 years. While people of color are a 21 percent minority in Colorado, they compose 57 percent of Colorado’s prison population—but only 18.6 percent of the entering students at the state’s four-year colleges. A recent report by the Colorado Legislative Council found that African-Americans are ten times more likely than whites to be incarcerated in Colorado, and Latinos/as are four times more likely than Anglos. The state spends approximately $25,000 to incarcerate a person each year and spends between $75,000 and $100,000 to build each prison cell. For the 1998-1999 school year, however, the state spent only $4,748 per public K-12 student, ranking Colorado second-lowest in the nation for public school funding. “The original impetus for … this bill,” Sen. Rupert told the Boulder Weekly earlier this year, “was seeing all the money being sucked out of the system. The more it went out to corrections, the less there was for education, crime prevention and health care. I saw those programs dwindling, so I said, ‘We’ve got to do something.’” So far, more than 60 Colorado organizations and faith communities have endorsed the prison moratorium. But, according to Sen. Rupert. “There’s so much money in building prisons. … [W]e’re building prisons all around the state’s perimeter in our small towns. We have a lot of legislators in small towns that see this as an economic development scheme. The people who build prisons also give people money to run campaigns.” The Colorado project expects that the moratorium legislation will be defeated but believes there is a chance that the task force might be approved as a necessary first step to redesigning policies that will strengthen communities, not dismantle them. The project is also evaluating the viability of organizing a ballot initiative, similar to a proposition that was passed in 1996 in Arizona. Who Loses,
Who Gains? The
project reports that: The California Project is also organizing to defeat the “Youth Crime Initiative” which will be on the California ballot March 7. The initiative would make it easier to arrest and entrap young people, place youth in adult prisons and lengthen sentences for whole categories of young people and adults—all of which would fall most heavily on people of color. Prison moratoriums are not a new concept. As long ago as 1973, President Richard M. Nixon’s Advisory Commission on Criminal Justice Standards and Goals recommended a 10-year moratorium on prison construction, and a 1976 work on the subject (Knopp, F.H. et al, Instead of Prison: A Handbook for Abolitionists, Syracuse, NY: Safer Society Press) noted that “in 1972, the National Council on Crime and Delinquency called for a ‘halt on the construction of all prisons, jails, juvenile training schools, and detention homes until the maximum funding, staffing and utilization of non-institutional corrections have been attained.’” As activist Russ Immarigeon writes in the May/June 1999 issue of Community Corrections Report, “A moratorium perspective posits that there are enough jails or prison cells but not enough community-based services and programs to address various aspects of preventing crime, reducing offender recidivism, repaying victims, and rehabilitating offenders. Furthermore, a moratorium perspective argues that unless local, state or federal governments stop … constructing new prisons other community based approaches will not work.” * * * For more information, contact * * * New York Prison Moratorium
Project—Kevin Pranis, Shana Siegal, c/o DSA, 180 Varick Street, 12th Floor,
New York, NY 10014; (212)727-8610, x 23; email, kpranis@igc.org or grandmasters@
earthlink.net. The authors thank Russ Immarigeon for his permission to include information contained in his article entitled, “A Moratorium on Prison Construction? Part 1: Implications for Community Corrections Programming and Planning,” Community Corrections Report, May/June 1999. Christie Donner coordinates Rocky Mountain Peace and Justice Center Prisoner Rights Project and was statewide coordinator for the Prison Moratorium Campaign. Gail Williamson works with the National Equal Justice Association in California and edits the National Equal Justice Association Bulletin. A version of this article appeared in the Fall 1999 NEJA Bulletin. |
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