PRISON EDICT BACKLASH REVEALS RACE BIAS
SACREMENTO BEEPublished Sunday, Jun. 05, 2011
The fearmongering responses to the U.S. Supreme Court declaring
California's prison system "cruel and unusual" in violation of the
Eighth Amendment were predictable. The court ordered the population
thinned so medical services can be effectively delivered to the state's
wards, a necessity given the uncontested fact that "an inmate in
California's prisons needlessly dies every six or seven days." Some
justices, politicians, law enforcement and pundits insist on a coming
tsunami of crime and havoc.
Any student of anti-racist civil rights struggles – against slavery,
Chinese exclusion, Jim Crow, race-based immigration controls – finds in
the historical record similar reactions to decisions perceived to
benefit poor people of color. The prognosis is always perpetual
disorder. We'd like to set the current record straight with two simple
points.
• First: Nearly everyone sentenced to prison leaves. The average
California prison term is about 54 months; time served in jail awaiting
trial makes the typical period in state custody about 43 months.
California sends people back inside on parole technicalities at twice
the national rate, and certainly parole reform is among administrative
tools California will use to achieve reductions. As a matter of fact,
the court's narrow ruling essentially restated the key recommendation of
a 2004 commission led by former Republican Gov. George Deukmejian,
architect of the state's 1980s prison boom. Deukmejian offered hundreds
of administrative and legislative ways cumulatively to shrink a prison
population of 163,500 to 111,000.
Thus, what's been ballyhooed as "early release" is actually a weak tweak
in a system that's spiraled out of control because Democrats and
Republicans have marched to a "get tough" beat that has little to do
with preventing crime or addressing its community consequences. Poor
people – a majority of whom are people of color – have become locked up,
locked out, demonized and disposable. Once released, they are legally
discriminated against for the rest of their lives in employment, housing
and public benefits. They are relegated to permanent, second-class
status.
• Second: The modestly educated men and women released every day
go back to urban and rural communities to restart lives. How to make
return to the free world successful is not rocket science; it doesn't
require more police and jails, and it isn't expensive.
For nearly two decades, researchers of various ideologies and
problem-solving methods have studied what people should do when they
come home and how to reduce crime in the first place. From the Rand
Corp. to the Economic Roundtable to Californians United for a
Responsible Budget, conclusions are the same: meet basic needs and lower
barriers to reintegration. And now there's evidence: results theorized
by researchers actually work in practice.
Formerly incarcerated people are leading real-world experts. Examples:
CNN hero Susan Burton who had been doing "life on the installment plan"
founded "A New Way of Life." ANWOL ensures returning women's basic
needs: a sober living place, identification papers, job training and
placement, education, family reunification and eventual independence.
Projects like ANWOL can be reproduced throughout communities devastated
by mass incarceration, as Kim Carter's San Bernardino-based Time For
Change Foundation demonstrates. Los Angeles Community Action Network
organizes on skid row, whose 6,000 homeless include many formerly
incarcerated people suffering mental illness. The network knows how skid
row's problems can be cost-effectively solved, by redirecting county
and city resources from policing and jails to housing and human
services.
These projects do not discriminate based on conviction; they point the
way to efforts being made that strive to assure basic human rights are
being met for all. Discrimination of people released from prison denies
them work, housing and food. Contrary even to voter preferences,
California has increased prison budgets while disinvesting in places
where small improvements in resources make huge improvements in general
well-being.
What underlies the refusal to cheaply and effectively reverse organized
abandonment? If it's not money, it must be race. Nearly everyone in the
United States – whatever their race, ethnicity, religion or party –
thinks "black" when they hear "prison" or "crime." To call the mass
incarceration of poor people "unintended" is to ignore the teachings of
philosopher-police chief William Bratton. He unabashedly told Los
Angeles organizers that when Jim Crow was found unconstitutional,
legislators wrote new laws using different criteria to get similar
outcomes. And just as poll taxes disenfranchised poor white people,
these new laws ensnare them.
The vitriol spawned by the Supreme Court's decision compels us to
declare mass incarceration not only destructive public policy but also
as morally indefensible as any system of racial domination and social
exclusion. We follow the path of Ida B. Wells, Martin Luther King Jr.,
Ella Baker and Cesar Chavez, and join freedom fighters around the world
by invoking human rights to basic protections and opportunities. Human
rights are fundamental principles in the growing movement against both
mass incarceration and the organized abandonment of vulnerable
communities.
Michelle Alexander, author of “The New Jim Crow:Mass Incarceration in
the Age of Colorblindness,” is the former director of the ACLU’s Racial
Justice Project in California and currently a law professor at Ohio
State University. Ruth Wilson Gilmore, author of “Golden Gulag: Prisons,
Surplus, Crisis, and Opposition in Globalizing California,” is a
professor of Geography at CUNY Graduate Center, and previously taught at
UC Berkeley and USC.
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