https://www.brennancenter.org/
~~ recommended by emil karpo ~~
SUMMARY: For decades, the federal government used its grant-making power to spur states to incarcerate more people and to impose longer sentences. It should now use that power to reverse course.
Few issues have received more sustained attention from U.S. policymakers over the last decade than the country’s unique overuse of incarceration. After decades of growth in imprisonment rates, states have attempted to reduce the number of people behind bars. Their reforms have been driven by a recognition that incarceration is expensive and often counterproductive and by research demonstrating that many people can be safely supervised in the community.footnote1_a7bpom81
Reforms have reduced the population behind bars from its 2009 peak, yet an astonishing level of incarceration persists: today over 1.2 million people are confined to federal and state prisons, and just over 636,000 more are locked up in local jails.footnote5_ttjzt805 Few states have achieved significant reductions in their prison populations, and in some places these populations have begun to grow again.footnote6_9mmi3ne6
For a half century, the federal government has harnessed its grant-making power to spur states to incarcerate more people and to impose longer sentences, making the United States the most punitive country in the world.footnote7_7730uw97 It can now use that same funding power to reverse course.
The idea of using federal funding to reduce incarceration is not new, but recent programs have had mixed results. For example, between 2010 and 2017, the U.S. Department of Justice’s Justice Reinvestment Initiative (JRI) provided state and local governments with technical assistance and direct funding to reduce their prison populations.footnote8_q7dfo878
Yet since assuming office in 2021, the Biden administration, while retaining JRI’s focus on recidivism reduction, now specifically allows grant money to support efforts to reduce incarceration for new crimes or technical violations of community supervision.footnote12_q0acc21
Building on this momentum, the Brennan Center for Justice calls on Congress to enact a new, $1 billion federal funding program, called the Public Safety and Prison Reduction Act, to channel money to states with the goal of reducing unnecessary incarceration while promoting humane and fair criminal-justice policies that preserve public safety. The proposal, based on a previous Brennan Center policy solution — the Reverse Mass Incarceration Act — was crafted in consultation with a variety of stakeholders, including formerly incarcerated individuals.footnote14_eddqxix
The grant program would be structured to do the following:
- offer states federal dollars to study the drivers of unnecessary incarceration and additional money to reduce prison populations;
- reward states that shrink their prison populations by 20 percent over three years with an extra three years of funding;
- afford states freedom to implement federal funding on the basis of local considerations by providing them a slate of 21 policy options from which to choose;
- track and measure success of grantees’ policy changes by mandating that states, in partnership with researchers or an academic institution, submit annual progress reports to the federal government describing and evaluating expenditures;
- require states to convene an advisory board composed of a diverse array of local stakeholders, including formerly incarcerated people;
- prohibit states from enacting punitive sentencing laws such as mandatory-minimum rules or truth-in-sentencing statutes during the lifetime of the funding; and
- establish subgrants for organizations that are led by formerly incarcerated individuals or that serve high numbers of people who have been arrested or convicted.
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The impact of this policy would be historic. If the 25 states with the largest prison populations used these funds to reduce imprisonment by 20 percent, 178,000 fewer people would be confined (see figure 1).footnote15_wwce7ns15 That would slash state prison populations by more people than are currently incarcerated in the entire federal prison system. The United States’ incarcerated population would decrease to numbers last seen before 1993, the year before the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 — often called the 1994 crime bill — was signed into law by President Bill Clinton.footnote16_gf4w3az16
This prison population reduction estimate is a conservative one. States that reduced their prison populations by 20 percent in the first three years of the grant period would be eligible for additional funds under the program, providing them with resources to make even greater reductions.
Although criminal justice administration is a core function of state and local governments, the federal government nonetheless has a vital role to play in both messaging the need to dismantle mass incarceration and incentivizing states to pursue systemic reforms toward that end. This report first delves into the history of the federal government’s role in encouraging overly punitive responses to crime and social disorder. It then outlines the new policy proposal, for which model statutory language is provided in the appendix. Given the fiscal costs and social harms of mass incarceration, the federal government must reorient its grant spending to press states to end punitive policies that fail to deliver public safety.
https://www.scribd.com/embeds/A Proposal to Reduce Unnece… by The Brennan Center for Justice
Endnotes
- footnote1_a7bpom8
1 James Austin et al., How Many Americans Are Unnecessarily Incarcerated?, Brennan Center for Justice, 2016, 5, 7–8, https://www.
brennancenter.org/our-work/ research-reports/how-many- americans-are-unnecessarily- incarcerated. - footnote2_4ftto6w
2 Austin et al., How Many Americans Are Unnecessarily Incarcerated?, 7.
- footnote3_8o6ojw9
3 Rebecca Vallas and Sharon Dietrich, One Strike and You’re Out: How We Can Eliminate Barriers to Economic Security and Mobility for People With Criminal Records, Center for American Progress, 2014, https://cdn.
americanprogress.org/wp- content/uploads/2014/12/ VallasCriminalRecordsReport. pdf; and Terry-Ann Craigie, Ames Grawert, and Cameron Kimble, Conviction, Imprisonment, and Lost Earnings: How Involvement With the Criminal Justice System Deepens Inequality, Brennan Center for Justice, 2020, 6–8, https://www. brennancenter.org/our-work/ research-reports/conviction- imprisonment-and-lost- earnings-how-involvement- criminal. - footnote4_4xxdb3d
4 Brian Elderbroom et al., Every Second: The Impact of the Incarceration Crisis on America’s Families, FWD.us, 2018, 21, https://everysecond.fwd.
us/downloads/everysecond.fwd. us.pdf. - footnote5_ttjzt80
5 E. Ann Carson and Rich Kluckow, Correctional Populations in the United States, 2021 — Statistical Tables, United States Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2023, 4, table 1, https://bjs.ojp.gov/sites/
g/files/xyckuh236/files/media/ document/cpus21stB.pdf. - footnote6_9mmi3ne
6 The Sentencing Project, “Growth in Mass Incarceration: Prison Population Over Time,” accessed September 5, 2022, https://www.
sentencingproject.org/ research/. - footnote7_7730uw9
7 Mike Crowley and Betsy Pearl, Reimagining Federal Grants for Public Safety and Criminal Justice Reform, Center for American Progress, 2020, 1, https://www.
americanprogress.org/wp- content/uploads/2020/10/ DOJgrants-brief1.pdf; and Inimai Chettiar et al., Reforming Funding to Reduce Mass Incarceration, Brennan Center for Justice, 2013, 18, https://www.brennancenter. org/our-work/research-reports/ reforming-funding-reduce-mass- incarceration. See also, generally, Emily Widra and Tiana Herring, “States of Incarceration: The Global Context 2021,” Prison Policy Initiative, September 2021, https://www. prisonpolicy.org/global/2021. html. - footnote8_q7dfo87
8 Samantha Harvell et al., The Justice Reinvestment Initiative: A Guide for States, U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Assistance, 2021, iii, https://bja.ojp.gov/
sites/g/files/xyckuh186/files/ media/document/JRI-Guide-for- States.pdf. - footnote9_bbwa4aj
9 In practice, JRI’s focus was on improving efficiency in the criminal justice system, such as by reestablishing good-time credits, creating a more streamlined parole process, and expanding parole eligibility, rather than on reducing overly long sentences — the biggest driver of bloated state prison populations. William J. Sabol and Miranda L. Baumann, “Justice Reinvestment: Vision and Practice,” Annual Review of Criminology 3 (2020): 317–39, 323–25, https://www.
annualreviews.org/doi/10.1146/ annurev-criminol-011419–041407 . - footnote10_kbfoy11
10 Kentucky’s HB 463 included reduced charges for lower-level drug crimes, mandatory reentry supervision, and graduated sanctions so that fewer people on probation and parole returned to prison immediately after a technical violation of a condition of their release. At the time HB 463 was signed into law, in 2011, the state’s prison population was at 21,545. Seven years later, in 2018, despite technical assistance and direct funding through JRI, Kentucky’s total prison population had climbed to 23,431. E. Ann Carson and William J. Sabol, Prisoners in 2011, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2012, 3, https://bjs.ojp.gov/
content/pub/pdf/p11.pdf; E. Ann Carson, Prisoners in 2018, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2020, 4, https://bjs.ojp.gov/ content/pub/pdf/p18.pdf; and HB 463 (Ky. 2011), https://apps. legislature.ky.gov/law/acts/ 11RS/documents/0002.pdf. - footnote11_r63hjro
11 U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Assistance, Justice Reinvestment Initiative: Reducing Violent Crime by Improving Justice System Performance FY 2018 Competitive Grant Announcement, 2018, 5–8, https://bja.ojp.gov/
sites/g/files/xyckuh186/files/ media/document/BJA-2018–13700. PDF. - footnote12_q0acc21
12 U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Assistance, BJA FY 21 Justice Reinvestment Initiative: State-level Training and Technical Assistance Program, 2021, 4, https://bja.ojp.gov/sites/
g/files/xyckuh186/files/media/ document/O-BJA-2021–108001.pdf . - footnote13_7hsbzx1
13 The White House, “Fact Sheet: President Biden’s Safer America Plan,” press release, July 21, 2022, https://www.whitehouse.
gov/briefing-room/statements- releases/2022/07/21/fact- sheet-president-bidens-safer- america-plan. Recommended policies include expanding drug courts; creating or expanding co-responder programs; and investing in job training, employment, housing, and other stabilizing services that can help formerly incarcerated people return to society. - footnote14_eddqxix
14 Lauren-Brooke Eisen and Inimai M. Chettiar, The Reverse Mass Incarceration Act, Brennan Center for Justice, 2015, https://www.
brennancenter.org/publication/ reverse-mass-incarceration-act . - footnote15_wwce7ns
15 We calculated the projected prison population by first identifying the 25 states with the highest prison populations and then applying to those states a 20 percent reduction. Prior to the reduction, the prison population in the top 25 states totaled 895,745 in 2020. After the 20 percent reduction, the total was 716,596. The difference between the two numbers was then subtracted from the actual national prison population (1,040,138 – 179,149). The resulting projected figure totaled 860,989.
- footnote16_gf4w3az
16 Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, Pub. L. No. 103–322, 108 Stat. 1796 (1994).
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