PRESS
RELEASES
As Corrections Declares
‘State of Emergency’ Commission Named by Californians
United for a Responsible Budget (CURB) Issues Proposal to
Close Four California Prisons
Move Follows Governor’s Pledge to Close Prisons
OAKLAND, CA-- Following on the heels of Corrections’
declaration of a “State of Emergency”, a commission
named by Californians United for a Responsible Budget (CURB),
a coalition of 40 organizations, today issued a proposal to
close four California prisons and not open the controversial
Delano II prison.
“We know this proposal follows the
Department’s declaration of a ‘state of emergency’
that it suddenly has too many prisoners. With the CDC having
failed to implement the reforms mandated by the people of
California in the last budget, we have to wonder if the real
‘state of emergency’ is that the corrections system
cannot correct itself,” says Professor Ruth Wilson Gilmore
of the University of Southern California, one of 19 people
named to the CURB Commission.
“If there is a ‘state of emergency’,
it’s of the department’s own making. They have
failed to implement reforms passed last year, they have failed
to reduce recidivism, reform parole, and they have failed
to reign in their own $5.3 billion budget,” continues
Gilmore, noting that Corrections’ overspends total $1.5
billion over the past five years and since 1981, Corrections’
share of the General Fund has risen 230%.
“California now leads the country in
prisons, but that's not what it takes to solve our problems.
Across the country, violent crime rates have fallen in states
that never copied California's prison buildup. It is time
to think outside the box - or, in this case, the cell,"
says CURB Commissioner and former State Senator Tom Hayden.
The CURB proposal states that given Corrections'
written commitment to reduce its prisoner population by 15,000
by June 2005, ,the Delano II prison should not be opened and
Pelican Bay, Valley State, Folsom State and the California
Correctional Center, Susanville should be closed. CURB looked
at operating costs, history of human rights abuses, distance
from family members, operating costs and impact on communities
housing prisons, among other criteria, in selecting the prisons
to close.
In March, the Governor appointed a panel
to study and recommend the closure of California prisons.
That panel, however, is comprised of people who have overseen
and enabled prison expansion in this state and across the
nation. In response, CURB assembled an alternative commission
which includes not only those with direct experience in corrections
and law enforcement, but also former prisoners, family members
of prisoners, academics, policy makers and other experts in
the field.
Among those named to the CURB Commission:
San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi, Former State Senator
Tom Hayden, San Francisco Under-Sheriff Michael Marcum, Professor
Ruth Wilson Gilmore of the University of Southern California,
John Lum, Former Chief Probation Officer for San Luis Obispo
County and Susan Burton, family member of a prisoner and Executive
Director of a New Way of Life Foundation.
By contrast, the four person panel appointed
by Schwarzenegger to study correctional reform includes: former
Governor George Deukmejian, who oversaw the doubling of the
state's prison population and the opening of nearly a third
of California's 32 prisons and Robin Dezember, a former deputy
director of Corrections under Gov. Pete Wilson and now consultant
to the CDC. According to the San Jose Mercury News, Dezember
has received almost $600,000 in no-bid contracts from the
department since 2001 and continues to be under contract as
a consultant to the Department he is now charged with overhauling.
“If the Governor was sincere in his
desire to ‘blow up boxes,’ rather than simply
‘move them around’, then he needs to hear from
people who have been in those prisons, their families, and
people who have studied what the state needs to do to build
safe communities,” says CURB Commissioner Dorsey Nunn,
a former prisoner and Program Director for Legal Services
for Prisoners with Children, noting that other states, including
Ohio, Florida, Georgia, Massachusetts, Michigan, Pennsylvania
and Illinois have decided to close prisons to save correctional
costs.
“Polls show that 3 out of 4 Californians
prefer rehabilitation and prevention over sending more young
people to prison. But neither political party seems willing
to stand up to the prison guards union, whose jobs and million-dollar
annual war chest depend on the size of the inmate population,
" says Hayden.
CURB includes the California Interfaith Alliance
for Prison Reform, the Coalition on Homelessness, the Central
California Environmental Justice Network, the UC Berkeley
Graduate Assembly and the Youth Law Center.
For a copy of the proposal and a complete
list of commissioners appointed by CURB visit www.curbprisonspending.org
Californians United for a Responsible Budget (CURB),
a broad based coalition of 40 organizations,
seeks to CURB prison spending by reducing the number of people
in prison and the number of prisons in the state.
For More Information, visit www.curbprisonspending.org
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