Corrections Reform
Harvey Santana is committed towards fixing Michigan’s Department of Corrections. Michigan is spending approximately $30,000 per inmate every year while the national average is $23,876. That is over $6,000 more per year per inmate than most other states. Our State Penitentiaries warehouse almost 50,000 inmates. Michigan ranks 9th in the nation for the most people incarcerated per 100,000 people. That is one category in which we do NOT want to be in the Top Ten.
Corrections’ spending has grown 538% in the last 34 years, making Michigan one of only four states that spends MORE on corrections than it does on higher education. Harvey Santana believes that is the opposite of what our State priorities should be. The annual budget for the Department of Corrections is almost $2 Billion dollars which amounts to 20% of the General Fund Budget.
Every year, nearly 35% of all released Michigan prisoners return to Wayne County of which 85% return to the City of Detroit. The current State strategy has not worked, is not working and will continue to fail if nothing is done to correct this problem.
True Rehabilitation
Michigan is facing an incarceration and post-incarceration crisis in urban communities. The reality of former prisoners returning to cities without life-skills training, education or job training during a tough economy is sobering. Returning citizens to our communities who have not been rehabilitated and who are not prepared for normal life is a recipe for disaster. Michigan must become innovative in their approach towards finding solutions to this problem. This is a public safety concern for law enforcement, businesses, the courts and most importantly the community.
As a State Representative, Harvey Santana will focus on strategies to create prison-to-work initiatives, modeled after successful programs that already exist. Michigan must become serious about reforming the correctional system and breaking down barriers for ex-offenders to find employment.
Advocating for the Mentally-Ill
Harvey Santana understands that there are inmates with a history of mental illness. Mentally ill people are being sentenced for crimes when they should be provided with the psychological help they need. Sadly, our State mental health programs were severely weakened by our previous Republican Governor John Engler and we continue to pay the price for that mistake today.
As a State Representative, Harvey Santana will advocate for the proper placement of mentally ill offenders to hospitals instead of prisons. He understands that mentally ill people are being sentenced for crimes they commit, yet they are not being given the help they require. These offenders are trapped in a “revolving door.” Mentally-ill offenders are trapped in a cycle of lack of treatment which leads to a deepening disorder, followed by additional arrests and, eventually, prison sentences.
The strategy of “Locking them up, forgetting they exist while pretending the problem is no longer present ” has not worked, is not working and will continue to fail if nothing is done.
Possible solutions:
Harvey Santana will work with all stakeholders to review all options to this growing problem. Some of the solutions listed below have been forwarded by the residents throughout the state, business organizations and others. For Harvey Santana, proper Corrections Reform must be one of our States highest priorities.
Among the things we can and should do are these:
- Releasing of old, sick and low-risk inmates who pose no real threat to our communities.
- Reducing our average cost to fall more into line with the cost averages we see in other Great Lakes states.
- Placing low risk offenders on electronic GPS tethers, instead of expensive penal incarceration.
- Reinstating disciplinary credits focused on academic and professional achievement to reduce recidivism rates.
- Reevaluating how we go about prisoner re-entry programs so we can better use our resources to improve and expand the Michigan Prisoner Re-Entry Initiative (MPRI).
- Diverting the mentally-ill into proper treatment facilities instead of general prison populations.
- Conducting a thorough, professional and complete financial audit of the Corrections Department Budget to better allocate money, personnel and resources to obtain better outcomes.
Tags: corrections, Michigan Department of Corrections, Michigan Prisoner Re-Entry Initiative