Is Penal Reform a Political Risk for Sen. Webb?
Published: January 8, 2009
Virginia Sen. Jim Webb believes that America’s prison system needs reforming. And this spring he plans to introduce legislation to accomplish that. It’s a politically sensitive issue, but he makes a good case for it in a number of venues.
As The Washington Post reported recently, Webb, a Democrat and now Virginia’s senior senator, described a number of symptoms pointing to the need for prison reform. Jails teem with young black men who later struggle to rejoin society. Drug addicts and the mentally ill take up cells that would be better used for violent criminals.
And why have these and other issues been allowed to fester in state and federal prisons? Webb says politicians have failed to address what has become a costly problem for fear of being labeled “soft on crime.”
The usual approach to criminal justice in Virginia and elsewhere has been to lock up the offenders and throw away the key. Virginia put an exclamation point on that in 1995 when the state abolished parole.
One result, Webb says, is that low-level drug users languish in prison for mandatory five-year terms, while many of the drug king pins escape apprehension and arrest and continue to ply their trade on the streets.
In speeches and a book, “A Time to Fight” that devotes a chapter to prison reform, Webb describes a U.S. prison system that is deeply flawed in how it targets, punishes and releases those identified as criminals. According to the Pew Center on the States and other groups, the United States has 2.3 million people behind bars, a higher percentage of its population than any other nation. In addition, as of 2006 there were more than 5 million additional people who have recently left jail and are under “correctional supervision,” including parole, probation and other community sanctions.
A disproportionate number of those incarcerated are black, Webb says. Black Americans make up 13 percent of the population, but they comprise more than half of all prison inmates, compared with one-third two decades ago. Today, Webb told The Post, a black man without a high school diploma has a 60 percent chance of going to prison.
The costs of housing and feeding and maintaining the inmates is skyrocketing. In his book, Webb writes that the U.S. is home to about 5,000 prisons and jails, with more under construction. In 2006, state governments alone spent $200 billion on prison construction. He also wrote that the combined expenditures of local, state and federal governments for law enforcement and corrections personnel total more than $200 billion a year.
He added that while recent figures are difficult to obtain, the average cost in 2001 of operating a state prison was $22,650 per inmate annually. For federal prisons, it was $22,632. By some estimates, Americans are now spending about $50,000 a year for every inmate.
By comparison, the amount of public dollars spent on college students is a pittance.
The senator also blames policies that strip felons of citizenship rights and can hinder their chances of finding a job after their release. He says he believes society can be made safer while making the prison system more humane and cost-effective.
Webb acknowledges that politicians who put prison reform on the legislative dinner plate open themselves up to criticism by opponents that they are soft on crime. But he believes that the subject is born of true leadership and that the best interests of society can be served by a thorough examination of it.
Webb has never been one to shy away from tough subjects. This one is no different. He deserves all the support he can get.
Advertisement
Reader Reactions
No society, including ours has ever been completely fair. Native Americans, Blacks, Irish, Italians, Eastern Europeans, Jews, Germans, Mexicans, everyone has had to struggle at one time or another to be fairly treated by the powers that be.
However, the massive discrepancies in our prison population are not explainable by simple “unfairness”. If that were true, the prisons would be full of Vietnamese, Chinese, Indian, and Japanese people too.
Men have got to make the personal decision not to have children that they then abandon. Women have to decide not to have families that they can’t support. People have got to decide for themselves not to get involved with gangs and blow their minds and money on drugs.
It’s a free-will thing. I reserve the “racist” label for people who believe that some groups are incapable of acting for themselves, and have to be gathered up into the “quarters” and given the means to live, generation after generation (while, by the way, providing quite a good living for their “helpers” at taxpayer expense).
So, the legal system is fair and everyone has an equal opportunity?
The social system is fair and everyone is treated the same?
Your lead-in on this Opinion speaks volumes. IF Senator Webb was the typical politician you generally endorse then his intent to introduce legislation to reform the penal system would most likely hinder his actions. I don’t believe self preservation is this Senator’s goal…for which Im grateful.
As Martha noted, thankfully he has moved the bar up for what all of our political leaders should strive to become….leaders rather than followers.
As to the issue of national prison reform, it is long overdue. African Americans have always suffered heavier sentencing for similar crimes committed by whites.
In the end, the cost to tax payers for maintaining prisons is greater than the cost of education. Our cultural challenges will be with us for decades and prison reform -just one of our many challenges, requires objective reasoning.
Our need for revenge…..settling the score…and irrational hatred becomes the repository of everything we are/should be ashamed of so says Margaret Atwood in the Massey Lectures 2008. I concur.
You are correct in the body of your Opinion to suggest that we support Senator Webb’s priority to introduce legislation re prison reform.
I can’t imagine a more racist comment than calling blacks “victims of our society”, implying that they are not responsible for their own actions and must be “managed” by the overseers of the welfare plantation in order to succeed.
Don’t know if you noticed or not, but our President is black, and elected by a white-majority nation. About time to start letting all the excuses die, and let people start taking responsibility for their own lives rather than depending on their keepers.
And once again you can see by what is posted here the racism that is endemic on the right. As is usual the right will blame the victims of our society and instead of attempting to correct some of the inequities they will hide them away.
When some rich white kids in this town at a well known boarding school were involved in cocaine distribution and a meth lab they did no jail time, just a slap on the wrist. After all we wouldn’t want some youthful indiscretion to ruin a life full of money and promise would we?
Jim Webb’s a good man and should have our support.
Be interesting to see what his solutions to the problems are.
What’s his implication in calling out the disproportionately high percentage of blacks in prison? Could it have anything to do with the 69% illegitimacy rate in black births? The lack of functioning families? The “thug” culture that brands any effort to better oneself as “trying to be white”?
Do you suppose that he’ll be addressing any of these issues, at all, at all?
Will you continue to support him( and then endorse him) when he gets completely hammered by Republicans who will, now and when he runs again, criticize him and call him a soft on crime LIberal?
He isn’t a Liberal at all( not that being one is a bad thing). He’s an intelligent person who THINKS about legislation and then gets it done. Proof: his Veterans bill. VA is LUCKY to have such a leader.
Post a Comment(Requires free registration)
- Please avoid offensive, vulgar, or hateful language.
- Respect others.
- Use the "Flag Comment" link when necessary.
- See the Terms and Conditions for details.
Find us on Facebook
Follow us on Twitter
Advertisement