| Rodriguez for Congress campaign Criminal Justice Reform
 
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            [October 22, 2016]
            
            
            
             Criminal Justice Reform Must Move 
			Beyond Era of Mass-Incarceration According to Rodriguez - Having 
			slightly less than 5 percent of the world’s population, but with 
			approximately 22 percent of the world’s incarcerated, the United 
			States has an urgent need to reform its criminal justice system.  | 
        
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			 The cumulative effects of retributive justice 
			practices, mandatory sentencing guidelines, and sundry practices 
			like “three strikes” provisions over the past generation have 
			overwhelmed our criminal court system and placed an untenable burden 
			on our prison system. With the average cost of incarceration per 
			inmate per year hovering just above $30,000, and in some states 
			double that figure, the cost to taxpayers at the local, state, and 
			federal levels has become staggering. Yes, we must do all that we 
			can to ensure public safety, but we must develop a system that is 
			cost-effective and outcomes-based—our current practices fail on both 
			of these points. 
 As a result of the “War on Drugs” that the nation launched in the 
			1970s, we have witnessed burgeoning numbers among the nation’s 
			incarcerated, many of whom are imprisoned for non-violent 
			drug-related offenses. This movement toward mass incarceration has 
			had a tremendously heavy toll upon African American and Hispanic 
			youth, and the societal impact upon broken families and broken 
			communities has been particularly devastating. Although we might pay 
			lip-service to the notion that the primary purpose of incarceration 
			is rehabilitation, our behavior as a society belies this point when 
			ex-felons find themselves shunned on the job market and void of any 
			real opportunities to start fresh when they are released. It should 
			surprise no one that the rate of recidivism among the ex-felon 
			population in the U.S. is staggeringly high.
 
			
			 Along with the rising population of the incarcerated, we have 
			witnessed an expansion in the construction of new prisons across the 
			U.S. during the past generation. In many states this has been one of 
			the largest industrial growth sectors in recent years. Some states, 
			along with the federal government, have sought to outsource this 
			work to for-profit facilities that detractors have termed “the 
			prison-industrial complex,” and many decry what such a system 
			effectively says about our societal values. When we place a priority 
			upon the economic impact that a prison will have while ignoring the 
			societal cost that it entails, we have lost sight of the key issue 
			at stake.
 As a society we must strive to support the use of corrective 
			measures short of incarceration in those situations when they are 
			applicable and most appropriate. We must increase support to 
			probation and parole officers and social workers who can be an 
			effective force in monitoring and mentoring those who need guidance 
			and direction in their lives. Key in this effort must also be a 
			renewed commitment to supporting efforts in working with youth 
			offenders.
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			 An effective juvenile justice initiative can be key 
			to transforming lives of a future generation that might otherwise 
			find themselves pawns in a culture of incarceration that is utterly 
			destructive and crushes any real hope of opportunity. We must also 
			work to erase the stigma that is associated with having been an 
			ex-felon so that we can become a society that truly believes in 
			second chances. Criminal justice reform that is aimed 
			at reducing mass incarceration should not be viewed as an effort to 
			get “soft on crime.” Those who choose to commit violent offenses in 
			our society must always know that the full force and effect of the 
			U.S. legal and criminal justice systems will be used to bring them 
			to justice. We remain a nation of laws. The reforms that are 
			presented here are intended to make sure that the punishment fits 
			the crime in those cases where the courts can show a degree of 
			discretion. We have sufficient evidence to know that our current 
			system is ineffective and that it is burdensome on society at large. 
			Rooting criminal justice reform upon an outcomes-based approach 
			presents us with a real opportunity to address a societal need. If 
			done effectively, future generations might be spared from the 
			debilitating effects that a failed mass incarceration policy has 
			produced. [Text from file received] Past related 
			articles 
			
			 
			
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