Prison policy opens access for incarcerated to get college education
Send a link to a friend
[November 28, 2022]
By Trina Thomas | The Center Square contributor
(The Center Square) – The Illinois Department of Corrections introduced
the Comprehensive College Education in Prison Policy, which focuses on
post-secondary education for the incarcerated.
According to Illinois Justice Project Program Director Ahmadou Dramé,
the program outlines how Illinois prisons will categorize different
educational opportunities and emphasizes accredited education programs.
It also codifies policies that Dramé said should "theoretically keep
incarcerated students in the classroom."
"I think Illinoisans should really care about people who are
incarcerated being able to access good high quality educational
programs," Dramé said. "And the reason being is that first of all ...
after a person has been incarcerated, 38-40% of those people will be
returning to the criminal legal system, re-arrested. They may have a
technical violation, but ultimately, these things land them back in
prison. And each time that happens ... it costs taxpayers ... more than
$150,000 per person and per event."
A study by the University of California Los Angeles found that for every
$1 that taxpayers invest in prison education, they receive a $4 to $5
return on re-incarceration costs within the first three years following
the release of a prisoner. The study also discovered a 43% recidivism
reduction rate for those who participated in education programs versus
their non-education counterparts.
[to top of second column]
|
Other studies by the Bureau of Justice show high recidivism rates
among released prisoners. In fact, the BOJ in 2005 traced 404,638
prisoners in a study across 30 states after their release from
prison. They discovered that 67.8% of prisoners were arrested again
within three years of their release, with 76.6% re-arrested within
five years. Over half, 56.7%, of those re-arrested happened the
first year after release.
Although prison rehabilitation is proven effective, it is often not
practiced. According to Dramé, that kind of neglect proves that
placing an emphasis on punishment over rehabilitation does more harm
than good.
A crime bill from the mid-1990s prevented individuals in prison and
the formerly incarcerated from gaining access to federal resources
to help pay for and be provided with a higher education. In fact,
crime was already high in 1994, yet incarceration rates continued to
soar for another 14 years.
With decades of calls for change that occurred long before and well
after the 1994 law, Dramé says IDOC's new policy is just one step in
the right direction. Illinoisans must stay vigilant if they wish to
see reform.
"We want a strong economy," Dramé said. "We need people in jobs and
we want people to be able to live lives of dignity and to pursue
their goals and their ambitions so that they can live happy lives as
well, and education is one way to do that." |