|
Oklahoma
State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, OK 73105
For Immediate Release: February 17, 2010
Sen. Constance N. Johnson
Johnson: Non-Violent Offender Alternative Placement Programs Could
Reduce State
Funding Obligations by Over $100 Million
Sen. Constance
N. Johnson is encouraging her legislative colleagues to consider
legislation that would establish alternative placement programs
for non-violent offenders in Oklahoma. Johnson said alternative
placement could ultimately reduce some of the state’s funding
obligations to the Department of Corrections.
Johnson has filed Senate Bill 2329, making persons convicted of
non-violent and drug-related crimes eligible for the Non Violent
Offender Alternative Placement program.
“With prison populations increasing and our correctional
facilities crumbling, it’s time for us to be smarter with
the money we spend on corrections,” said Johnson, D-Oklahoma
County. “We could convert the savings to rehabilitative efforts
that can keep people out of the prison system and provide them with
the opportunity to live better, more productive lives. In a state
where we pay a high price for our high incarceration rates, it’s
a proposal that deserves to be heard.”
Johnson noted that of the approximately 26,000 inmates now housed
in DOC facilities, 4,759 are imprisoned for non-violent offenses
not related to drugs. An additional 7,846 are imprisoned for non-violent
drug offenses without any violent concurrent sentences. Johnson
estimates that nearly 5,000 non-violent offenders would be eligible
for alternative placement under her proposal. If adopted, Johnson’s
plan represents a potential savings of $125 Million, which could
then be used on other vital state programs that are crumbling under
the current budget crisis.
“Reducing our prison population would give us the opportunity
to convert both public and private prison bed space to long-term
rehabilitation facilities,” Johnson said. “Ultimately,
my hope is that the proposal will receive a fair hearing, and that
we can have an open dialogue on criminal justice reform. It’s
clear that the current approach isn’t working, and it’s
time to consider cost-saving alternatives.”
Johnson has invited Senate and House members to convene with her
in a dialogue on criminal justice reform with an eye toward forming
a criminal justice reform caucus in the Legislature.
“There are many voices that have yet to be heard on the issue
of saving money through a different approach to criminal justice,”
Johnson stated.
Students and other advocates from around the state will converged
on the Capitol on Wednesday to urge leaders to hear the bills. The
criminal justice reform dialog will be held Thursday at 12 Noon
in Room #534A.
For more information contact:
Sen. Johnson: 405-521-5531

|