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Child Poverty and How to Stem America’s Prison Madness

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Joanne98 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Mar-01-08 02:02 PM
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Child Poverty and How to Stem America’s Prison Madness

Child Poverty and How to Stem America’s Prison Madness
by Dan Brown
Criminals, especially violent criminals, must be punished appropriately for their actions. Many deserve to go to jail.America has followed this simplistic rationale for decades, and our prison population has ballooned to an all-time high. A jarring New York Times story reports that 1 in 99.1 Americans is currently behind bars. The cost for keeping them there last year was $44 billion, and that price is expected to rise to nearly $70 billion by 2011.

These out-of-control statistics are a national disgrace.

America’s disproportionate investment in corrections rather than prevention maintains what the Children’s Defense Fund aptly calls the “Cradle to Prison Pipeline.” This system is a terrible short-term and long-term investment, both fiscally and in lives.

In the short-term, corrections expenses eat up a massive portion of state budgets. The Times reported, “On average, states spend almost 7 percent on their budgets on corrections, trailing only healthcare, education and transportation.” States are forced not to fund other, critical programs because of the inflexible expenses of keeping the prison system running as is. For example, programs to strengthen schools or improve neighborhoods — programs that would help to steer kids away from crime — are scuttled to fund jails.

In the long-term, more and more people will go to jail (as many as 1 in 3 African American males at some point in their lives), destroying an untold number of families. Expenses on corrections will continue to soar, nudging out of the budget more and more of other possible programs.

Without a substantive national effort to help at-risk kids find a path to hope and achievement (No Child Left Behind pays farcical lip service to this), many are falling needlessly into lives of crime and incarceration. Marian Wright Edelman wrote, “High school dropouts are almost three times as likely to be incarcerated as youths who have graduated from high school.” We need to address the root cause of why many people commit crimes–that they feel as though they have no better options.

Many poor black or Latino men commit crimes years after they give up on school and themselves. This tragedy does not have to persist for future generations. We can make changes to provide support and better options for children before they are sucked onto the criminal path.

We can do more to make those better options available at the critical, early stages of life. Let’s invest as much in vaccines as in hospital beds, so to speak, so that the future can hold promise for everyone. As a double bonus, we’ll also have less crime and a lower tab on corrections costs.

The Children’s Defense Fund assembled a thorough and important report on the Cradle to Prison Pipeline and how to dismantle it. Here are their top recommendations:
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/02/29/7375/

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