Five years ago I was little informed, you could even say ignorant, of some areas that I am now an expert in. I now spend so much of my time reading and researching about a system that is broken and in need of repair. I am taking a few minutes to send out a challenge to all of you that have been touched in some way by the Federal Corrections system in the hopes that if we all speak out, eventually small things will change, leading eventually to bigger and better changes.
Back in 1984 Congress eliminated parole within the Federal System, so currently the only opportunity for any early release is in the calculation of their Good Time Credit. The system is set up that any inmate sentenced for more than 12 months earns 54 days per year as a Good Time Credit. Ideally that means for every year of their sentence they could take 54 days off their sentence per year and should amount to serving 85% of the original sentence. The problem lies in the complicated calculation that the BOP uses to determine the actual days, their calculation actually works out to 47 days per year. They base their calculations on days served and each progressive year takes into account the previous years good time credit. It is like compounding interest only in reverse. This works out that the inmates end up serving 87.1% of the original sentence.
Now that may not seem like much, but to anyone serving that time, every extra day is a big deal. Looking at it from a taxpayers perspective, the difference between 85% and 87.1% would save taxpayers $914 million over every 9.5years based on the current federal prison population. These calculations were taken from Families Against Mandatory Minimums or FAMM. Other sites have done similar calculations and come up with similar numbers.
All this leads me to my challenge, there is a bill called the Barber Amendment that is currently in need of bi-partisan sponsorship, that would amend Title 18 U.S.C. Section 3624(b)(1). This bill would change the current calculation from 54 days to 128 days, which would be a return to the previous Good Time Credit figure before the Sentencing Guidelines of 1987. Politicians are not excited about this bill because they do not want to appear soft on crime, but we need to get them to think of it as being smart on crime. In today's environment with governements looking for ways to cut spending, here is a way to drastically cut spending. Prisons are overcrowded and it would be a way to thin out the populations making it safer for both the inmates as well as the employees.
I am asking everyone who has a loved one currently incarcerated or any fiscally responsible citizen to write your state representatives to urge them to consider sponsoring this bill. It has been floating around for a number of years and it is time to put some thought and humanity back into our justice system. Sell them on the idea that it saves money, lives and families. Here is the link for the FEDCURE site that has more information on the bill and its need for sponsorship.
By the time this bill could possibly be implemented, my husband will probably already be home, but there are so many people who have found themselves trapped with a federal mandatory minimum sentence who might have hope that they could have a life outside prison fences that I can no longer sit back and be the ignorant person I used to be.
Thank you for this post. My father is a federal inmate and it means so much that there are others like me out there searching for ways to improve his and others' situations.
ReplyDeleteI take up your challenge! The experience of watching a beloved one go into the system has catalyzed change in me- the system needs change! I am changing from within, with LOVE in my heart, not the anger that is also in my liver. I acknowledge the anger and let it dissolve, dancing my prayers. Why has this incarceration happened and what good in the world can come of it .. with the wise eye of a Buddha one can find answers. I take up your challenge to use my positive energy, intelligence, and care of Life to do something about the conditions that send people needlessly to prison, and the conditions they face there. It's a long time-out to be used as meditation training, but there are much prettier ways to get that accomplished!
ReplyDeleteI'll check out the FEDCURE site and all the other prison reform sites, and forward this blog post on to our community. Thanks Kate **
Peace, Ayden