Who is the Colorado Criminal Justice Reform Coalition?

Our mission is to reverse the trend of mass incarceration in Colorado. We are a coalition of nearly 7,000 individual members and over 100 faith and community organizations who have united to stop perpetual prison expansion in Colorado through policy and sentence reform.

Our chief areas of interest include drug policy reform, women in prison, racial injustice, the impact of incarceration on children and families, the problems associated with re-entry and stopping the practice of using private prisons in our state.

If you would like to be involved please go to our website and become a member.


Wednesday, April 04, 2007

Tapia -- On the Craft of a Moral Document

This is part of a larger conversation that Colorado Confidential had with Sen. Tapia:

One key area, and that is corrections. The prior administration felt very strongly that we should enforce our laws, we should put people in prison and we should make it awfully hard for them to get out of prison.

Well, our prison population has ballooned. We have no excess capacity in terms of jail space or prison space. We are asking for proposals from private prison venders — not building our own prisons but contracting with private prisons. We’ve actually kind of made them into economic development drivers for small communities. So right now the moral issue is, do we want to spend all our money on prisons and prison growth, or do we want to slow down the growth of prisons and try to spend money in other areas, like education?

CoCo: You had already been working on this budget for several months…

Sen. Tapia: Yes, we’ve been working on it since November of last year. Ritter wasn’t sworn in until the 11th of January, and he didn’t hire most of his people until into February and part of March, so, this is the Owens budget modified, by the Joint Budget Committee and by recommendations made from the Ritter administration.

The Ritter Administration put together a diversion and recidivism package because he felt we had to stop the growth of prisons, and you stop the growth of prisons three ways: One by sentencing reform and that’s only what we can do in the legislature — that would stop the growth and that’s up to us as legislators.

Second, you can put money into diversion programs and his recommendation and supplemental request was to put money into diversion packages. That means if you’re a woman and you’ve been sentenced to jail because you have a crime dealing with drugs or alcohol, we’ll sentence you, but we’ll divert you to an alcohol treatment facility, and if you successfully pass that then you don’t have to serve your prison time.

Another area we have put emphasis on is the back end, and that’s recidivism. Under Governor Owens’ administration we had something like a 50 percent recidivism average — 100 are paroled, 50 of them come back to prison within six months – six months! They come back! So that adds to our prison population. Part of the reason is, we cut a lot of parole officers. We don’t have as many parole officers watching out for people once they get out, second the community hasn’t put together any programs for community corrections.

In this budget the governor’s goal is to cut the recidivism in half. So we hired 115 more parole officers and we’ve put several million dollars into community servicing. So before they go out into society they have to go into community corrections. They still have a structure, they have to check in every night, and they have to sleep there every night. But then they go out into the world and try to make a living. Those are good things. And they integrated some health care and mental and drug and alcohol programs.

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