Giving people on parole the opportunity to vote or having their records sealed after years of demonstrating a crime-free, productive life are just parts of the package that will have a longer term effect. It took us a long time to get to the situation we are in and it's not going to fixed overnight. There has to be a commitment by policymakers to create solutions that are based on facts and data and they must be willing to give those solutions a chance to get a foothold and create real change.
Oregon is on the verge of a milestone: In the next two years, the state will spend tens of millions more tax money to lock up prison inmates than it does to educate students at community colleges and state universities.
The trend results from more than a decade of explosive prison growth largely fueled by Measure 11, the 1994 ballot initiative that mandated lengthy sentences for violent crimes. Since then, the number of inmates has nearly doubled and spending on prisons has nearly tripled.Oregon News.
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