There is no one in California with any knowledge of our state's prison system who doesn't agree that it is in crisis. While we expand the number of offenses for which incarceration is the penalty and then expand the length of sentences for those offenses, we have expanded the prison walls beyond capacity. As as result, the courts have intervened in our correctional system's process and threatened to close the doors to new prisoners unless the conditions within the prisons improve significantly.
With state government squeezed for funding, we have seen the cost of the corrections portion of the state budget increase geometrically over the past two decades. With more and more "three strikers" clogging up the prisons, and more elderly lifers needing expensive medical care as they age and die in prison, the problem has only gotten worse. What can and should the state do about this?
What will it take to avoid the state's prison system being taken over by the courts, with consequences that are unacceptable to the people of the state?
Assemblymember Paul Krekorian (D- Burbank) has a proposal that attempts to address at least one aspect of this situation. Here is Assemblymember Krekorian's explanation of the bill that now sits on the Govenor's desk awaiting either signature or veto.
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