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Prison policy activists see opportunity in “lame duck” to cut correction spending

Kevin Rosseel
/
morguefile

Bills that seek to reduce prison spending in Michigan seem to have momentum going into the last weeks of the Legislature’s 2014 session.

Credit Kevin Rosseel / morguefile
/
morguefile

Michigan spends about $2 billion every year on prisons. The legislation seeks to reduce the length of some prison stays and provide more supervision for people after they are released from prison.

The most widely supported proposal would create a commission to oversee sentencing guidelines and discuss other corrections policies.

“It creates a forum for exploring all this. And it’s something Michigan badly needs,” said Barbara Levine with the Citizens Alliance on Prisons and Public Spending.

“Every additional month that somebody spends in prison multiplied by thousands of prisoners is millions of dollars. So the question becomes whether there’s a way to reduce that length of stay safely.”

Levine sees the Legislature’s “lame duck” session as the best window to get the measures passed.

“To have to start over again on any of it would be very difficult because it means, with term limits, you’ve got a lot of new legislators who have to be educated to these issues all over again,” she said.

The sponsor of the legislation, Rep. Joe Haveman, R-Holland, is term-limited at the end of this year. He is widely seen as the biggest advocate for prison reform in the Legislature.

State Attorney General Bill Schuette says he is “encouraged” by the talks. But he says he has “grave concerns” about reducing prison stays for some violent offenders.

Copyright 2014 Michigan Radio

Jake Neher is a state Capitol reporter for the Michigan Public Radio Network. He joined MPRN in September of 2012. Before that he served as a reporter and anchor for WFUV Public Radio in the Bronx, New York, and as News Director for KBRW Public Radio in Barrow, Alaska. He has been working in radio in some capacity since he was 15 years old. A native of southeast Michigan, Jake graduated from Central Michigan University in 2010. He has a master's degree in public communications from Fordham University.