2021 -- S 0245 | |
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LC001373 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2021 | |
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S E N A T E R E S O L U T I O N | |
CREATING A SPECIAL LEGISLATIVE COMMISSION TO STUDY JUSTICE | |
REINVESTMENT PROPOSALS AND PROVIDE RECOMMENDATIONS FOR REDUCING | |
THE INCARCERATION OF WOMEN | |
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Introduced By: Senators Kallman, Quezada, Pearson, McCaffrey, DiMario, Valverde, | |
Date Introduced: February 10, 2021 | |
Referred To: Senate Judiciary | |
1 | WHEREAS, Rhode Island is actively striving towards investing in community services in |
2 | a way that decreases crime, recidivism, and incarceration; and |
3 | WHEREAS, Rhode Island will be best able to ensure a safe and just community by |
4 | investing in educational, health, and social services that will decrease the conditions that lead to |
5 | criminal activity; and |
6 | WHEREAS, Rhode Island is committed to community safety through a combination of |
7 | dedicated law enforcement, crime prevention, and restorative justice measures; and |
8 | WHEREAS, Rhode Island is focused on public safety through the maintenance of a |
9 | balanced correctional system of institutional and community-based programs that provide |
10 | rehabilitative options to help facilitate successful reentry; and |
11 | WHEREAS, There is strong evidence that successful community programs can |
12 | effectively reduce crime and incarceration and present viable and financially efficient alternatives |
13 | to punishment based models; and |
14 | WHEREAS, The Rhode Island Working Group for Juvenile and Criminal Justice has |
15 | proposed a number of recommendations for improving and expanding reentry support systems in |
16 | the areas of corrections, housing, employment, education, and juvenile justice; and |
17 | WHEREAS, The Justice Reinvestment Working Group established the need and cost- |
18 | effectiveness of investing in recidivism reduction best practices in ways that will reduce overall |
19 | correctional costs; and |
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1 | WHEREAS, It is necessary to continue to establish clear plans for funding and |
2 | implementing the proposals of the Rhode Island Working Group for Juvenile and Criminal |
3 | Justice, and the Justice Reinvestment Working Group in ways that will allow for greater |
4 | community investment; and |
5 | WHEREAS, Women enter prison with very high rates of addiction, trauma, and physical |
6 | abuse and most women in prison are mothers of children. It is necessary to prioritize the |
7 | development and launch of expanded diversion and alternatives to incarceration that can help |
8 | these women recover from these challenges and avoid further incarceration; and |
9 | WHEREAS, The number of women currently incarcerated at the Adult Correctional |
10 | Institutions has dramatically fallen over the past twelve months and is far below the maximum |
11 | capacity of the facility; and |
12 | WHEREAS, The Gloria McDonald building which serves as the primary women’s prison |
13 | was originally designed as a Maximum security prison for men and has instead been used as the |
14 | sole women’s prison for all levels of security, creating significant challenges for the Rhode Island |
15 | Department of Corrections and the incarcerated women; and |
16 | WHEREAS, The Department of Corrections has proposed in its FY 21 budget to close |
17 | the Gloria McDonald for the purposes of reducing its budget; now, therefore be it |
18 | RESOLVED, That a special legislative commission be and the same is hereby created |
19 | consisting of thirteen (13) members: one of whom shall be a member of the Rhode Island Senate, |
20 | to be appointed by the President of the Senate; one of whom shall be a representative of the |
21 | Judicial Branch, to be appointed by the Chief Justice; one of whom shall be the Director of the |
22 | Rhode Island Department of Corrections (DOC), or designee; one of whom shall be the Director |
23 | of the Department of Behavioral Healthcare Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals (BHDDH), |
24 | or designee; one of whom shall be the Rhode Island Public Defender, or designee; one of whom |
25 | shall be the Rhode Island Attorney General, or designee; one of whom shall be the Chair of the |
26 | Rhode Island Parole Board, or designee; one of whom shall be a former warden of the Rhode |
27 | Island women’s prison, to be appointed by the President of the Senate; one of whom shall be a |
28 | representative from OpenDoors, to be appointed by the President of the Senate; one of whom |
29 | shall be a representative from the Formerly Incarcerated Union of Rhode Island, to be appointed |
30 | by the President of the Senate; one of whom shall be a representative from the Center for Health |
31 | and Justice Transformation, to be appointed by the President of the Senate; one of whom shall be |
32 | a representative from Amos House, to be appointed by the President of the Senate; and one of |
33 | whom shall be a representative from the Rhode Island Brotherhood of Correctional Officers, to be |
34 | appointed by the President of the Senate. |
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1 | In lieu of any appointment of a member of the legislature to a permanent advisory |
2 | commission, a legislative study commission, or any commission created by a General Assembly |
3 | resolution, the appointing authority may appoint a member of the general public to serve in lieu |
4 | of a legislator, provided that the majority leader or the minority leader of the political party which |
5 | is entitled to the appointment consents to the member of the general public. |
6 | The purpose of said commission shall be to study the merits and feasibility of justice |
7 | reinvestment proposals which provide a clear blueprint for community driven public safety, |
8 | recidivism reduction, lowering public safety spending, and long-term sustainability of |
9 | investments into community resources and that would reduce the number of women incarcerated |
10 | in Rhode Island, including, but not limited to, analyzing the feasibility of the Department of |
11 | Corrections' proposal to close the women’s facility from the perspective of a commitment to |
12 | justice reinvestment principles. |
13 | Forthwith upon passage of this resolution, the members of the commission shall meet at |
14 | the call of the President of the Senate and organize, and shall select a chairperson from among the |
15 | members. |
16 | Vacancies in said commission shall be filled in like manner as the original appointment. |
17 | The membership of said commission shall receive no compensation for their services. |
18 | All departments and agencies of the state shall furnish such advice and information, |
19 | documentary and otherwise, to said commission and its agents as is deemed necessary or |
20 | desirable by the commission to facilitate the purposes of this resolution. |
21 | The Joint Committee on Legislative Services is hereby authorized and directed to provide |
22 | suitable quarters for said commission; and be it further |
23 | RESOLVED, That the commission shall issue an initial report on its findings no later |
24 | than five months after passage of this resolution, and a following report after twelve months. Said |
25 | commission shall expire on January 5, 2023. |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
S E N A T E R E S O L U T I O N | |
CREATING A SPECIAL LEGISLATIVE COMMISSION TO STUDY JUSTICE | |
REINVESTMENT PROPOSALS AND PROVIDE RECOMMENDATIONS FOR REDUCING | |
THE INCARCERATION OF WOMEN | |
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1 | This resolution would create a thirteen (13) member special legislative study commission |
2 | whose purpose it would be to study justice reinvestment proposals and provide recommendations |
3 | for reducing the incarceration of women, and who would report back to the Senate five months |
4 | after passage of this resolution, and whose life would expire on January 5, 2023. |
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