Assembly Bill 1914 Introduced by Assembly Member Montanez
This bill is trying to address the problem of reintegration into society of former inmates, by establishing ways and methods to properly educate them and increase their chances of successfully fulfilling the requirements of life outside prison. The author of the bill (Cindy Montanez) declares that the current structure of California's prison education system undervalues education and is hostile to rehabilitation. Focusing on custodial functions will ensure prison growth, while, by implementing short- and long-term educational and vocational services and strategies, recidivism will reduce significantly, as shown by the reduction of the crime phenomenon in more 20 states that have adopted such measures. The California prison system is based solely on punishment, while rehabilitation and education play an insignificant role. The purpose of a judicial system should be the active correction and reintegration into society of the inmates, and not the simple, medieval retributory reaction against the individual. Nonetheless, state-funded education for the inmates can result in not only a reduction of recidivism but also in economic growth, through the increased labor volume provided by former inmates.
The bill intends to create a committee to develop and implement a plan for providing educational services for inmates, including counseling and placement, to give the inmates the opportunity to obtain the equivalent of a high school-diploma or even to provide college-level academic programs, if the inmate shows the potential and is willing to pay for the program. The bill would also set forth goals and objectives for the committee, including ensuring that correctional education programs provide 9th grade literacy skills and marketable vocational skills, evaluating the effectiveness of the educational programs by developing a mechanism to test offenders for academic achievement and developing a five-year comprehensive plan for a unified correctional school system. The committee would also be required to report to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2006, with recommendations for further restructuring of correctional education on issues such as attaining parallel education structures between correctional and public education, funding sources, and correctional education curriculum.
The active involvement of the state in the raising of the level of education for the inmates, should, at least in theory, be held accountable for the desired effects: lowering recidivism and reintegration of the individuals into society. Audrey Bazos and Jessica Hasuman from the UCLA School of Public Policy and Social Research, the Department of Policy Studies, state in their work "Correctional Education as a Crime Control Program" that "According to research, increased educational attainment is associated with a decreased incidence of crime. This can be explained because people choose between committing crimes and pursuing employment in the labor market. The risks associated with criminal activity bear a greater cost when the alternative to crime, having a job, pays more. As a result, choosing to commit a crime is less attractive option to those who would earn a greater amount in the labor market. The association between education and crime can also be derived from research that indicates that increased cognitive skills are associated with decreased crime." Although, from the economic point-of-view, proper education should be sufficient, it is uncertain whether some individuals would successfully reintegrate or would choose the same life as before. This is a problem that criminology is trying to address. For instance, Howard S. Becker states in his book from 1963, "Outsiders," that delinquency is a creation of social structures, structures that mark the individual as a "criminal." It is unsure that education alone will be enough. For most inmates, the state would probably have to make sure that they get a job, for simply allowing an inmate to search for work, even if he is properly educated, is foolish. Unemployment is currently high, so employers are expected to give jobs to individuals without a criminal record, just because they have a choice. The education program is ineffective without the appropriate measures concerning the fate of the inmate after release. Although the program is fine by itself, the Robert E. Burton Committee has to evaluate the real chances of reintegration for the participants in the program, and that involves partnerships with associations and firms, foundations and other institutions which would allow the former inmate to actually use what he/she had the opportunity to learn during the education program. If not, there is a high probability of failure for the program, for the social "marking" of the "criminal" that H.S. Becker mentioned would impede the individual from reintegrating into society. Education alone is not enough. Is has to be followed by measures to help, at least initially,...
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