Questions for Michigan candidates
Are you
getting sick of the campaign ads?
Tired about hearing
all the dirt against the opponent, who’s getting endorsed by whom, who’s the
most attached to former office holders, who's really a conservative and who's a fake, who’s to blame for bad water in Flint,
why marijuana should not be legal but carrying guns into school should be, and
why it’s time to “fix the damn roads?” It continues ad nauseum, and it’s only
going to get worse.
The Michigan
primary is approaching, yet there’s one item on the budget that seems to get no
attention: corrections.
Wanna know
just how much is being spent to run our state prison system? $5+ million per day! We think that
qualifies this topic for some discussion.
Oh, if you
push the candidates hard enough, you may hear praise for Michigan’s lowering
recidivism rate, and our improved college and vocational programs for prisoners.
To be fair, the department deserves these kudos.
But here are
some of the things I’d like to hear about:
-What we’re
going to do about adopting “presumptive parole,” because we have many prisoners
eligible for parole, and deserving of parole, who are still in there at a cost
of $36,000+ per person per year!
-What we’re
going to do about those poor prisoners with long indeterminate sentences, such
as 50-200 years, which prevent an inmate from even seeing the Parole Board for the
first 50 years!
-What we’re
going to do about a “good-time” bill that seems to be stuck in committee.
-Why our
state approved a compensation fee for those who have been wrongly convicted,
but then does everything in its power to avoid paying that fee.
-Why our
state continues to drag its feet on re-sentencing juvenile lifers, despite the
US Supreme Court decision.
-How we're going to improve medical care for our prisoners.
-How we're going to improve medical care for our prisoners.
-What’s
being done to improve the prison corrections officers situation, e.g. severe
shortages, especially in the women’s prison; and lack of appropriate training,
especially when caring for the mentally ill.
Granted, these
are not the popular subjects. But, they involve 39,000 people in our state
prison system (most of whom will be out some day), as well as their families and friends and loved ones. Believe
me, these people could add many more items to our list.
These are
among the important items for us, and if you hope to be a lawmaker in the State
of Michigan, we’d like your views before we vote, please.
I’m Doug
Tjapkes, and I approve this message.
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