November 15, 2024

Idavox Archives

Archived articles originally found on the One People's Project website.

ONE PEOPLES PROJECT IS ON BOARD WITH DECARCERATE PA

We have always called for radical reform to the criminal justice system, so we have decided to endorse the platform of a Pennsylvania organization geared towards drawing attention to the proliferation of prisons, as the state seems more interested in building more as opposed to uising those same funds to push programs that keep people out of them.

 Decarcerate PA Platform

No More Prisons: A Call to Conscience

Who signed on?

Decarcerate PA is a grassroots campaign made up of organizations and individuals throughout Pennsylvania working to maximize public health and safety by putting a halt to the state’s broken and bloated prison system. As many other states across the country are exploring ways to shrink their prison population and close unnecessary facilities, Pennsylvania is moving in the opposite direction. Governor Corbett is seeking to expand nine existing prisons and build three brand new ones. This plan will add 8,000 new beds to our state’s already massive prison system. Yet in 2011 the governor cut nearly $1 billion from education and made massive cuts to a host of other essential programs and services. And so we ask: during this moment of fiscal austerity, can Pennsylvania really afford to spend $685 million to put even more people behind bars?

The governor can continue the failed policies of the past, policies that have made our state a national leader in incarceration even as we have fallen behind in education, employment, and environmental protection. Alternatively, he can help make Pennsylvania a state that gives all its residents a safe environment in which to learn, live, and grow. Thirty years of limitless spending on prisons has been more than enough. This massive social experiment is over, and the conclusion is clear. Mass incarceration destroys families and communities. It disproportionately targets poor people and people of color. It means fewer jobs and more environmental devastation. It makes us less safe and more afraid.

Decarcerate PA has come together around three core initiatives to boost Pennsylvania’s economic, environmental, and ethical health. This platform advocates a sensible policy agenda that we hope will provide a road map for our state legislators, district attorneys, Department of Corrections administrators, and the Governor to follow. This platform reflects the desires of communities across our state. Decarcerate PA is committed to working closely with individuals and organizations throughout Pennsylvania to bring about these changes. We invite all individuals, community groups, and social movements working for a just Pennsylvania to join us in these efforts. 

Decarcerate PA Platform

1. No new prisons – Enough is enough!  More prisons mean more problems.
We advocate that Pennsylvania enact an immediate and lasting moratorium on all new prisons, county or city jails, prison expansions, new beds in county jails, immigrant detention facilities, and private prisons.
New prisons become full prisons. Pennsylvania has filled every prison it has built; new facilities only exacerbate the problem of overcrowding. Like new highways that create even more traffic, building new prisons means putting more people in prison. What new and expanded prisons do not do is make Pennsylvanians any safer. New prisons come at the expense of the very things that make us safe–jobs, housing, a clean environment, strong communities. Most prison jobs are reserved for existing state employees, making them unavailable to many people who live in the towns where prisons are constructed. The construction projects are short-term and increasingly not unionized. And locking people up removes them from the labor force entirely. Prisons make other forms of development hard to attract, and they pollute the air, water, and land around them. In short, more prisons mean fewer jobs and more pollution. We call on the Governor to cancel immediately all plans to build any new prisons and jails, including the expansion of existing institutions.

2.     DecarcerationPrison overcrowding can be solved one way and one way only: reduce the number of people in prison.
We advocate that Pennsylvania shrink its prison population by reforming existing arrest, sentencing, and parole practices.
Pennsylvania can and should take steps to limit its prison population. The only way to reduce the problems caused by overcrowding and an unhealthy reliance on imprisonment is to have fewer people in prison. Misguided policies caused the wasteful and brutal practices of mass incarceration; it is going to require smarter policies to end it.  We support legislation that results in fewer people going to prison and fewer people being held in prison for long stretches of time without cause.  We call on our representatives to pass legislation that will transform the current system at every stage–from arrest and sentencing to parole and probation–to reduce the number of Pennsylvanians in prisons, jails, and detention centers. We also call for the full restoration of civil and human rights for formerly incarcerated people.  

3.     Community ReinvestmentImprisonment guts local resources and destroys families. We need to build communities, not prisons.
We advocate that Pennsylvania reinvest money spent on prisons into community institutions.
The money slated for prison expansion would be better invested in the well being of all Pennsylvanians, both urban and rural, east, west and central. Funds already allocated for prison expansion should be instead devoted to institutions that sustain and repair our communities. Prisons destroy our communities. Smart investment in community institutions and infrastructure makes us healthier and safer. Public money should go toward public goods: quality public schools, stable housing, jobs and job training programs, health care and food access, drug and alcohol treatment programs, community-based reentry services, and non-punitive programs that address the root causes of violence in our communities.

The task before us is as large as it is necessary. With your help, we can put an end to mass incarceration.

If your organization would like to sign on to this platform and join the campaign, email us at [email protected] or give us a call at (267) 217-3372. 

If you are an individual and want to show support for the platform, sign our petition HERE

The following organizations have endorsed this platform:

ACLU of Pennsylvania

ACT UP Philadelphia

ACTION United

The African Redemption Church

AIDS Policy Project

And Justice for All

American Friends Service Committee PA Program

ANSWER Philly

Art Factory

Art for Justice

Books Through Bars

Campaign for Nonviolent Schools

Casino Free Philadelphia

DreamActivist Pennsylvania

Every Mother is a Working Mother Network – Philly

Fight for Lifers Inc.

Fight for Philly

Global Womens’s Strike/Philly

Green Party of PA

Green Party of Philadelphia

Harrisburg Catholic Worker

Hearts on a Wire

Human Rights Coalition-Chester

Human Rights Coalition-Fed Up chapter

Human Rights Coalition-Philly

Institute for Community Justice

International Concerned Family and Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal

International Action Center

Jobs with Justice

Justice Strategies

Kingdom Care Reentry Network

Labor Working Group of Occupy Philly

LAVA

Liberty Resources

Media Mobilizing Project

NAACP Criminal Justice Project

NAACP Graterford Branch

National Boricua Human Rights Network

National Lawyers Guild – Temple Chapter

National Lawyers Guild – Philadelphia Chapter

N’COBRA

New Sanctuary Movement of Philadelphia

New Society Educational Foundation

Northeast Philly for Peace and Justice

Occupy Philly

On the Block Radio

One Love Movement

One People’s Project

Payday Men’s Network – Philly

Pennsylvania Institutional Law Project

Philadelphia Anti-Curfew Committee

Philadelphians Allied for a Responsible Economy

Philadelphia Catholic Worker

Philly Against War

Philly Collaborative for Reproductive Justice and Support

Philly Independent Media Center

Philadelphia Innocence Project

Philly Stands Up

Philly Survivor Support Collective

Pointman Soilders Heart Ministry

Prison Health News

Project HOME

Proyecto Sol

Real Cost of Prisons Project

Reconstruction, Inc.

Returning Citizens Voters Movement

SCIG Native American Community

The Sentencing Project

Teacher Action Group

Temple Law Students for Students

The Time is Now to Make a Change

Up Against the Law Legal Collective

Vietnam Veterans Chapter 466 (Graterford)

Villanova Alumnae Association at Graterford

War Resisters League

Whites in Anti-Racist Solidarity

Wild Poppies Collective

Women of Color in the Global Women’s Strike/Philly

Wooden Shoe Books

Young Broadcasters of America

Youth Art and Self Empowerment Project

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