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Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Fiscal Reality

I’ve spent a fair amount of time this past week explaining the “fiscal cliff” to guys here in the college dorm.  I’ve given overviews of the President’s proposal and the counter-proposal from the GOP House leadership.  And, invariably after concluding my remarks someone will ask me “Why don’t they just realize you can’t spend what you don’t have?”  And me, the inmate with the huge restitution judgment, has to smile because they get it more than the politicians in DC or most voters.

Also, this past week the Governor of Virginia announced that he was asking all state departments to submit budgets for the next fiscal term at 4% less than the current funding allotment.  He went further, specifically calling on departments to find savings in their current budgets [Public Safety, which includes DOC, needs to find $165 million].
The fact that week’s before the election the Governor was touting the economic strength of the Commonwealth should come as no surprise.  After all, it’s tough getting elected to office and keeping the office telling citizens the cold hard truth:  government spending is unsustainable.  Tough decisions have to be made.

Virginia spends roughly $1.2 billion annually to maintain approximately 40,000 inmates in prison.  A majority of these men and women are nonviolent offenders being held in low custody facilities.  And “hold” is the operative word.  The Commonwealth lacks sufficient resources to adequately rehabilitate and retrain inmates.  The state oversees a literal cycle of crime, prison, return to the street, crime, prison; on and on it goes.
If Governor McDonnell is serious about the fiscal reality facing Virginia he can begin by addressing “good time earning” for inmates and consider reintroducing parole.  Community supervision – as many states are now finding – is more cost effective and causes less harm to communities and individuals than incarceration.

As I tell the guys in here, America, Virginia can’t spend its way out of this fiscal crisis.  The Governor can be a leader and make the tough call on the failure that is prison spending.  Or, he can be like all the other politicians punting the issue.

2 comments:

  1. Hey Larry,
    You should draw up a proposal showing how much the sate would save reinstating parole, and being generous with good time....maybe someone in the state government has half a brain, and might take an interest. It would have my vote!

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  2. Larry you have a nice blog.

    I've done a little time in a Va. jail so I can relate somewhat. The welfare police state breaks up families destroys lives and ships distraught young men off to be cheap labor for the PIC & cannon fodder for the MIC.

    Unfortunately the real crooks and thieves are across the Potomac. Having worked in DC I wouldn't place any trust in them at all. Power and money corrupts as we both know.

    They are not above committing acts of violence or terrorism to destroy evidence or enrich themselves or their buddies. L. Paul Bremer of Marsh & Mcclennan and Howard Lutnick of Cantor Fitzgerald for example are criminal sociopaths and no amount of crocodile tears can convince me otherwise. That goes for most of the gang at the WH the at the FED and on the Hill. The scum rises to the top while the virtuous (like Ron Paul) are often ignored much to the nation's peril.

    In any case you have some insightful analysis and I look forward to more posts.

    ReplyDelete