Rome News-Tribune

Bill to help end probation early gets unanimous vote in Senate

- By Beau Evans

A bill to tighten rules for allowing ex-offenders in Georgia to be released early from probation that should help thousands of people maintain jobs and housing passed out of the state Senate on Thursday.

Sponsored by Sen. Brian Strickland, R-mcdonough, the bill would let first-time felons in Georgia sentenced to prison for 12 months or fewer seek early terminatio­n of their probation after they’ve been released, paid court fines and avoided another run-in with the law for two years.

The bill would allow wellbehavi­ng probatione­rs to petition courts for early terminatio­n of their supervisio­n terms after three years. Its aim is to cut down Georgia’s highest-inthe-country probation population, Strickland said.

“In Georgia, we should incentiviz­e individual­s who make mistakes, serve their time, pay their restitutio­n and stay out of trouble,” Strickland said from the Senate floor.

“We should be helping Georgians who have earned a second chance in life to get a job, buy a house, start a family or accomplish anything else they dream of doing in this state without the stigma of probation hanging over their heads.”

The bill passed unanimousl­y in the Senate and now heads to the state House of Representa­tives.

It follows legislatio­n in 2017 under then-gov. Nathan Deal aimed at easing rules on terminatin­g probation early. Those changes have not worked as planned, with only a handful of the roughly 50,000 eligible probatione­rs actually being granted early terminatio­n as of last year, advocates say.

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