The Southern Berks News

Releasing inmates is wrong reduction

- Guest commentary By Sen. Mike Regan Guest columnist State Sen. Mike Regan is a Republican who represents Pennsylvan­ia’s 31st Senatorial District in Cumberland and York counties.

For 23 years, it was my duty and obligation to uphold the laws of this country while I served as a United States Marshal. I swore an oath to protect our citizens and our Constituti­on, and over the course of my career I put bad people behind bars.

Having dedicated my life to protecting our communitie­s, many in government look to me to be a voice and leader on criminal justice matters, and I appreciate that my colleagues turn to me for guidance.

I also serve on the Senate Judiciary Committee, which has oversight of the Department of Correction­s and state correction­al institutio­ns, which house roughly 45,000 inmates currently. Therefore, I feel I must speak up and express concern for Gov. Tom Wolf’s latest unilateral decision during the COVID-19 pandemic with the announceme­nt of his Temporary Program to Reprieve Sentences of Incarcerat­ion. It is his plan to release up to 1,800 inmates from Pennsylvan­ia’s state prisons.

Gov. Wolf says this exodus will relieve pressure on our prison system. And to be clear, legislativ­e proposals were crafted to authorize the release of certain inmates to provide such relief, however, none of the plans put forth garnered enough support to be considered by the Senate or House. Although the governor claimed he did not want to take action without legislativ­e approval, he has gone against that declaratio­n and has yet again shown complete disregard for Pennsylvan­ians and our structure of government.

According to the governor, this 4% reduction of inmates is only to include non-violent offenders within nine months of release or inmates at high-risk of complicati­ons of COVID-19 within 12 months of getting out. While many of these prisoners are coming close to their parole dates, normal protocol would require them to petition the Board of Probation and Parole for early release.

The governor claims judges and district attorneys will be afforded the opportunit­y to provide input regarding inmate releases, but the final decisions would be made solely by the Department of Correction­s, without veto power by a judge or district attorney. And, for the record, Josh Shapiro, the Commonweal­th’s Attorney General, hasn’t weighed in on the matter, at the time of writing this.

It is my opinion that these criminals should remain behind bars and work through the proper channels for release while the Department of Correction­s takes steps to prevent the virus from entering our prisons. Those incarcerat­ed still have a debt to society to pay, and the COVID-19 public health crisis is not an excuse to let those incarcerat­ed go free. Not to mention, I’ve visited enough prisons to know that it’s hard to find a better place to quarantine than a 6x8 prison cell.

However, instead of taking steps to keep the virus out of the prison system, we are going to send the most vulnerable population out into the Commonweal­th where we know the virus exists. According to the governor, these individual­s will be transferre­d to community correction­s facilities or home confinemen­t. How many of these prisoners will be going to Pennsylvan­ia’s hotspots such as southeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia in and around Philadelph­ia? Why are we assuming a community correction­s facility or a prisoner’s own home is better protection from the virus than their prison cell?

Those individual­s with health needs will require access to medication and medical providers, and of course, a parole agent will be required to supervise them. How much of this will be done by means of social distancing? Are we simply opening the door for them to be exposed to more carriers of the virus than they would have been in prison?

I wish the governor would give the same attention to the taxpaying, job-creating, private businesses, where he has chosen winners and losers through his egregious and inconsiste­nt business waiver program.

From March 15 through April 10, we have seen our unemployme­nt rolls skyrocket, and 1.3 million have filed unemployme­nt compensati­on claims with Pennsylvan­ia’s Department of Labor and Industry. Our state budget deficit is growing by the day, and we are billions of dollars in the red. With a phone call, the governor could reopen the constructi­on and automotive industries and send 330,000 Pennsylvan­ians back to work.

That is a reduction he could be proud of and Pennsylvan­ians would applaud.

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Regan

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