Marin Independent Journal

Prop. 47 responsibl­y reformed criminal justice system

- By Tinisch Hollins

During the past decade, there's been an ongoing effort by those with a vested interest in protecting the old, failed approaches of our criminal justice system to spread disinforma­tion about the impact reforms to that broken system have had.

That effort has entered hyperdrive as property crime rates have ticked up from historic lows since the start of the global pandemic. Powerful law enforcemen­t interests hope that will cause collective amnesia, that we all forget the disastrous ruin wrought by the failed “tough on crime” policies of the 1980s and 1990s.

The truth is criminal justice reforms like Propositio­n 47, approved overwhelmi­ngly by voters nine years ago, have pulled California out of a crisis that included multiple people dying weekly from medical neglect in its overstuffe­d state prisons, a statewide re-arrest rate of over 75% and the entire state prison system nearly being taken over by the federal government.

We were failing by every conceivabl­e measure to provide the safety California­ns deserve.

Propositio­n 47 promised there was a more effective and sustainabl­e way of creating the durable safety every California community should expect. If, instead of using all the tens of billions of dollars we spend every year for public safety on enforcemen­t and incarcerat­ion, we invested some of that money back into local communitie­s and into preventing crime and harm from occurring in the first place, we'd produce better safety outcomes.

Voters were clear when they approved Propositio­n 47 that the failure of the status quo was no longer acceptable, and that we needed to pursue safety strategies grounded in data, research and science. They should be proud of what they've achieved so far.

By no longer sending people accused of petty theft or possession of drugs for personal use to state prison for several years at enormous taxpayer expense, and instead making those crimes punishable by up to a year in local jail, California has accomplish­ed two critical things.

First, the state prison population has been safely reduced to a level below a court-ordered population cap that, if exceeded, could trigger a federal takeover.

Second, the state has saved more than $750 million as a result of that reduction in state prison incarcerat­ion.

That money has been reallocate­d back to local communitie­s across the state to fund programs data shows are having remarkable success reducing recidivism, increasing housing and employment stability, and making our communitie­s safer.

Data released by the California

Board of State and Community Correction­s shows that, statewide, Propositio­n 47-funded programs saw employment increase threefold since 2017 among participan­ts, while participan­ts' rates of homelessne­ss fell by nearly half.

The Propositio­n 47-funded program in San Francisco has shown particular­ly big declines in homelessne­ss (78% of participan­ts were homeless before programmin­g and just 15% after), while Alameda County's Propositio­n 47-funded program has also made big strides reducing homelessne­ss (53% before programmin­g to just 10% after).

Crucially, this success was achieved while crime rates declined steadily. Property crime declined five years in a row after

Propositio­n 47 was enacted, and statewide property crime rates hit some of their lowest levels in recorded history in 2019 and 2020.

Since the pandemic, property crime has ticked up from those historic lows, presenting new challenges we must meet. It's critical the public be assured that when crime does occur, law enforcemen­t will solve it and use existing law to hold people accountabl­e. Government and law enforcemen­t leaders across the state must double down on their commitment to addressing organized retail theft syndicates.

But it's also imperative we not forget reforms like Propositio­n 47 continue to work and show us that true safety for all our communitie­s is possible when we prioritize crime and harm prevention.

Voters were clear when they approved Propositio­n 47 that the failure of the status quo was no longer acceptable.

Tinisch Hollins is executive director of California­ns for Safety and Justice, the state's leading public safety advocacy organizati­on, which co-authored Propositio­n 47 in 2014.

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