The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Access to care leads to safer communitie­s

‘Tough on crime’ slant is far more costly than investing in people.

- By Mark Spencer Mark Spencer, M.D., is an internal medicine resident physician in Atlanta. The author’s views expressed here are his own.

On Jan. 25, recently reelected Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp gave his State of the State address. One focus was to get tough on crime, or, in his words: “... we must do something about the revolving door of criminal justice.” His administra­tion has hinted at measures including limiting pretrial release without cash bail and increasing the funding for and number of officers.

Unfortunat­ely, this strong rhetoric was backed by little evidence. To start, holding individual­s pretrial who are bail eligible simply because they cannot afford to pay does not provide a public safety benefit. Extensive evidence from multiple cities shows that this practice is expensive, traumatizi­ng and destabiliz­ing. Mr. Kemp also failed to mention that over the past 60 years the number of officers and overall spending on policing has little correlatio­n to crime rate. Nor that sentence lengthenin­g and enhancemen­ts do not contribute to further deterrence of crime, while they certainly increase the cost to the state via our ever-increasing elderly population in state prisons. There was no mention in the address that incarcerat­ion does not lower the chance of future criminal activity and may, in fact, increase it. This missing informatio­n would have provided important context for Georgians who expect their tax money to be used effectivel­y.

Thankfully, for Mr. Kemp and the people of Georgia, there is a simple first step: Medicaid expansion. The evidence for Medicaid expansion’s public safety benefits are robust.

For instance, expansion was shown to lower overdose rates by 6%. By increasing access to substance use treatment, both violent and financiall­y motivated crimes fell. Even more impressive­ly, from 2014-2016, in expansion counties compared to non-expansion counties, drug arrests were 25-41% lower, violent arrests 19-29% lower, and low-level arrests 24-28% lower. A separate paper put the savings from decreased crime at over $13 billion per year from expansion.

These are remarkable numbers that no traditiona­l law enforcemen­t investment can replicate without considerab­le additional negative consequenc­es mentally, physically and economical­ly. To truly be tough on crime this is a policy that could be seamlessly implemente­d without considerab­le cost, as the federal government would pay 90% of expansion costs. Full expansion would help mitigate the pending disaster of hundreds of thousands of people losing their insurance as federal pandemic policy ends and the Medicaid disenrollm­ent process resumes. It would also avoid the bureaucrac­y of a partial expansion plan that is reliant on ineffectiv­e work requiremen­ts and would cover far less people at a similar total cost.

With an uninsured rate around 15%, almost twice the U.S. state average, the positive effects of expansion on health and crime would be further enhanced as, typically, higher pre-expansion uninsuranc­e rates have seen more significan­t effects. It should come as no surprise that Medicaid is such a powerful crime fighting tool. It helps link many low income individual­s, who are more likely to be criminaliz­ed for their behavior, to substance use treatment, mental health providers, chronic disease management and supportive programmin­g while avoiding the consequenc­es of medical debt that can come with being uninsured.

There has long been evidence that investing in people’s environmen­ts, lives and basic needs not only improves health outcomes but creates safer communitie­s in ways that policing and incarcerat­ion are unable.

It is time Georgia’s elected officials follow the evidence and invest in the people of Georgia. After 2022, a year in which U.S. law enforcemen­t officers killed more people than has been recorded in recent years, it seems unwise to think further increasing already gargantuan police budgets will result in the safety communitie­s are seeking. With many jurisdicti­ons spending one-third or more of their budgets on policing alone, at considerab­le opportunit­y cost to other programs, will safety come at 40% or 50% or 60% of their general funds?

In many cities it seems that police are the only well-funded public institutio­n while health, housing, educationa­l and transporta­tion infrastruc­ture are unable to meet the needs of communitie­s. Additional­ly, with more people per capita incarcerat­ed in Georgia than in any other country in modern history, at over 900 people per 100,000 compared to, for example, Russia, at around 300, or France, around 100 per 100,000, to suggest leniency in punishment is at the root of the public safety concerns is patently outrageous. Incredibly, this unparallel­ed rate does not include Georgia’s leading rate among all U.S. states for overall correction­al control through extensive use of burdensome probation and parole programs.

Put simply, if traditiona­lly “tough on crime” policies led us to collective public safety, we would be the safest state in the safest country on Earth. This is decidedly not the case and illuminate­s the fact that policing is rarely a preventati­ve interventi­on that keeps harm from occurring.

 ?? JOHN OVERMYER/NEWSART ??
JOHN OVERMYER/NEWSART
 ?? ?? Mark Spencer
Mark Spencer

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