Each
year, when 650,000 ex-prisoners return to communities all across the
United States, many suffer from deteriorating health conditions and
must confront a hostile environment where their rehabilitation will be
difficult to achieve.
What’s more, the families
and communities they are rejoining may have changed significantly
during their absence — creating a totally new dynamic for these
ex-prisoners to overcome at a time when their circumstances already
make them vulnerable.
It is now clear that when America embarked on its aggressive campaign
to “get tough on crime” by swelling the nation’s prison ranks, not
enough planning was put into creating healthy prison environments or
considering the impact that incarcerating so many people would have on
the families and communities that they left behind.
Needless to say, with America’s criminal justice system primed to
incarcerate African American men, in particular, the impact of
mandatory sentencing and strict drug laws is being felt heavily in
black communities from coast to coast. Of the 2.1 million people
incarcerated in jails and prisons in 2005, 548,300 were black males
between the ages of 20 and 39. To put that in perspective, 4.7 percent
of all black American males were incarcerated in 2005, compared to 0.7
of the country’s white males.
The original war on crime back in the late 1960s centered on providing
social programs to address poverty, widely seen as an incubator for
crime. Many programs were developed that emphasized rehabilitating
offenders.
Twenty years later, however, the new mandate to the criminal justice
system was to “do something about drugs,” and that translated into the
biggest increase ever in the nation’s prison population. Instead of
training people for jobs, government money was spent on building more
prisons.
Arrests for drug violations skyrocketed from 661,000 in 1983 to
1,126,300 in 1993. From 1980 to 1993, the percentage of white inmates
rose 163 percent, while the percentage of black inmates increased by
217 percent. And by the end of 1993, half of all federal and state
prisoners were African Americans.
Perhaps the biggest victims of this policy were children — the sons and
daughters of the prisoners. By 1999, there were 721,500 parents in
federal and state prisons, and they were mothers and fathers to 1.5
million children.
The social impact of so many children with parents in prison is
devastating, especially in low-income communities. It fosters an
environment where children don’t have role models and may fall into the
same bad habits of their parents. We also must consider the
psychological impact. While the father is incarcerated, children and
families not only lose the financial and emotional support of the
missing parent, but must also deal with the stigma of having a family
member in prison.
Moreover, the community receives another jolt when the prisoner comes
home. Prisons have become a nest for many infectious and chronic
diseases, ranging from HIV/AIDS to hepatitis to tuberculosis. In fact,
the rate of confirmed AIDS cases in prisons runs five times higher than
in the general population. Inmates are ineligible for Medicaid when
they are incarcerated, so their health care services are limited. When
Medicaid and other benefits are lost upon incarceration, there is often
a lengthy lag time for reinstatement when a prisoner is released.
Generally, there are no federal or state requirements to ensure that
benefits are available upon release from prison, a situation that
increases homelessness and blocks access to needed health care.
Unfortunately, because of lapses in recordkeeping, neither federal nor
state agencies know how many former prisoners permanently lose
benefits. The federal government requires the suspension of benefits
while someone is in prison, but allows a flawed process to exist for
restoring those benefits. Thus, when inmates return home, they are
usually in poor health — mentally and physically. Their poor health is
another burden for their families, many of which don’t have health
insurance; meanwhile, their community has to deal with the spread of
diseases.
Clearly, the negative results from increasing the prison population
have taken away any benefit that political leaders sought by supposedly
taking criminals off the streets.
If America sticks with this misguided policy, there have to be
significant changes made to better ensure that real rehabilitation
takes place in prisons, that inmates have access to quality health care
and that more support is available to help inmates on their reentry
into their families, as well as their communities. Let’s correct bad
public policy.
We have seen the impact of what more prison walls have brought us. Now
it’s time to invest in the health and well-being of people.