There's no denying that the rollout of the Affordable Care Act has been, uhhh, somewhat less than stellar. The bright spot is that 400,000 people so far are eligible for expanded Medicaid coverage. The even brighter part for me is that over 1/8 of them are from West Virginia. We're trying to figure out how to raise that percentage.
Just think, if the US Supreme Court hadn't made Medicaid expansion a state option those numbers would be in the millions.
EURO-DOGS. It looks like domestication of dogs began around 18,000 years ago in Europe.
PARTY ON. Here's wishing a chill weekend to one and all.
November 15, 2013
November 14, 2013
Cute and not cute
If you just want to see something amusing today, click here. You'll never think about toy dinosaurs the same way again.
AND IF THAT DIDN'T WORK, check out this harmonica playing elephant.
OK, ENOUGH CUTE. Here's a look at the connection between zombies, international politics and 21st century anxieties.
AND YOU CAN HEAR THEM ALL THE TIME IN WV. From Bloomberg by way of Ken Ward's Coal Tattoo, here are some bad arguments from the coal industry.
GOAT ROPE ADVISORY LEVEL: ELEVATED
AND IF THAT DIDN'T WORK, check out this harmonica playing elephant.
OK, ENOUGH CUTE. Here's a look at the connection between zombies, international politics and 21st century anxieties.
AND YOU CAN HEAR THEM ALL THE TIME IN WV. From Bloomberg by way of Ken Ward's Coal Tattoo, here are some bad arguments from the coal industry.
GOAT ROPE ADVISORY LEVEL: ELEVATED
November 13, 2013
A better solution to prison overcrowding
Note: the following op-ed of mine on prison overcrowding ran in Sunday's Charleston WV Gazette-Mail. For some reason, however, they didn't put it online. Here it is:
Earlier this year, the WV legislature passed a bill proposed
by Gov. Tomblin aimed at reducing the state’s chronic prison overcrowding
problem. It was a step in the right direction, although in the short term it
will keep the problem from getting worse rather than make it a whole lot
better.
As of Nov. 1, there were over 6,808 people under the
supervision of the Division of Corrections (DOC), although there are only
enough beds for around 5,778. This means that 1,252 were held in regional jails
rather than the state’s correctional facilities.
In recent years, the backlog has been as high as 1,874. Part
of the reason for the recent drop in the backlog is the transfer of some
inmates to Salem, which was formerly a juvenile detention center.
This kind of overcrowding causes all kinds of problems,
including a more dangerous situation for inmates, corrections officers and
ultimately the community at large. Jails are meant to be temporary holding
facilities. For the most part, they don’t offer the kind of programs,
treatment, education and rehabilitative activities provided by the DOC.
In some cases, inmates have languished in regional jails for
long periods of time after being sentenced to state prisons. Some have even
been denied parole because they didn’t complete programs that weren’t even
offered where they were held. It’s a pretty classic catch 22 situation.
The underlying reason for this problem is that over the last
few decades, despite a fairly low crime rate, West Virginia, like much of the
country, began incarcerating more people than in the past for offenses that once
had been dealt with in other ways. It also began keeping them in prison longer
and making less use of parole. A 2012
study by the Pew Charitable Trust found that West Virginia’s sentences for most
crimes increased dramatically between 1990 and 2009 and were often longer than
the national average or those of neighboring states.
To use an overworked plumbing metaphor, the pipeline to
prisons got bigger but the drain got smaller.
The end result was an expensive system that ate up more and more of the
state’s budget, devastated many low income families and communities, and didn’t
contribute as much to public safety as a more rational approach would have done.
Things have gotten to the point now that DOC officials are
contemplating relocating around 400 prisoners to out of state, private,
for-profit prisons so that they can take part in the kinds of programs not
offered in jails.
While those motives are praiseworthy, there are some
problems with this approach. For one thing, private prisons are expensive. For
another, their track record isn’t very good. Caroline Isaacs, a co-worker of
mine in Arizona, recently published a study on the subject, the punch line of
which is in the title: Private Prisons:
The Public’s Problem. Read more here: http://afsc.org/sites/afsc.civicactions.net/files/documents/AFSC_Arizona_Prison_Report.pdf
Isaacs concludes that “The profit motive of privatized
prisons stands in direct conflict with the purpose of corrections, which is to
correct behavior—thereby reducing future crime. Unfortunately, these
corporations are counting on future crime for the financial health of their
business.”
Shipping inmates out of state could weaken family and community ties that may
already be frayed.
Finally, even if 400 inmates get services, that would still
leave over 800 inmates stagnating back in the regional jails.
Ironically, a more promising solution was arrived at more
than 10 years ago as a result of a WV Supreme Court decision which created a
long-term plan for dealing with overcrowding and which was agreed to by the DOC
and the Regional Jail Authority.
The Supreme Court ordered the creation of a plan in a 2000
ruling in the State ex rel Sams v. Kirby case,
which at the time dealt with a much less severe jail backlog of 850. Had the
plan been fully implemented, the problem would have been permanently eliminated
by 2007. Instead, it has grown much worse.
Some aspects of the plan included granting extra good time
for certain offenders. Specifically, it called for the DOC to “identify those
prisoners who, through their work records, educational accomplishments, and
good conduct qualify for recommendations of extra good time, thereby reducing
the amount of time left to serve for prisoners whose conduct warrants it.”
It also called for the creation of special work or education
programs to allow appropriate inmates to earn extra good time. In addition, it
called for the division to identify low risk prisoners “who, through years of
good conduct and successful completion of rehabilitative programs, are
appropriate candidates for commutation, or shortening of their sentences.”
Other common sense elements of the plan were reviewing the
sentences of older inmates who no longer constituted a threat to public safety
and removing harsh and restrictive parole practices. West Virginia’s rate of
granting parole to eligible inmates dropped from 65.9 percent in 1990 to 28.3
percent in 2002. Last year, the Justice Center of the Council for State
Governments estimated the effective parole rate to be 33 percent.
In the years since this plan was issued, significant
progress has been made in risk and needs assessments of offenders, which should
simplify the implementation of the plan.
Sometimes in West Virginia we are pretty good at coming up
with solutions but not so much on making them happen.
I have profound respect for the people charged with the difficult
job of running West Virginia’s corrections system. In this case, however, the
path laid out by the Supreme Court’s long term plan seems more promising to me
than the Trojan horse of private for-profit prisons.
Wilson is director of
the American Friends Service Committee WV Economic Justice Project and a
Gazette contributing columnist.
November 12, 2013
In lieu of a real blog post...
...you can watch this video of a weird sea monster seen off an oil rig.
November 11, 2013
Tending the wounded
On this Veteran's Day, a few lines of Walt Whitman's poem The Wound-Dresser have been going through my head. It's about a Civil War era angel of mercy tending to wounded and dying soldiers and no doubt comes from his personal experience:
Here's the whole thing.
MINIMUM WAGE. Here's a call to raise it. And here's a poll that shows this has public support.
ONE UGLY FISH here.
Arous'd and angry, I'd thought to beat the alarum, and urge relentless war,
But soon my fingers fail'd me, my face droop'd and I resign'd myself,
To sit by the wounded and soothe them, or silently watch the dead...
Here's the whole thing.
MINIMUM WAGE. Here's a call to raise it. And here's a poll that shows this has public support.
ONE UGLY FISH here.
November 10, 2013
Canine theology
The medieval theologian and philosopher St. Thomas Aquinas famously came up with five proofs of the existence of God and any number of arguments regarding the divine attributes. Arpad, our Great Pyrenees dog and security chief of Goat Rope Farm, is something of a theologian himself. He came up with on proof of the existence and benevolence of the Deity, which goes something like this:
*This time of year, all kinds of deer carcasses appear in the woods.
*Deer carcasses are awesome.
*Therefore, God exists and is good.
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