Delegate Keith Haynes responds!

September 17, 2009
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Not long ago, I shared an open letter that I sent to Delegate Keith Haynes in reference to a quote that he provided to the Baltimore Sun. In the Sun article, Haynes described the $100 million dollar expansion of prisons in East Baltimore as a “good investment.” I quickly wrote him and cc’d a handful of folks on the letter and a few days later we had the opportunity to talk.

He told me that there are two pots of money in the Maryland budgetary system – an operating budget and a capital budget. The operating budget, said Haynes, is the budget that is strained by a structural deficit. That’s the budget, he said, that is currently being shaved away more and more every year. The money for prisons is from the capital budget and the decision to construct new prisons in East Baltimore was made some time ago.

He agreed with me that investing in schools, mentoring programs, and other intervention strategies was more amenable than building more cells and locking people up. He also said that his quote for the Sun article was mischaracterized and so he appreciated an opportunity to speak to me directly about it. We ended the conversation by agreeing to work together and locate resources that would do more to help and lift people than punish and imprison them.

I’ll definitely keep this in mind as we head toward another General Assembly in January where the Legislature seems to be poised to expand its own version of the RICO laws. According to The Sun, members of the House of Delegates met to re-examine Maryland’s Anti-Gang statute. State prosecutors would like to strengthen state “anti-gang” measures by having judges add prison time if a person convicted of certain crimes was a part of a gang at the time of the crime. (How are they going to prove that?)

Here again – another display of energy and effort focused on how we can further criminalize people instead of heeding the findings of Think Tanks like Justice Policy Institute which suggests in a 2007 report that more energy needs to be directed toward promoting jobs, education, healthy communities, and lowering the barriers of reintegration into society for former gang members.

I look forward to redoubling my efforts to work with Delegate Keith Haynes and other elected officials, like longstanding justice advocate Delegate Jill Carter, in steering state resources toward community-building, cost effective public safety strategies.

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One Response to Delegate Keith Haynes responds!

  1. Rev. C. Solomon on September 18, 2009 at 9:40 pm

    I was informed recently that 10% of California's State Budget is being spent on its criminal justice system (to include prisons), eek. I also udnerstand that our state's prison system may be taken over tonight by the judiciary. We have a serious problem in America…, i.e., 3 strikes and you're in!

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