由买买提看人间百态

boards

本页内容为未名空间相应帖子的节选和存档,一周内的贴子最多显示50字,超过一周显示500字 访问原贴
USANews版 - 奥巴马想给服役犯人发奖学金
相关主题
美国地区法院裁决,马萨诸塞州必须用纳税人的钱,资助因谋杀而判处终身监禁的囚犯做变性手术A Harvard team lost a debate to prison inmates (转载)
纳税人还要为供养在监狱里的非法移民买单奥巴马政府已经在监狱伙食里去除了猪肉制品
马里兰要给监狱里犯人发iPAD (转载)高院说犯人自己打官司也要自己掏腰包
监狱犯人的持枪权得到保障。 (转载)司法部要停止私营监狱
监狱里的罪犯没法享受高科技通讯了,呵呵大统令又从监狱里放了79个罪犯
Hard Times, Fewer CrimesAnother common-sense move
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev’s Medical Care Is Covered at Federal Facility这个巴马任命的法盲法官果然不是一般人
政府故意隐瞒非法移民的犯罪数据美国监狱对犯人的改造作用不大
相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: education话题: pell话题: prisoners话题: said
进入USANews版参与讨论
1 (共1页)
s*********e
发帖数: 1814
1
没钱上学?犯罪去吧,进了监狱就能上了!
WASHINGTON—The Obama administration’s plan to restore funding for in-
prison college programs won praise from inmate advocates Tuesday, alongside
allegations that officials are ignoring the will of Congress and eschewing
the needs of law-abiding students.
A 1994 law prohibits inmates at state and federal prisons from receiving
Pell grants, the main form of government aid for low-income college students
. Before then, prisoners could use the grants to cover tuitions, books and
other education-related expenses for courses they took while incarcerated.
The Wall Street Journal reported Monday that the administration planned to
temporarily make Pell grants available to some prisoners. An Education
Department official confirmed the plan Tuesday, describing it as a limited
pilot program that would call for proposals from colleges and universities
to deliver courses in prisons. Education Secretary Arne Duncan and Attorney
General Loretta Lynch are set to formally unveil the program at a Maryland
prison on Friday.
“The administration believes equipping incarcerated individuals with the
skills they need to successfully re-enter the community is one of the most
powerful and cost-effective methods to ensure they avoid future contact with
the justice system and become productive members of society,” an Education
Department official said Tuesday.
The Obama administration can’t lift the ban without the approval of
Congress, but it plans to use an arcane provision of the Higher Education
Act that allows it to temporarily waive rules as part of an experiment to
study their effectiveness. Under the plan, a limited number of colleges
would deliver courses at prisons, potentially helping thousands of prisoners
, while providing data on recidivism.
Pell grants cover up to $5,775 a year in education expenses per person, and
under the Obama administration plan the money would go directly to colleges.
Inmate advocates have spent years seeking to overturn the ban through
Congress but have consistently run into opposition from lawmakers, including
conservatives who bristle at the notion of helping convicted criminals at a
time of government deficits.
Glenn E. Martin, an ex-offender who co-founded the nonprofit Education from
the Inside Out Coalition, said the administration’s move represented a
breakthrough for groups like his that have argued covering upfront costs
will save the government money in the long run by reducing recidivism and
the overall prison population.
“We already understand that education works” for reducing recidivism, Mr.
Martin said, citing various studies. But he said lawmakers are loath to
anger constituents. He said numerous lawmakers have told him privately: “I
totally get this, I believe in it. But what do I do when I get a constituent
telling me, ‘I can’t afford to have my kid going to college.’”
A top House Republican, Education Committee Chairman John Kline (Minn.),
said he was open to debate about the merits of college aid for inmates, but
criticized the administration for not going through Congress. “
Unfortunately the administration has chosen once again to stifle an
important debate by acting unilaterally and without regard for the law,” he
said in a statement.
Rep. Chris Collins (R., N.Y.) argued Tuesday that federal education funds
should be spent on law-abiding families struggling to cover college costs.
He said he planned to reintroduce a bill dubbed the “Kids Before Cons Act”
to block federal funds from going to in-prison education.
“The Obama administration’s governing strategy is simple: Identify people
who have broken the law, reward them with taxpayer dollars and penalize
hardworking Americans,” Mr. Collins said. “Americans won’t tolerate
putting criminals’ educations before the millions of hardworking students
struggling to obtain a college education.”
A group of congressional Democrats, meanwhile, previously proposed lifting
the ban on Pell grants for prisoners.
Rep. Donna Edwards (D., Md.), who is backing a bill to lift the ban on Pell
grants for inmates, said in-prison college courses reduce the chances that
inmates will return after serving their sentences.
“That’s the surest way to make sure that people can succeed” after they’
ve been released from prison, she said. “If we continue to do those things
we’ll ensure a lower recidivism rate.”
Roger Pilon of the libertarian Cato Institute questioned the administration
’s method for implanting the program. He pointed out that Congress
explicitly forbids prisoner Pell grants as part of the 1994 crime bill.
“It appears to be just one more example of the Obama administration playing
fast and loose with the law,” Mr. Pilon said.
Key details of the administration’s plan are still unknown, including how
many and which types of convicts would be eligible.
Two people briefed on the plan have said the program would likely last
between three to five years, and the price tag would be relatively small—in
the millions of dollars. By comparison, the government awarded roughly $34
billion in Pell grants in the latest academic year.
The effort is part of a broader push by the Obama administration to overhaul
the criminal-justice system. Advocates of criminal-justice reform say
educating prisoners gives them something positive to focus on while
incarcerated and greatly increases the odds that they will find a job and
avoid a lifestyle of crime once they leave prison.
“Although statistics vary from state to state, recidivism rates are well
above 50% for prisoners. But that figure drops to very low single digits if
the person in prison emerges with a college degree,” said Robert Ferguson,
a Columbia University law professor and author of “Inferno: An Anatomy of
American Punishment.”
“Education, on both sides of the bars, is the greatest single tool for
dealing with the problems that prisons face everywhere in the U.S.,” he
said.
The $34 million in Pell grants awarded to prisoners in 1993 amounted to less
than a 10th of 1% of total grant money issued that year, according to
figures provided by the Education Department that year. Prisoners serving
life sentences or on death row weren’t eligible for Pell grants.
Prisoners as a group have less education than the general U.S. population. A
2003 study by the Justice Department’s research arm, the Bureau of Justice
Statistics, found that more than half of state inmates ages 24 and younger
hadn’t completed high school or its equivalent. Only 4% of state inmates in
that age group had received higher education.
A 2001 study by the Correctional Education Association, conducted for the
Education Department, found that education behind bars reduced the
likelihood of incarceration by at least 10%.
A Texas Tech University study of inmates in the state who exited prison
during the 2010-11 school year found that those who completed a college
academic program while behind bars had a 21% lower rate of recidivism than
those who did not. The graduates were also more likely to be in a wage-
earning class three years after their release.
Older studies from Illinois, Maryland, Ohio, Indiana, Alabama, Wisconsin and
New York have also shown correlations between higher education and reduced
recidivism.
b*****e
发帖数: 53215
2
老侯真是最人性化的大统领 我支持他当终身统领

alongside
students

【在 s*********e 的大作中提到】
: 没钱上学?犯罪去吧,进了监狱就能上了!
: WASHINGTON—The Obama administration’s plan to restore funding for in-
: prison college programs won praise from inmate advocates Tuesday, alongside
: allegations that officials are ignoring the will of Congress and eschewing
: the needs of law-abiding students.
: A 1994 law prohibits inmates at state and federal prisons from receiving
: Pell grants, the main form of government aid for low-income college students
: . Before then, prisoners could use the grants to cover tuitions, books and
: other education-related expenses for courses they took while incarcerated.
: The Wall Street Journal reported Monday that the administration planned to

1 (共1页)
进入USANews版参与讨论
相关主题
美国监狱对犯人的改造作用不大监狱里的罪犯没法享受高科技通讯了,呵呵
前弗州猪党主席找hitman暗杀他猥亵过的女孩Hard Times, Fewer Crimes
美国前民主党主席找人暗杀他猥亵过的女孩Dzhokhar Tsarnaev’s Medical Care Is Covered at Federal Facility
Woman-Beating Democrat Still on the Job While in Jail政府故意隐瞒非法移民的犯罪数据
美国地区法院裁决,马萨诸塞州必须用纳税人的钱,资助因谋杀而判处终身监禁的囚犯做变性手术A Harvard team lost a debate to prison inmates (转载)
纳税人还要为供养在监狱里的非法移民买单奥巴马政府已经在监狱伙食里去除了猪肉制品
马里兰要给监狱里犯人发iPAD (转载)高院说犯人自己打官司也要自己掏腰包
监狱犯人的持枪权得到保障。 (转载)司法部要停止私营监狱
相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: education话题: pell话题: prisoners话题: said