Showing posts with label ecumenical advocacy days. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ecumenical advocacy days. Show all posts

Monday, April 20, 2015

Washington Report to Presbyterians Spring 2015



Click here to view or download the complete Washington Report to Presbyterians (PDF document).

THE LATEST NEWS FROM THE PC(USA) OFFICE OF PUBLIC WITNESS INCLUDES:

By the Reverend J. Herbert Nelson

In the United States of America, we incarcerate more people than anywhere else in the world. While the U.S. is home to five percent of the world’s population, we nonetheless incarcerate 25 percent of the world’s prisoners. Read more…


Featuring Former OPW Intern Jessica Tate and What’s NEXT for the Church?

NEXT Church is a network of leaders across the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) who are trying to figure out what it means to be God’s faithful church in the 21st Century. Read more…


OPW Staff highlight a few recent victories for the church’s public witness ministry, including:

·      Victory on Establishing Diplomatic Relations with Cuba
·      Standing with Low-Wage Workers
·      Nuclear Non-Proliferation in Iran
·      A Step in Addressing Global Climate Change


The Office of Public Witness is currently hosting an art exhibition titled “Homeless” by Presbyterian member Lucy Janjigian. These 18 paintings represent the trials and sorrows of people living with homelessness. They deal eloquently with real-life tragedies. Read more…

Presbyterians in the National Capital region are invited to come view the exhibition. Please contact ga_washington_office@pcusa.org to let us know you are expected.

Meet this Spring’s amazing group of young adult service learners. Read more…

The PC(USA) Office of Public Witness in April 2015 is releasing a new “Young Adult Engagement Report, 2012-2015,” in which we review the fruits of the last three years of ministry to and with youth and young adults. Through three projects, the OPW reports having engaged with over 5,000 youth and young adults in the 3-year period. These programs are:

1.     A Justice Model for Service Learning
2.     Seminars to Build Advocates for Justice
3.     Conferences and Outreach

The overwhelming conclusion is that this ministry is a blessing ot the work of the OPW, which will renew its commitment to providing educational and experiential learning opportunities for youth and young adults. To download the complete report, please click here.


Land of the Free on Lockdown


By the Reverend Dr. J. Herbert Nelson

In the United States of America, we incarcerate more people than anywhere else in the world. While the U.S. is home to five percent of the world’s population, we nonetheless incarcerate 25 percent of the world’s prisoners. Our claim to be the land of the free is scarred by the issues surrounding mass incarceration, which include the deep legacy of ongoing racism in this country, a private, for-profit Prison Industrial System, disparate mandatory sentencing that unjustly targets people of color and non-violent offenders, and a failure to live into God’s call for restorative justice, which focuses on making relationship right and on restitution, rather than on retribution and punishment.

According to the Sentencing Project, 2.2 million persons are incarcerated in the United States. This represents a 500 percent increase over the past 30 years. The Prison Industrial System is responsible for the incarceration of one in three young African American men – in prison, in jail, on probation, or on parole — yet mass incarceration tends to be categorized as a criminal justice issue, rather than a racial justice or civil rights issue (or crisis).

In the wake of the release of the United States Department of Justice’s investigation of the Ferguson Police Department, it is clear that there are cases of long-term mistrust among marginalized communities. This mistrust and fear stems from a deep-seated practice by law enforcement to target and over-criminalize communities of color. It is difficult for any community, targeted by the very people who are called to protect them, to avoid the struggles of over-criminalization.


During my ministry in Memphis, TN, it was clear that once the perpetual cycle of the criminalization of a community begins, it negatively impacts households and generations of people. Children are impacted by the absence of an incarcerated parent. Jails and prisons become rites of passage for young people and whole communities of both young and older persons are destroyed by underground economies of guns, violence, sex trafficking, and too many lives lost prematurely to drugs and alcohol.

The question we are raising at this year’s Compassion, Peace and Justice Training Day and Ecumenical Advocacy Days pertains to more than ending mass incarceration. We are raising deeper questions –

“How do we restore communities that have experienced a historically negative impact by the criminal justice system in the United States?”

“How do we eradicate the corporate takeover of the United States and other countries across the globe, which leads to the denial of human dignity and violations of human rights?”

For us, as Presbyterians, these are the related questions that we ought to raise and take back to our local communities and congregations. Our hope is that both of these training events will be a time of deep introspection as to how Jesus Christ is calling you to be a disciple at a deeper level of engagement.


Let’s come together with a mind to End Mass Incarceration and Break the Chains of Systems of Exploitation.

SAVE THE DATE!
Ecumenical Advocacy Days
April 16-19, 2016


Breaking the Chains on EAD Lobby Day 2015



Today, hundreds of Christians, including Presbyterians, will converge on Capitol Hill for meetings with the offices of their Senators and Representatives following PC(USA) Compassion, Peace and Justice Training Day and Ecumenical Advocacy Days. This is the culmination of an Advocacy Training Weekend of learning about mass incarceration and systems of exploitation through keynote speakers, workshops, training, worship, and discussion time.
 
During these meetings today, these Christian advocates will be addressing these two issues –
 
1.     Eliminating the Immigrant Detention Bed Quota (in effect since 2009), a federal budgetary mandate stating that “34,000 detention beds” must be filled at any given time. In order to fill the detention bed quota law enforcement targets immigrants and detains them in mostly private detention centers where human rights abuses run rampant.
  
2.     Ending Mandatory Minimum Sentencing. Mandatory minimum sentences are      excessive and contribute to significant racial disparities in the federal prison system.
 
Both of these problems have contributed significantly to the explosion of incarceration in the United States.
 
Join fellow advocates by urging your Senators and Representatives to pass make these important policy changes. Click here to write to your Members of Congress today!

Striking the Quota from Appropriations bills
 
In the House, Congressmen Deutch (D-FL) and Foster (D-IL) will introduce an amendment to strike the quota language in the Fiscal Year 2016 Appropriations bill. Ask your Representatives to vote in favor of this amendment and garner support for the elimination of the quota. Detaining people just to meet a quota and to pad the profits of private prison companies is not only unjust. It is bad policy.
 
Smarter Sentencing
 
To address mandatory minimum sentencing, urge your Senators and Representatives to support the Smarter Sentencing Act of 2015 (S. 502/H.R. 920), sponsored by Senators Mike Lee (R-UT) and Richard Durbin (D-IL) and Representatives RaĆŗl Labrador (R-ID) and Bobby Scott (D-VA), and the Justice Safety Valve Act of 2015 (S. 353/H.R. 706), sponsored by Senators Rand Paul (R-KY) and Patrick Leahy (R-VT) and Representatives Thomas Massie (R-KY) and Bobby Scott (D-VA).
 
The Smarter Sentencing Act would limit long mandatory minimum sentences for drug offenses, expand judicial discretion in cases involving the lowest level drug offenses, and reduce the federal prison population by retroactively implementing the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010 (a significant reduction in the sentencing disparity between crack cocaine and powder cocaine).
 
The Justice Safety Valve Act would restore judicial discretion in all federal criminal cases by allowing the broadest departure from mandatory minimum sentences.
 
Read a detailed description of the lobby day ask here.
 
What does the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) say about these issues?
 
In 1910 the General Assembly declared that the church ought to stand “For the development of a Christian spirit in the attitude of society toward offenders against the law. The Church holds that a Christian society must seek the reformation of offenders…” (Minutes, PCUSA, 1910, Part I, p. 232). 
 
In 1988, the 200th General Assembly reaffirmed that “individual Presbyterians and the entities of the General Assembly . . . advocate a social order where compassion and justice characterize efforts toward those in the criminal justice system.”
 
In 2003, the 215th General Assembly stated in a “Resolution Calling for the Abolition of For-Profit Private Prisons” that “the ultimate goal of the criminal justice system should be restorative justice, addressing the hurts and the needs of the victim, the offender, and community in such a way that all might be healed.” Moreover, it states, “Since the goal of for-profit prisons is earning a profit for their shareholders, there is a basic and fundamental conflict with the concept of rehabilitation as the ultimate goal of the prison system.”
 




Monday, April 13, 2015

2015 Ecumenical Advocacy Days Lobby Day Ask

On Monday, April 20, hundreds of Ecumenical Advocacy Days participants from around the country will meet with the offices of their Senators and Representatives to address these justice issues, after a weekend of education and training on the issues of mass incarceration and systems of exploitation.


We call on Congress to reform federal criminal justice and immigrant detention policies toward the goal of ending unfair, unnecessary, costly and racially biased mass incarceration:
·       Adopt criminal justice and sentencing reform policies that incorporate an end to mandatory minimum sentencing;
·       Eliminate the detention bed quota for immigrant detention.


End Mandatory Minimum Sentencing

We urge Congress to support federal criminal justice reform legislation that would:

  • Allow judges the discretion to fully consider the circumstances of individual cases to arrive at the most appropriate sentencing decision.
  • Strike or reduce mandatory minimum sentences.
  • Shrink the size of the federal prison system, particularly among people convicted of nonviolent and low-level offenses.
  • Eliminate racial disparity and racial bias in sentencing.  
  • Prioritize alternatives to incarceration for individuals who pose little threat to public safety, and ensure accountability without the use of excessive punishment.
  • Overall, federal sentences are excessive given the level of culpability for the average federal prisoner. Half of the federal prison population was sentenced to more than 10 years in prison and 25% was sentenced to between 5 and 10 years in prison. Twenty-six percent of prisoners are serving sentences for violent offenses and about half are serving sentences for drug offenses. U.S. Sentencing Commission research indicates that nearly one-third of federal prisoners have little or no criminal history.
  • Mandatory minimum sentences for drug offenses have created significant racial disparities within the federal prison system. The U.S. Sentencing Commission has also found that Black and Hispanic defendants constitute the majority of people subject to mandatory minimum sentences and existing opportunities for relief from them are less often available to African American defendants. In 2011, the U.S. Sentencing Commission found black defendants were more likely to receive mandatory minimum penalties, in 60.6% of drug cases carrying such a penalty. Hispanic defendants were sentenced to a mandatory minimum in 41% of such cases and whites in 36.3%.
  • Excessive sentencing practices, exacerbated by mandatory minimums, created an overcrowding crisis within the federal Bureau of Prisons. During fiscal year 2013, the federal prison system was 36% over its rated capacity. For high and medium security male facilities, capacity exceeded 50% and 45%, respectively. This overcrowding creates a dangerous environment for prisoners and staff because of an increase in misconduct caused by the strain of the deteriorating prison conditions. Prisoners now face triple or quadruple bunking in cells and many recreational areas have transitioned into dormitory space.
  • Over three decades of unchecked growth in the federal prison population has burdened the federal criminal justice system and produced increasing costs that are unsustainable. In 1980 the federal prison population was approximately 25,000 and cost about $330 million. By fiscal year 2014 the population had grown to 216,000 people and received an appropriation from Congress of $6.874 billion. The per capita cost of incarcerating an individual in the federal system is $29,000 annually.
  • At a time of significant government belt tightening the high cost of prison limits allocations for other important justice programs, like services for victims, crime prevention, and re-entry programs. The Bureau of Prisons consumes over 25% of the Department of Justice’s budget and this proportion will continue to grow if significant reforms designed to curtail growth and reduce the prison population are not enacted. 
  • Passage of the Smarter Sentencing Act would advance several sentencing reform priorities of the faith community. The legislation’s provisions would limit the long mandatory minimum sentences for drug offenses, create an immediate reduction in the federal prison population due to the retroactive application of sentencing reforms passed under the Fair Sentencing Act in 2010 for crack cocaine offenses, and expand judicial discretion in cases involving the lowest level drug offenses.
  • Passage of the Justice Safety Valve Act comes closest to realizing the sentencing goals of the faith community. The legislation would restore judicial discretion in all federal criminal cases by allowing the broadest departure from mandatory minimum sentences.


We support legislation like the Smarter Sentencing Act of 2015 (S. 502/H.R. 920), sponsored by Senators Mike Lee (R-UT) and Richard Durbin (D-IL) and Representatives RaĆŗl Labrador (R-ID) and Robert (Bobby) Scott (D-VA), and the Justice Safety Valve Act of 2015 (S. 353/H.R. 706), sponsored by Senators Rand Paul (R-KY) and Patrick Leahy (R-VT) and Representatives Thomas Massie (R-KY) and Bobby Scott (D-VA), as intermediate legislative approaches to advancing these recommendations.

Our Faith Conviction

As people of faith and conscience, we are deeply concerned for the many millions of men, women and children arrested, sentenced, incarcerated and returned home from incarceration throughout this country.  The federal criminal justice system should lead the nation in ensuring proportional and equitable accountability for our brothers and sisters entangled within the criminal justice system. Unfortunately, the federal justice system is far from a national model. Since 1980, the size of the federal prison population has increased nearly 800%. Approximately 210,000 people are confined in federal prisons; 12% are in facilities managed by for-profit corporations. Many federal prisons are dangerously overcrowded and rehabilitative programming and treatment opportunities are lacking.

Mandatory minimum penalties -- sentences prescribed by Congress -- have substantially contributed to the increase in the federal prison population over the last 30 years and must be addressed to stop the crisis. We concur with the bipartisan U.S. Sentencing Commission’s 2011 report on mandatory minimum penalties that states, “certain mandatory minimum provisions apply too broadly, are set too high, or both, to warrant the prescribed minimum penalty… This has led to inconsistencies in application of certain mandatory minimum penalties….”

Eliminate the Immigrant Detention Bed Quota

We urge Congress to eliminate the detention bed quota for Fiscal Year 2016.

In the House, Congressmen Deutch (D-FL) & Foster (D-IL) will introduce an amendment to strike the quota language in the appropriations bill.  We ask you to:

·       Vote in favor of this amendment.
·       Contact other offices to gain support for the elimination of the quota.
·      Express your opposition to the bed quote in public statements.

The United States has the largest immigration detention infrastructure in the world. The expansion of this system in recent years is partly due to the immigration detention bed quota, a policy passed by Congress under which 34,000 immigrants are held in ICE detention at any given time. This policy is unprecedented; no other law enforcement agency operates on a quota system. 
What is the bed quota?
·       Enacted by Congress: Congressional appropriations language in ICE’s budget states “[t]hat funding made available under this heading shall maintain a level of not less than 34,000 detention beds.”
·       Implemented as a quota: ICE interprets this language as a quota requiring the agency to lock-up an average of 34,000 people in immigration detention at any given time.
What is the bed quota’s impact?
·       Immigrants are held in facilities in which innumerable human rights abuses and dozens of deaths have occurred. Immigrants are often held with no access to outdoor space, served rotten food, and subjected to wholly inadequate medical and mental health care.  Most immigrants are held in facilities hundreds of miles from their families and without access to counsel.
·       The quota feeds into a larger system characterized by mass deportation and lack of due process.  It incentivizes targeting immigrants for deportation in order to fill jail cells.
·       It puts a price tag on immigrant lives. The policy leads Congress and ICE to treat immigrants as numbers to fill a quota, not as real people with children and loved ones who depend on them.
·       It costs ICE over $2 billion every year. Money appropriated for the bed quota helps line the pockets of for-profit prison corporations that run over half of all immigration jail beds. The two top private prison companies, Corrections Corporation of America (CCA) and the GEO Group, have a combined annual revenue of over $3 billion.

Our Faith Conviction

As people of faith we support alternatives to immigrant detention, which runs contrary to our values of basic dignity, due process, and human rights. Immigrants are often held with no access to outdoor space, served rotten food, and subjected to wholly inadequate medical and mental health care.  Detained families are seeking protection from sexual assault, trafficking, and violence. The bed quota is a particularly egregious element of the immigrant detention system.

Detention operates on a quota system that keeps 34,000 immigrants imprisoned each day.
·       Congress has directed ICE to maintain a daily quota of 34,000 detention beds and has made ICE’s funding contingent on doing so.
·       The requirement to fill the quota forces ICE to find immigrants to detain and to continue operating facilities with subpar conditions and track records of abuse.
·       No other law enforcement agency is forced to operate on a quota system. 

Detention is expensive – there is a human cost to our communities and a monetary cost to taxpayers.
·       The administration’s rampant detention and deportation policies mean that the families and communities of nearly half a million people are torn apart each year.
·       The most recent budget request for ICE’s Custody Operations is just over $2 billion. During a time of fiscal crisis, it is unacceptable to be spending billions of taxpayer dollars to needlessly detain immigrants. This is a complete waste of resources when other proven and effective methods—including parole, release under supervision, and bond—cost taxpayers far less than detention.

Private prison corporations lobby for policies like the bed quota which keep immigrants in detention.
·       Nearly 60% of detention beds are in facilities run by private prison corporations, which rake in profits from the incarceration of immigrants.