Criminal Justice Reform Coalition Kicks Off Session With Restorative Justice, Re-Entry Goals

On Monday, advocacy groups and lawmakers held a press conference pushing to decrease the state’s reliance on incarceration, and to keep people who have served their time from falling back into the system.

“There’s not enough programs within the correctional facilities to help deal with the issues that those who offend, and potentially can re-offend, come into,” said Kenny Matthews from the West Virginia Family of Convicted People.

Matthews is a formerly incarcerated person. He says before being paroled, he was able to make connections with people who helped him with transitional services.

He wants these programs to be introduced to others sooner.

“The reason why a lot of people reoffend is because they don’t feel like they have a place, have a sense of purpose, within the community, within the state society in general,” Matthews said.

In the last couple of years, lawmakers have recognized challenges that incarcerated people face when re-entering society, with an expungement act in 2019, and a bill last year to restore driver’s licenses.

This year, Del. Dianna Graves, R-Kanawha, is reintroducing a bill for juvenile restorative justice programs.

In criminal justice circles, restorative justice seeks to rehabilitate the community by connecting people who have committed a crime to their victims. The program only works if victims participate voluntarily.

“We find that all humans are the same,” Graves said. “You know, we all have some kind of level of empathy, and when you face the victim of a crime, and you see their suffering, you don’t want to do it again.”

Last year, the House of Delegates voted to pass Graves’ first attempt at a restorative justice bill for juveniles. The bill died when it reached the Senate, where the Judiciary committee there didn’t schedule it on their agenda for consideration.

Graves said her messaging this year about a restorative justice program is the same.

“If you want to be tough on crime, the best way to do that is to prevent crime in the first place,” Graves said Monday. “And restorative justice programs have shown that that’s what happens.”

The Coalition for Criminal Justice Reform, which organized Monday’s press conference, said they are also working to advance legislation dealing with fairness in employment, voting rights for people on parole and sentencing reform.

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member.

W.Va. Lawmakers, Advocates Talk Criminal Justice Reform Ahead Of Session

Over the last few years, members of the West Virginia Legislature have passed a handful of laws aimed at reforming the state’s criminal justice system.

But no one could’ve anticipated the toll that the coronavirus pandemic would have until lawmakers were just adjourning in March 2020. The devastation has not missed state-run correctional facilities, where data shows that more than 3,500 incarcerated people and staff have been infected at one point or another since March.

This year, advocates aren’t only planning to advance the work they’ve accomplished so far, they’re also looking at bills under a new, public health-related light.

“I think everybody realizes that simply incarcerating folks we’re mad at doesn’t always work,” said House Judiciary Chair Moore Capito. “We’ve really tried to make an effort to distinguish how we treat those that we’re mad at versus those that we’re afraid of.”

Jails Still Overcrowded Despite 2020 Bail Reform

Recent efforts include an expungement act in 2019, which paved the way for the governor’s Jobs and Hope program, an effort to connect people in recovery from substance use disorder to job training.

Lawmakers most recently passed a law for bail reform, which tasks magistrates with issuing non-cash bail requirements to people arrested for nonviolent charges. This law also outlines ways that magistrates and county prosecutors can avoid imposing unreasonable bail requirements.

But jail populations are even higher today than they were toward the end of the last legislative session, even after the bail reform law took effect in June.

More than 5,700 people are incarcerated in West Virginia jails, against a system-wide capacity of 4,265 beds.

A little more than 40 percent of the people occupying West Virginia jails Tuesday were still awaiting trial on charges from the state. Sixteen percent of this pre-trial population includes people being held for misdemeanor charges.

Another 261 people were being held pretrial on federal charges.

There was a roughly 2,000-person backlog on Tuesday, of people who have been convicted and are still in jail, waiting to be sent to prison.

Capito says lawmakers are looking at unresolved issues related to the bail reform law, but no updates have been written yet. Some advocates, outside the Legislature, think new data collection laws are key to improved enforcement.

“What we’re hearing is that many magistrates aren’t holding that three-day hearing,” said Quenton King, a policy analyst for the West Virginia Center on Budget and Policy and member of the state Criminal Law Reform Coalition. “We want to see, you know, who is not doing that? And what are the results of those where this is happening?”

Health, Wellness In Correctional Facilities

The problem of jail overcrowding has been amplified by the coronavirus pandemic, where too many people means not enough room for social distancing and fewer resources for preventing disease spread. Guidance from the CDC advises courts and local law enforcement agencies to use alternatives to incarceration.

To prevent introducing the virus into some jails and prisons, facilities are no longer offering in-person visitations, which can lead to isolation.

Del. Cody Thompson, D-Randolph, says poor mental health care is an issue he sees compounding problems in correctional facilities.

“I would definitely bet that there will be more legislation put forward to try to reform our system right now, to bring it more into line with the 21st century, more in line with modern practices regarding mental health and rehabilitation,” Thompson said.

He plans to introduce bills for trauma-informed training, and for increasing medical access to incarcerated people. An investigation by Reuters found in December that of the 110 people who died in West Virginia regional jails from 2009 to 2019, a quarter were suicides; more than a third were other medical conditions.

Most recently, a report by the West Virginia ACLU, using data from Reuters, found that just eight percent of those deaths were people convicted of charges. A quarter of the deaths were people who were in custody for unknown reasons. More than half died within their first month of incarceration.

“A death sentence is illegal in the state of West Virginia,” said Del. Danielle Walker, D-Monongalia, who is working on legislation with Thompson. “But because certain policies are not in place, we have had many people die on our watch.”

Walker herself is planning to introduce several more criminal justice reform bills, dealing with data collection and support for families whose loved ones have died behind bars.

Hope For Action In Transitional Housing

Pastor Beverly Sharp, a former corrections employee and member of the Criminal Law Reform Coalition, is hoping lawmakers also will focus on a need for transitional housing, which can serve as a supervised step for people toward the end of their sentences.

“It’s kind of like you have one foot inside jail or prison and one foot in the community,” Sharp said. “So you’re still supervised, you’re still held accountable, but you also have access to people that will help you navigate with, how do you apply for a job? How do you fill out a resume? How do you transfer skills that you learned while you were incarcerated to an application for employment?”

In West Virginia, Sharp said few options exist for re-entry programs, beyond those dealing with substance use disorder and treatment.

Immediately connecting people coming out of incarceration with resources to help with employment, licensing and new technology, she added, can help reduce the odds that people will return to jail.

Something that Sharp says won’t help? Creating any legislation that would increase penalties.

“We already have a system that is in disrepair, that is overcrowded, that’s not able to handle the number of people that are currently incarcerated,” Sharp said.

One of the House Judiciary Committee’s top priorities in criminal justice reform this year is revamping sentencing laws. According to House Judiciary chair Capito, an interim committee has been meeting over the summer to draft a new bill.

Lawmakers officially gavel in the new session Wednesday at noon. So far, leadership plans to meet for all 60 days, but Republicans have shared what they say is an ambitious agenda of priorities for the first few weeks, in case their work is cut short.

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member.

Law To Reduce Pretrial Jail Population Takes Effect

A law outlining a new process for the release of pretrial defendants took effect Friday, June 5, as the state continues coronavirus testing for prisoners and staff in all of the state’s lockups.

Supporters say the legislation could help reduce overcrowded jails, where populations are at a higher risk of an exacerbated spread of the virus due to limited room for social distancing. 

During the legislative session, West Virginia chapters of groups like Americans for Prosperity and the ACLU said the law could ultimately reduce the number of people in state custody, decreasing what local and state agencies pay to run West Virginia jails and prisons. 

Gov. Jim Justice signed House Bill 2419 into law March 25, after lawmakers passed the legislation his way March 7. Less than a week before the bill’s passage, there were 5,200 people in jail. On Friday, there were a little more than 4,600 people in jail and seven out of 10 jails were over capacity.  

The law requires judges to release a person charged with certain misdemeanor offenses that don’t involve violence or crimes against minors. 

Those charged with drug-related misdemeanor charges under the Uniform Controlled Substances Act aren’t eligible for automatic pretrial release, under this law. 

In all cases involving pretrial arrestees, the legislation emphasizes using methods other than incarceration to ensure people charged with certain misdemeanor offenses don’t skip their own trial. Such alternative strategies could include home arrest, constant supervision from a judicial officer or cash bail bonds. 

This law calls on judges to use “the least restrictive” strategy possible. For cash bail requirements, which some judges require that defendants pay to secure their pretrial release, the law prohibits judges from charging more than three times the maximum fine for an offense. 

For defendants who don’t qualify automatically for pretrial release, based on the type of their misdemeanor charge, the law requires judges to hold a hearing up to 72 hours after the person is placed in jail, to consider again whether there are ways other than incarceration to ensure that person will return to the court for trial.

According to the Division of Corrections and Rehabilitation, there were 331 pretrial defendants facing misdemeanor charges in jail on Friday. 

The law goes into effect as three new prisoners and one employee tested positive for the virus by Friday afternoon. Before this week, more than 100 people tested positive at the Huttonsville Correctional Center, a state-run prison in Randolph County. 

The state is waiting for the results of more than 3,150 tests after collecting results from prisoners and staff at more than 15 correctional sites. The DCR still had much work to complete at five of 10 jails, four out of 11 prisons and six out of 10 juvenile detention sites, according to data Friday afternoon

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member.

Exit mobile version