SCAR
Why not try real solutions?
Spokane could just decide to love its community more. Everyone wants less crime, but leaning on police to do all the work just creates more prisoners. We need to actually invest in our community; in each other.
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Important Updates
Spokane Community Against Racism (SCAR) invited the public to attend a presentation Monday, March 25, to address efforts to build a new jail in Spokane and why alternatives are needed to better create a fair, efficient system of justice for everyone in the community.
The presentation included speakers from Smart Justice Spokane, Center for Justice, I Did the Time, the Bail Project, NAACP, and SCAR.
Sponsors Included: Smart Justice, I Did the Time, NAACP, SCAR, The MLK Center, Carl Maxey Center, FUSE Spokane, Spokane NOW, Spokane Coalition of Color, and Asian Pacific Islander Coalition – Spokane Chapter
During this meeting we shared the following points that we’re now making public.
Explanation: Whatever the intent of individuals, the results of our current criminal justice system are racist. A bigger jail will only perpetuate the racial disproportion we are trying to eliminate.
Explanation: “If we build it, the system will fill it,” for it is the nature of systems to fill vacuums. By building a bigger jail we would perpetuate and exacerbate a broken system.
Explanation: Part of the overcrowding in the current jail is caused by the County Commissioner’s decision to rent beds to Federal law enforcement agencies. The overpopulation puts incarcerated humans at greater risk and further dehumanizes incarcerated persons.
Explanation: As reported in the Spokesman Review recently, Spokane is underutilizing community services, which results in greater expense for our criminal justice system. Free up beds AND save money at the same time!
Explanation: Spokane sets a dubious record for the highest percentage of people currently in jail within the Washington State held without bail. That percentage is 77.7%. To state the obvious, these people are presumed innocent, but they cannot afford bail. Spending time in prison creates hardship for these members of society, their families, and their employers. By incarcerating these innocent poor people, we jeopardize their employment, strain marriages and other relationships, and potentially separate them from their children. Going to trial wearing a prison jumpsuit increases the chance of being found guilty. Wasting months in jail motivates individuals to accept a plea bargain, even when innocent.
Explanation: In February Spokane City Police made a presentation of a diversion program to the SRLJC, which illustrates this important point. The Jail Diversion Unit created in cooperation with Frontier Behavioral Health has already proven effective in reducing incarcerations and increasing police productivity by redirecting people with mental health issues to treatment, rather than to punishment.
Explanation: There is broad agreement, both locally and nationally, that several aspects of the criminal justice system are dysfunctional. Spending millions of dollars on a new and bigger jail invests in those dysfunctions. When the reforms come, we will look silly having bet our money on a broken system.
Explanation: Policies such as permanently removing voting rights for felons precludes the notion that they can ever have their full humanity respected and restored.
Explanation: Punitive justice is not justice, but has become a means for our government to dehumanize its citizens. Criminal justice reform restores citizens to contribute to the greater good. Spokane School District is beginning to demonstrate the benefits of practicing restorative justice.
For more information contact Pastor Walter Kendricks at (509) 534-4878