Articles & News
March 13,
2008
Second Chance Act (H.R. 1593) Passes
USA Congress!
The Reducing Recidivism and Second Chance Act of 2007 (H.R. 1593)
will help make communities safer and provide housing and
rehabilitation to ex-felons.
On Tuesday, March 11, the U.S. Senate
passed The Second Chance Act, legislation designed to aid former
prisoners coping with the challenges of reentry. The Second Chance
Act authorizes $362 million to states, local governments and
nonprofit prisoner reentry organizations to help former prisoners
obtain job training, literacy training, substance abuse treatment,
counseling, housing and mentoring services, and now awaits the
signature of President Bush before it can become law.
The Senate version of the Second Chance Act was introduced by U.S.
Senators Joseph R. Biden, Jr. (D-Del.), Arlen Specter (R-Penn.),
Sam Brownback (R-Kans.) and Patrick J. Leahy (D-VT). The
bipartisan bill was passed by voice vote after the Senate adopted
a concurrent resolution (H Con Res 270) that made minor changes to
the Second Chance Act, including limiting the federal share of
project costs for some reentry programs. In November 2007, the
U.S. House of Representatives voted 347 to 62 to pass the Second
Chance Act.
The Second Chance Act also includes a limited pilot program for
early release of eligible nonviolent elderly prisoners over the
age of 65 who have served the greater of 10 years or 75 percent of
the term of imprisonment to which the individual was sentenced.
The Second Chance Act is Congress’ response, in part, to the
growing number of individuals in prison. “In recent years, this
Congress and the states have passed a myriad of new criminal laws
creating more and longer sentences for more and more crimes. As a
result, this country sends more and more people to prison every
year. There are currently more than two million people in jail or
prison, and there are more than 13 million people who spend some
time in jail or prison each year. Most of these people will at
some point return to our communities,” said Senator Patrick Leahy
(D-VT). “What kind of experience inmates have in prison, how we
prepare them to rejoin society, and how we integrate them into the
broader community when they get out are issues that profoundly
affect the communities in which we live.”
“The Second Chance Act will go a long way to help these
ex-offenders reintegrate into the community and become productive,
contributing members of our community. Congress has passed this
critical legislation, and I hope the President quickly signs it
into law,” said Senator Biden.
President Bush must sign the Second Chance Act before it becomes
law. This bill provides essential programs that will support
successful rehabilitation and reentry. Handing prisoners the tools
to be successful will also help make our communities safer.”
"This is just the begining of a entirely new wave of restoring
rights and beniefits to Ex-Felons," said former 10 Year Federal
Inmate Larry Levine, founder of American Prison Consultants, a
national prison consulting firm that provides pre incarceration
assistance to inmates prior to entering the Federal Prison System.
"Federal Parole and the increase of Good Conduct Time to ex-felons
is just around the corner," said Levine.
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