Wonder if john e. bush will attend the ceremony and sign a few more Bibles? Wasn't it last Easter that he visited a prison and autographed Bibles for inmates?a few interesting bits:
Department of Corrections Secretary Michael W. Moore, Deputy Secretary Richard Dugger and Chief of Staff Peggy Ball will tour and dedicate the new faith-based dorm (based on Senate Bill 912) at Wakulla Correctional Institution on April 22, 2002 at 6:30 p.m. All interested media is invited.
The Department of Corrections received more than $611,000 for the creation of faith-based dorms at six prison facilities. This is a continuing effort on the part of Florida's DOC to help inmates develop inner strength, positive behavior and more education so that they may become productive citizens upon their release. Additionally, the department was appropriated $1,940,000 for 400 faith-based transitional beds and $2.5 million for 16 new chaplains and 52 transition release specialists at all the major institutions. Wakulla Correctional Institution is the final faith-based prison dorm to open in Florida under Senate Bill 912 that passed during the 2001 Legislative session.
http://www.angelfire.com/fl4/fci/wakullafaith.htmlBut just a few feet away, in a dorm used for a new program that groups religious inmates together, the conditions are less crowded and more private. Residents of that dorm not only have access to nightly programs about religion but also training sessions in job skills, computer use, literacy, substance abuse prevention and anger management.
>snip<
In addition to the extra space and privacy granted to the faith-based dorm residents, the roughly 340 inmates in the program can attend two hours of counseling and training sessions each night and have computer access not granted to non-participants, corrections officials acknowledged.
One lawmaker who voted against the legislation that created the program said it reeks of state-sponsored religious endorsement. Rep. Mark Weissman, D-Parkland, said it is unfair and unconstitutional to group religious inmates together and then offer them more programs and privacy.
http://www.jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/042902/met_9269853.html----------------
So, john e., how's that program for reinstituting the voting rights for ex-felons coming along? Still backlogged? Still take well over a year for a case to come before the clemency board?>snip<
She said an estimated 613,000 felons were denied voting rights three years ago, and 167,000 of those were black. As a a result, she said, 5 percent of Florida's voting-age public and 10 percent of the black voting-age population were blocked from the polls
http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/politics/5597531.htmThe Felon Vote
State Courts Should Decide Ex-Felons' Voting Rules, Federal Judge Rules
Felons Have Allies in Vote-Ban Case
Law enforcement and justice department officials file amicus brief
Elizabeth Amon
The National Law Journal
01-14-2003
A group of former law enforcement and senior U.S. Department of Justice officials have filed an amicus brief urging a U.S. Circuit Court to restore voting rights to felons.
The amicus brief is signed by 14 people, including former Deputy Attorney General Eric Holder, former Solicitor General Seth Waxman and numerous former U.S. Attorneys, including G. Douglas Jones and Wilma Lewis.
The case, Johnson v. Bush, No. 02-14469C, challenges the validity of a Florida law that strips felons of all voting rights even after they have finished serving time and rejoined society. It was rejected on summary judgment last July and will be argued before the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in March.
James Johnson, a former Assistant U.S. Attorney who is now a partner at Morrison & Foerster of San Francisco and co-counsel on behalf of the plaintiffs, said that having such prominent law enforcement figures as strong advocates strengthens their argument: "It is a very powerful signal about what, from a policy perspective, makes sense here."
Florida is one of eight states in the country that permanently disenfranchises felons, although it does reinstate the privilege in a small number of cases. The suit is on behalf of more than 600,000 ex-felons, or about 10.5 percent of the state's black citizens of voting age and about 5 percent of Florida's voting-age population.
http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1039054573756 TALLAHASSEE - Nearly 3,000 people were locked up in June, the largest number of new inmates in any single month in Florida in more than a decade.
The bulge in the state prison population, which caught officials by surprise, was largely driven by a big jump in the number of people being imprisoned for drug crimes, according to state Department of Corrections figures.
The immediate problem -- a looming lack of bed space -- may have been resolved last week when Gov. Jeb Bush signed an emergency measure shifting more than $65 million from reserves into a flurry of new prison construction.
But officials are starting to question what is causing such a large and unexpected spike in prison admissions while, as politicians are quick to point out, the crime rate has dropped to record lows.
http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/state/6562864.htmTo regain the franchise in Florida, most ex-prisoners must complete a fourteen-page clemency questionnaire. Nicholas Thompson, in his Washington Monthly article, reports that the questionnaire asks everything from the irrelevant (their religious preferences, the cause of their parents' deaths), to the invasive (the names of children parented out of wedlock), to the potentially invidious (the names and purposes of any organizations to which they belong). If this paperwork does not prove sufficiently daunting, however, Florida requires in addition that those seeking re-enfranchisement typically appear before the governor and his cabinet--an intimidating requirement rarely demanded by any other state. Following that, petitioners must file with a state board that reviews the questionnaires and forwards its recommendations and investigative reports--which the subjects themselves are never allowed to see--to the governor, who by law is vested with "unfettered discretion to deny clemency at any time for any reason." Since only the most resolute complete this obstacle course, in a typical year, 1999, only one out of every three hundred eligible ex-convicts in Florida succeeded in regaining the vote. (One of Florida's rare "successes" in this regard is Charles Colson, the Nixon administration official convicted in the Watergate scandal. He was pardoned by Governor Jeb Bush in 2000.)
http://www.findarticles.com/cf_dls/m1252/12_129/87869038/p2/article.jhtml?term=----------------------
BALLOTS? NO. BIBLES? Yes.
such a deal......