Tell lawmakers that now is the time to protect the fundamental and constitutional right to full reproductive freedom. The Reproductive Freedom Act (S3030/A4848) will expand and protect access to reproductive health care for all New Jerseyans.
News and Alerts
Support Restorative and Transformative Justice for Youth
If passed, the Restorative and Transformative Justice for Youth and Communities Pilot Program (A4663/S2924) will establish pilot programs in Paterson, Newark, Trenton and Camden. These pilot programs will assist young people after they are released from juvenile facilities, and will also focus on keeping young people from entering the criminal legal system in the first place.
Wraparound services for youth after release would include mental health services, substance use disorder treatment, and life skill supports– all with the goal that they will get a fresh start and fully develop their potential in a positive direction. The second part, centered on keeping youth out of detention and/or the adult system, establishes “restorative justice hubs” where youth and their families can heal, build healthy relationships, and, if necessary, address any harm to individuals or community through dialogue, accountability, and repair.
Help us now by sending a letter to members of the Assembly Law and Public Safety committee and the Senate Judiciary committee to urge their quick action on this bill. The Assembly will hear the bill this coming Wednesday, so please take action quickly.
Registration Now Open
Registration Open for the UU Justice Gala 2021
Our major, most important, super big fundraiser of the year!
Please join us for UUFANJ’s UU Justice Gala 2021. We’ll gather in fellowship at this virtual event to celebrate what we have accomplished through Faith Action. Racial Justice has been chosen as the theme to highlight the overarching goal of the dismantling racism work across all our Task Forces.
New Jerseyans Need The Reproductive Freedom Act
Thrive NJ, a coalition of advocates across the state, calls on lawmakers to pass the Reproductive Freedom Act (S3030/A4848). It has been one year since Governor Murphy declared in his 2020 State of the State address that New Jersey must protect the ”fundamental and constitutional right to full reproductive freedom.” We call upon our leaders in the State Senate and Assembly to join the Governor and take a stand against these injustices by advancing the Reproductive Freedom Act. The first step is hearing the bill in committee, which they must do in a timely manner.
Rev. Rob Gregson is quoted in a press release from Thrive NJ:
“We at UU FaithAction NJ are proud to stand in a long line of religious individuals and groups who across generations and faiths support initiatives like the Reproductive Freedom Act. We call for the RFA to be debated and then passed into law swiftly in New Jersey, ensuring that the fundamental right to decide for oneself and one’s family the most intimate and delicate decisions about health, dignity and one’s own body remain the prerogative of each New Jerseyan–not shackled by a philosophy foreign to one’s own conscience.”
You can read the full text of the press release here.
We call on our representatives to recognize the urgency of need, and commit to enacting the Reproductive Freedom Act expediently.
New Jersey Clean Energy Equity Act (A4185)
Please help ensure that New Jersey’s communities of color are included in the move to renewable energy. Governor Murphy’s New Jersey Clean Energy Act is a first step toward a renewable energy future in New Jersey, but we must be explicit and deliberate in ensuring that all New Jerseyans benefit from a clean energy future and are not burdened by health-harming pollution.
Dismantling Racism
New Jersey legislation to create a “New Jersey Reparations Task Force”: Assembly #711/Senate #322
A711/S322 is a bill that would create a Reparations Task Force, to study proposals for African-Americans in New Jersey and make recommendations for action. It is expressly designed to help advance work for racial justice here in the Garden State.
The Assembly bill has been sent to the Assembly State and Local Government Committee chaired by Asm. Vincent Mazzeo. The NJ Senate version goes before the Senate State Government, Wagering, Tourism & Historic Preservation Committee chaired by Sen. James Beach.
Sponsors:
Assembly: Shavonda Sumter, District 35; Britnee Timberlake, District 34; and Verlina Reynolds-Jackson, District 15
Senate: Ron Rice, District 28; Sandra Cunningham, District 31; Troy Singleton, District 7; Loretta Weinberg, District 37; Shirley Turner, District 15; and Nina Gill, District 34.
If passed into law, what would this bill do?
A Reparations Task Force would be created consisting of 11 members, comprised of four legislators and seven citizens. This bill, among other things, requires the task force to: (1) examine the institution of slavery within the State of New Jersey; (2) examine the extent to which the State of New Jersey and the federal government prevented, opposed, or restricted efforts of former enslaved persons and their descendants who are considered United States’ citizens to economically thrive upon the ending of slavery; and (3) examine the lingering negative effects of slavery on living African-Americans and on society in New Jersey and the United States.
The Task force will make recommendations for what remedies should be awarded, through what instrumentalities, and to whom those remedies should be awarded; and address how said recommendations comport with national and international standards of remedy for wrongs and injuries caused by the State. An interim report is required within 12 months with a final report for action to be delivered within 24 months.
Why is this bill necessary?
Many Americans of good faith and conscience have struggled for years with the searing legacy of 450 years of legalized slavery, Jim Crow laws and other policies of institutionalized racism North, South, East and West across the United States up to the present day. The system of slavery that flourished in the United States constituted an immoral, shameful, and inhumane deprivation of the life, liberty, humanity, citizenship, and cultural heritage of Africans and also denied them, among other things, the fruits of their own labor upon which this country, and its economy, was built.
An overwhelming body of scholarship, legal and community evidentiary documentation, and the modern day lived experiences of the descendants of enslaved Africans form the basis for inquiry into the ongoing effects of the institution of slavery and its legacy of persistent systemic structures of discrimination on living Black people and communities in the United States.
While many Northern states abolished slavery following the Civil War, New Jersey opposed the Emancipation Proclamation and was the last Northern state to abolish slavery. Following the Civil War, New Jersey refused to ratify the Reconstruction Amendments. New Jersey’s deep roots in American slavery and its vestiges have endured to the present day. A direct line can be traced from New Jersey’s role in American slavery to its system today of voter suppression, racial wealth disparities, mass incarceration, racial segregation, and crumbling infrastructure in Black communities in New Jersey, such as the current elevated lead levels in water and homes.
Through a thorough and searching public discussion of how Blacks have been treated in New Jersey for the last 400 years, the call for reparations will raise the level of understanding of all citizens of the state and seek to repair the harm that has resulted from America’s original sin in the Garden State.
Unitarian Universalist/UU Faith Action NJ Position on this Legislation.
Many of our congregations in New Jersey are supporting or studying the adoption of an 8th Principle, one that would directly address the spiritual and ethical demands of this shameful legacy on our faith movement today. This bill has not currently been adopted as an official part of the UU Faith Action of New Jersey issue agenda. However, two of our member congregations, UU Church in Cherry Hill and the UU Congregation of Princeton, have held virtual forums on the issue of reparations and have begun to make connections throughout NJ to have this piece of legislation enacted. The Board of Trustees of UU Faith Action New Jersey has discussed the issue and is trying to decide how best to address it. Clearly, the import of the legislation directly speaks to UU Faith Actions call for the dismantlement of racism. Whether the Board creates a special Task Force to take on this issue or the Criminal Justice Task Force includes this on the 2020 Issues agenda, UU Faith Action can be a catalyst in expanding the dialogue on race throughout the state.
For the full text of the bill: https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/2020/Bills/A1000/711_I1.HTM
The Case for Reparations, Ta Nehisi Coates. https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2014/06/the-case-for-reparations/361631/
RHein/10/2020
New Jersey legislation to establish requirements for the use of deadly force: Assembly 4526
A4526 was introduced in August 2020, and seeks to define when the use of deadly force by police officers is justified. It eliminates making an arrest or preventing an escape as justification for the use of deadly force. There isn’t a Senate version as of this writing.
Bill Sponsors:
Assembly: Cleopatra G. Tucker, District 28; Shavonda E. Sumter, District 35; Verlina Reynolds-Jackson, District 15
If passed into law, what would this bill do?
This bill amends current law to provide that the use of deadly force by a police officer, or a person authorized to act as a police officer, when attempting to make an arrest is justified only if there is imminent threat of deadly force to the person using force or to someone else.
The bill states that deadly force may not be used to prevent the escape of a person charged or convicted of an offense.
Why is this legislation needed?
Under current New Jersey law, a police officer is justified in using deadly force when making an arrest if the force is necessary to thwart the commission of a crime, or to prevent the escape of a person convicted or charged with a crime, as long as the use of force creates no substantial risk of injury to an innocent person.
The lack of specific legal limitations on the use of force by police may be one factor in the large numbers of persons, particularly persons of color, who are killed by the police. It is estimated that in the US about 1,000 civilians are killed by the police each year. Black men are three times more likely to be killed by police than white men.
Focusing on policing in New Jersey, the Force Report by NJ Advance Media studied 70,405 reports of use of force from 2012 to 2016. This report found that a Black person was 224% more likely to have force used on them than a white person. While the report covered all types of force and not only deadly force, 21% of the subjects were injured by the use of force.
The proposed bill will make clear that deadly force is to be used only in extreme circumstances when lives are at stake. Ideally implementation would include training in de-escalation and conflict resolution.
Unitarian Universalist Principles.
In taking positions on specific legislation related to criminal justice in our state, the CJR task force looks to the Seven Principles which we share with all Unitarian Universalists. In supporting the Deadly Force bill, we consider the First Principle as most relevant, along with the proposed 8th Principle currently under consideration by the UUA.
- The 1st UU Principle calls us to affirm the inherent worth and dignity of every person. A person who is a suspected of a crime is still entitled to be treated with respect and humanity.
- The Proposed 8th Principle calls us to affirm and promote a diverse society, acting to accountably dismantle racism and other oppressions in ourselves and our institutions. Our criminal justice system is part of the structure of systemic racism that continues to favor the white majority over the rights of persons of color. Historically, police power has been used to enforce laws that promoted slavery and Jim Crow segregation. To dismantle racism, it is essential to make changes in how the police engage with all community members, especially persons of color.
Note: Follow this link to read the full text of the bill: https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/2020/Bills/A4500/4256_I1.HTM
For more information:
“Congregational Toolkit for Engaging Racism and Local Policing” of All Faiths Justice Alliance.
https://www.uufaithaction.org/all-faiths-policing-toolkit/
“New Jersey Force Report” at https://force.nj.com/
JLauby/10/2020
MARIJUANA IMPLEMENTATION LEGISLATION (the Assembly and Senate versions of each are identical now, so opening the Assembly bill gets you to the basic info.
A21/S21– “New Jersey Cannabis Regulatory, Enforcement Assistance, and Marketplace Modernization Act”; legalizes personal use cannabis for certain adults, subject to regulation by Cannabis Regulatory Commission; removes marijuana as Schedule I drug.
A1897/S2535 Provides for certain criminal and civil justice reforms, particularly addressing legal consequences associated with certain marijuana and hashish offenses as well as raising awareness of available expungement relief.**
Reentry Services
New Jersey legislation to require the Division of Parole to offer parole services to certain defendants who have served their maximum sentence: Assembly #4685/Senate #415
S415 was introduced in January 2020, and passed at the end of July with bipartisan support. It was sent to the Assembly Law and Public Safety Committee, where it was introduced as A4685 in September. The Criminal Justice Reform task force identified this as a priority bill for the 2019-20 legislative session and it remains a priority for the current 2020-21 session.
Assembly sponsors: Annette Quijano, District 20; Anthony S. Verrelli, District 15
Senate sponsor: Shirley K. Turner, District 15
If passed into law, what would this bill do?
This bill will require the Division of Parole to offer the same post-release services to defendants who have served the maximum term of incarceration that are provided to defendants who are released on parole. Under the bill, these services are to be provided upon request of the defendant. The bill directs the Commissioner of Corrections to advise these defendants of the availability of these services and to provide them with appropriate contact information.
The bill also requires the State Parole Board to include in its annual report the number of defendants who request post-release services pursuant to the provisions of this bill, a summary of the particular assistance received, and the recidivism rates of these defendants.
Why is this bill necessary?
Under current NJ law, defendants incarcerated in a State correctional facility who do not participate in their own rehabilitation while incarcerated, or who have been denied release under the regular parole process (including minimum mandatory sentences) effectively serve the maximum sentence. These inmates, commonly referred to as “max-outs,” subsequently are released directly into the community without supervision or transitional services.
As recently as five years ago, forty percent of those in NJ prisons served their maximum sentence. This is twice the national average, and twice the number as those released on parole in our state. These defendants are not entitled to services that are available to parolees– such as access to residential community release programs (halfway houses); drug treatment programs; residential programs; community resource centers; emergency housing placement; and other basic support services.
A 2012 Pew Charitable Trust study found that the number of inmates serving their maximum sentence more than doubled nationwide between 1990 and 2012. This increase in max-outs was found to be largely due to state policy choices over the previous three decades that resulted in offenders serving higher proportions of their sentences behind bars. The study found that “truth-in-sentencing” laws, limits on release eligibility, and the outright elimination of parole in some states added nine months to the average prison time served by offenders released in 2009, compared with those released two decades earlier.
In addition to lengthening the time served in prison and thereby increasing the costs of incarceration to the taxpayer, these max-out rates serve no justifiable public purpose. Studies have consistently found that those who max-out have higher recidivism rates than those released on parole. A later Pew study found that for many offenders, shorter prison terms followed by supervision have the potential to reduce both recidivism and overall corrections costs. In New Jersey, for example, inmates released to parole supervision before their sentences expired were 36 percent less likely to return to prison—even when controlling for risk factors such as an offender’s prior record that reliably predict recidivism—than inmates who maxed out. (Max-Out: The Rise in Prison Inmates Released Without Supervision. https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/reports/2014/06/04/max-out)
Unitarian Universalist/UU Faith Action NJ Position on this Legislation.
Unitarian Universalists have long been drawn to efforts to reform our revenge-centered approach to criminal justice. Since the 1980’s, and the era of “mass incarceration” so powerfully documented by Michelle Alexander(*) and many others, the American criminal justice system has often provided little justice, especially to people of color, and little in the way of truly effective rehabilitation to those it incarcerates at such enormous public expense.
As a faith, Unitarian Universalists are committed to honoring the inherent worth and dignity of every person (first principle) and equity and compassion in human relations (second principle.) These two principles guide our position on this important bill. It will at the very least ensure that those who have nearly always served the longest sentences, and therefore been absent from their families and communities for the longest period of time, receive the same reentry services provided to all others who are released under parole.
The proposed Eighth Principle also informs our position on this bill, as it calls all Unitarian Universalist to affirm and promote “journeying toward spiritual wholeness by working to build a diverse multicultural Beloved Community by our actions that accountably dismantle racism and other oppressions in ourselves and our institutions.” Any work to reform and dismantle our broken criminal justice system must be built on a commitment to dismantling the institutional racism that undergirds it.
(*) Read these important books:
The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Color-Blindness,” by Michelle Alexander.
Until We Reckon: Violence, Mass Incarceration and the Road to Repair,” by Danielle Sered.
To read the text of A4685, follow this link: https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/2020/Bills/A5000/4685_I1.HTM
SMacDonnell/10/20
Expanded Reentry Services: Assembly #4785/Senate #2953
A4785/S2953 were introduced in October 2020 and seek to expand the scope of inmate reentry assistance and benefits. The Criminal Justice Reform task force has identified this as a priority bill for the current 2020-21 legislative session.
Primary Sponsors
Assembly: Asw Annette Quijano – District 20 (Union), Asm Anthony S. Verrelli – District 15 (Hunterdon and Mercer)
Senate: Sen. Stephen M. Sweeney – District 3 (Cumberland, Gloucester and Salem), Sen. Sandra B. Cunningham – District 31 (Hudson)
If this legislation passes, what will it do?
A4785/S2953 expands the scope of the recently amended state’s Fair Release and Reentry Act, which requires that the Department of Corrections (DOC) ensure inmates are provided within 10 days of their release from incarceration various documents, prescription medicine, and assistance in their reentry efforts. This bill extends the provisions of the Fair Release and Reentry Act to county correctional facilities and, in some cases, adds new provisions, or increases the time period for certain services to be required.
The bill expands the Act with detailed provisions regarding many items, including:
- identification cards and their acceptance at all levels of government (extends it past an emergency to six months post release)
- needed prescription medication (extended to a three-month supply, and makes the requirement permanent)
- assistance in applying for Medicaid, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), and Work First New Jersey programs
- enabling the use of the address of a reentry organization for any inmate who is unable to identify a residence at the time of application for benefits
- providing a one-day NJ rail or bus pass to returning citizens
- information about voting
- documents, such as the returning citizen´s participation in educational, training or treatment programs while incarcerated, criminal history record, information on record expungement, and an account of fines, child support arrearages or other obligations due
Why is this legislation necessary?
An individual emerging from incarceration needs to find housing, food, employment, mental health and medical care, reestablish familial and other relationships, pay fines, and comply with a myriad of parole requirements. As if that weren’t difficult enough, many laws and other obstacles needlessly impede them from doing those very things. The process of reentry is often so overwhelming that many returning citizens may recidivate or return to previous addictions. Because of the racial inequities in the New Jersey incarceration system, these problems disproportionately affect individuals and communities of color. This bill attempts to remove many of the common obstacles to reentry such as the lack of information, and not having identification or an address, which prevent returning citizens from applying for needed programs and assistance. The common-sense goal of the legislation is to provide support for successful reentry into the community.
Unitarian Universalist/UU Faith Action NJ Position on this Legislation.
Unitarian Universalists are committed to honoring the inherent worth and dignity of every person (first principle) and equity and compassion in human relations (second principle,) as well as dismantling racism and other systems of oppression (proposed 8th principle.) These principles guide our commitment to supporting the successful reentry of individuals who were incarcerated. While our society often puts up so many obstacles to success that it almost seems it wants returning citizen to fail, we say no, we want them to succeed. We want them to get all the help they need to heal themselves, develop their gifts and talents, and become contributing members of society.
To learn more about this issue and the legislation itself:
Link to the bill: https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/2020/Bills/A5000/4785_I1.HTM
Articles:
Commission Finds 100 Ways to Aid Re-Entry of Ex-Prisoners (2019)
https://www.njspotlight.com/2019/10/commission-finds-100-ways-to-aid-re-entry-of-ex-prisoners
Hundreds of N.J. prisoners expected to be released early are at risk of homelessness, records show (10/20)
TIdrobo/10/2020
Expands Eligibility for Certain Inmates To Participate in Residential Community Release Programs: Assembly #4681 / Senate #2933
Both the Assembly and Senate bills (A4681 /S2933) were introduced on September 17, 2020. The Senate bill is in the Law and Public Safety committee, and the Assembly bill is in the Judiciary committee. This bill will expand access to residential community release programs (halfway houses) for individuals being released from state prisons in NJ.
Sponsors:
Assembly: Raj Mukherji, District 33; Valerie Vainieri Huttle, District 37; Verlina Reynolds-Jackson District 15.
Senate: Nellie Pou, District 35.
If passed into law, what would this bill do?
This bill expands eligibility for certain inmates to participate in a residential community release program (RCRP) and modifies DOC reporting requirements concerning capacity of these programs.
Under current law, an inmate is eligible for participation in a RCRP if the inmate is in the custody of the Department of Corrections, is scheduled to be released from custody in less than one year and the commissioner or a designee determines that the inmate’s participation in a RCRP is appropriate. (Other eligibility requirements pertain if the inmate is scheduled to be released in greater than 12 months but less than 24 months and the commissioner or a designee determines that the inmate’s participation in a substance use disorder treatment program is appropriate.)
Under the provisions of this bill, an inmate who is otherwise eligible under current law is eligible to participate in a RCRP if the inmate is scheduled to be released in less than 30 months, or the inmate is scheduled to be released in greater than 12 months but less than 30 months for a substance use disorder treatment program.
Under current law, the Commissioner of Corrections is required to certify on a monthly basis to the Director of the Division of Budget and Accounting that all available RCRP beds in the State are filled to contract capacity with eligible State inmates who are within 30 to 36 months of release. The provisions of this bill require the commissioner also to provide this monthly certification to the Legislature, and require the certification for eligible inmates who are within 18 to 30 months of release.
Why is this bill necessary?
This bill has become necessary due to the recently passed Public Health Emergency Credits legislation, and in anticipation of the early release of a large number of eligible individuals from state facilities.
Under the bill, the commissioner is required to make every effort to fill RCRP vacancies as they become available and maximize the provision of services to help inmates with the transition and reentry into the community. Consistent with the eligibility requirements of Public Health Emergency Credits law, an inmate, other than an inmate convicted of certain sexual offenses or arson or a related offense, who is otherwise eligible for RCRP placement is not to be deemed ineligible for participation in a RCRP solely based on the inmate’s custody status.
Unitarian Universalist/UU Faith Action NJ Position on this Legislation.
Unitarian Universalists are committed to honoring the inherent worth and dignity of every person (first principle) and equity and compassion in human relations (second principle,) as well as dismantling racism and other systems of oppression (proposed 8th principle.) These principles guide our commitment to supporting the successful reentry of individuals who were incarcerated. While our society often puts up so many obstacles to success that it almost seems it wants returning citizen to fail, we say no, we want them to succeed. We want them to get all the help they need to heal themselves, develop their gifts and talents, and become contributing members of society. The availability of expanded residential services throughout the state is an essential component of successful reentry, as it allows those released to begin their journey of re-integration within a supportive atmosphere.
To read the text of the bill, follow this link: https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/2020/Bills/A5000/4681_I1.HTM
What you should know about halfway houses https://www.prisonpolicy.org/blog/2020/09/03/halfway/
Defunding halfway houses could be disastrous for the community | (NJ.com) https://www.nj.com/opinion/2020/09/defunding-halfway-houses-could-be-disastrous-for-the-community-opinion.html
SMacDonnell/10/2020
Juvenile Justice Reform 2020/21
Restorative and Transformative Justice for Youth and Communities Pilot Program: Assembly #4663/Senate #2924
A#4663/S#2924 were introduced in September 2020 and seek to establish pilot programs of restorative and transformative justice for youth during the COVID 19 pandemic and beyond. The Criminal Justice Reform task force has identified this as a priority bill for the current 2020-21 legislative session.
Assembly Sponsors: Verlina Reynolds-Jackson, District 15; Anthony S. Verrelli, District 15; Shanique Speight, District 29; Shavonda E. Sumter, District 35 .
Senate sponsor: Shirley K. Turner, District 15.
If this legislation passes, what would it do?
A#4663/S#2924 would establish a two-year pilot program in the Juvenile Justice Commission, which would assist with the reintegration of youths released from juvenile facilities. The purpose is to prevent recidivism and also to help youth avoid any initial involvement with the system. The legislation includes four target cities – Trenton, Camden, Newark and Paterson, and contains two components designed to improve the socioemotional and behavioral responses of youth within communities through the use of more appropriate, and less punitive, interventions:
- Wraparound services – The bill calls for community-based enhanced reentry wraparound services: evidence-based mental health services, substance use disorders treatment and recovery, life skills support, and other social support services.
- Restorative justice hubs – The bill seeks to create physical spaces within the community where youth and families could heal, reconnect and build healthy relationships, and help resolve local conflicts through dialogue instead of punitive measures.
The bill asks for proposals from service providers in the above cities and is funded by reallocating $8,4000,000.00 from the category of Juvenile Services for the Department of Law and Public Safety.
Why this legislation is necessary.
Nationwide, our youth justice systems are failing our youth, labeling those who commit harm as irrevocably “bad,” and punishing, rather than helping them to develop into responsible citizens. In New Jersey more specifically, the youth justice system has staggering racial justice disparities, high recidivism rates, and grossly underfunded community-based services. Despite these failures, the state continues to finance its youth incarceration system at exorbitant cost. In calendar years 2020 and 2021, New Jersey plans to spend $300,000 to incarcerate each youth in a State secure juvenile facility.
This bill seeks to do better for our youth, creating an alternative that uses restorative and transformative justice. Nationally, restorative justice and transformative justice programs and practices have been recognized as best practices in keeping young people out of the youth justice system and successfully reintegrating them into their home communities after being released from out-of-home placements.
Restorative justice is a system that brings together those harmed, community members, and youth who have committed harm to discuss and explore solutions to address the root cause of that harm. Sometimes the root cause can be unhealed trauma that the young person himself or herself endured or witnessed. Restorative justice encourages stronger community relationships and community-driven public safety. Transformative justice addresses conflicts and harms at the individual level, community level, and within broader social structures. It works to build alternatives to our current systems and transform the conditions which help create acts of violence or make them possible.
Unitarian Universalist/UU Faith Action NJ Position on this legislation.
Unitarian Universalists are committed to honoring the inherent worth and dignity of every person (first principle) and equity and compassion in human relations (second principle,) as well as dismantling racism and other systems of oppression (proposed 8th principle.) These principles guide our commitment to seeing the best in our youth and helping them to repair harm, and integrate into and contribute positively to their communities. We choose growth and healing over control and punishment.
To learn more about this issue and the legislation itself:
Go to this link to see the complete bill, https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/2020/Bills/S3000/2924_I1.HTM
For more information on the issue, here are some articles and recommended books:
Our current juvenile justice system
Restorative Justice in Schools:
https://www.montclairlocal.news/2020/07/30/restorative-justice-makes-difference-montclair-nj
For an introduction to restorative justice:
The Little Book of Restorative Justice: Revised and Updated, by Howard Zehr
For restorative justice and violent crime:
Until We Reckon: Violence Mass Incarceration and a Road to Repair, by Danielle Sered
TIdrobo/10/2020
New Jersey Youth Justice Transformation Act: Assembly 710/Senate 315
A710 and S315 were introduced in January 2020 to plan for and carry out the closure of the state’s three secure juvenile facilities. The bill requires the transition to the use of community group homes and the provision of services in local communities rather than in centralized facilities.
Bill Sponsors:
Assembly: Shavonda E. Sumter, District 35; Linda S. Carter, District 22; Britnee N. Timberlake, District 34.
Senate: Ronald L. Rice, District 28; Sandra B. Cunningham, Distrct 31; Nellie Pou, District 35
If this legislation is passed, what would it do?
This bill requires the Juvenile Justice Commission to close its three secure juvenile facilities and develop a transition plan for juveniles in these facilities. Specifically, the bill requires:
- Closing of the three secure juvenile facilities, with current residents of the facilities transitioned according to individualized plans, either to the community or to a group home.
- All non-secure residential community homes will be assessed and renovated or closed.
- New community homes will be opened as needed, taking into consideration accessibility to families, including transportation.
- $100 million a year will be allocated for developing and implementing community-based programs.
- A racial and ethnic disparities study will be conducted.
Early this year, a task force was set up to assist with planning this effort. Three listening sessions were held in different regions of the state to get input from community members and service providers. Further plans were put on hold during the Covid pandemic. Budgetary constraints have prevented this bill from coming up for a vote.
Why is this legislation necessary?
The incarceration of adolescents does not improve public safety and leads to recidivism. There is a nationwide effort to close large care facilities and to invest in community-based programs and rehabilitative out-of-home placements when needed.
New Jersey’s youth justice system is marred by staggering racial disparities and un-even community-based youth programs. A Black youth is thirty times more likely to be detained or committed than a white youth. The state spends over $250,000 a year to incarcerate a youth in a secure facility. Over $60 million is spent each year to operate the three secure facilities, which are at less than half capacity. These funds would be better spent in maintaining and evaluating community programs and services.
There is also a need for more transparency and oversight of state-funded services. Currently the effectiveness of county youth services commissions greatly varies because of limited accountability measures.
To start to address the large racial and ethnic disparities, the bill requires a study of disparities at different stages of the youth justice system, including school exclusion, interaction with police, detention, adjudication and disposition. More equitable and effective results can be achieved if the plan for each adolescent includes input from the family and community and takes into consideration the developmental needs of the child.
Unitarian Universalist Principles
In taking positions on specific legislation related to criminal justice in our state, the CJR task force looks to the Seven Principles which we share with all Unitarian Universalists. In supporting the Youth Justice Transformation Act, we consider the First and Second Principle as most relevant, along with the proposed 8th Principle currently under consideration by the UUA.
- The 1st UU Principle calls us to affirm the inherent worth and dignity of every person. It is particularly important that youth feel respected and supported as they develop their sense of self-worth. The juvenile justice system must be designed to nurture and support rather than punish youth.
- The 2nd UU Principle calls us to act with justice, equity and compassion in human relations. We must treat youth as valuable members of the community, even if they have created harm, rather than locking them away in facilities.
- The Proposed 8th Principle calls us to affirm and promote a diverse society, acting to accountably dismantle racism and other oppressions in ourselves and our institutions. Our criminal justice system is part of the structure of systemic racism that continues to favor the white majority over the rights of persons of color. Black youth are much more likely than white youth to be detained and incarcerated. To dismantle racism, it is essential to make changes in the juvenile justice system.
Note: Follow this link to read the full text of the bill: https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/2020/Bills/A1000/710_I1.HTM
For more information:
Problems with NJ juvenile justice system
Until We Reckon: Violence Mass Incarceration and a Road to Repair by Danielle Sered
JLauby/10/2020
Our Priority Issues for 2020/21
UU FaithAction NJ 2020-2021
Summary Legislative and Advocacy Priorities,