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1 | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, Untreated drug offenders are the cause of crime in | ||||||
3 | many of our communities and those communities across Illinois | ||||||
4 | become "victims" as a result of State policy of incarcerating | ||||||
5 | and not treating low-level non-violent offenders; and
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6 | WHEREAS, The answer for reducing crime is both to change | ||||||
7 | public perception and legislative strategies so that low-level | ||||||
8 | drug use is perceived and treated as a public and mental health | ||||||
9 | issue and to require a prevention strategy; and
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10 | WHEREAS, Communities are alarmed at the high rate of drug | ||||||
11 | offenders returning to Illinois communities without | ||||||
12 | rehabilitation and stripped of employment, housing, and | ||||||
13 | education prospects, creating volatile conditions in our | ||||||
14 | neighborhoods; and
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15 | WHEREAS, These barriers to employment, housing, education, | ||||||
16 | and other basic needs force many non-violent drug offenders | ||||||
17 | into a cycle of escalating criminal activity; and | ||||||
18 | WHEREAS, The Developing Justice Coalition, a statewide | ||||||
19 | alliance of dozens of community groups, and other | ||||||
20 | community-level organizations are working together with | ||||||
21 | legislators, the business community, bar associations, and | ||||||
22 | academia to define and combat the critical public safety | ||||||
23 | problems that are proliferated across the State by the cycle of | ||||||
24 | untreated drug abuse, violence, incarceration, and barriers to | ||||||
25 | prisoner reentry; and
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26 | WHEREAS, This cycle threatens the very foundation of our | ||||||
27 | communities as more families are devastated by untreated drug | ||||||
28 | addictions, while the process of incarceration and reentry has | ||||||
29 | become commonplace and a major eroding factor in some Illinois | ||||||
30 | communities; and
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1 | WHEREAS, Illinois spends millions of dollars each year | ||||||
2 | incarcerating the same nonviolent drug offenders, many of whom | ||||||
3 | cycle in and out of prison on an ongoing basis at great expense | ||||||
4 | to the taxpayers; and
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5 | WHEREAS, Every year, the number of arrests for drug | ||||||
6 | offenses is increasing, with over 70,000 people arrested for | ||||||
7 | drug offenses in Illinois in 2004; and | ||||||
8 | WHEREAS, Every year, counties send a new record number of | ||||||
9 | admission of non-violent drug offenders to Illinois State | ||||||
10 | prisons; and | ||||||
11 | WHEREAS, In 2005 alone, more than 11,000 people were | ||||||
12 | imprisoned in Illinois for low-level, nonviolent drug offenses | ||||||
13 | at a cost of more than $249 million annually; and | ||||||
14 | WHEREAS, Illinois law currently contains provision for | ||||||
15 | diversion away from prison toward more effective treatment, but | ||||||
16 | the existing laws are either inadequate, improperly applied, or | ||||||
17 | lack resources for implementation; and | ||||||
18 | WHEREAS, In FY 2005, a record number of nearly 40,000 | ||||||
19 | people were released into Illinois communities with little or | ||||||
20 | no resources, and tens of thousands of the ex-offenders | ||||||
21 | returned to Illinois neighborhoods with untreated drug | ||||||
22 | addictions; and | ||||||
23 | WHEREAS, In 2005, with the recidivism rate of 54.6%, most | ||||||
24 | non-violent drug offenders will return to prison within three | ||||||
25 | years; and | ||||||
26 | WHEREAS, Members of the Developing Justice Coalition have | ||||||
27 | come to understand that we cannot arrest ourselves out of this | ||||||
28 | problem, nor can we cure addicted people by warehousing them; |
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1 | and | ||||||
2 | WHEREAS, There is a need to examine the creation of a | ||||||
3 | system of sanctions that utilizes diversion in appropriate | ||||||
4 | cases and reduces the escalating cost of Corrections by | ||||||
5 | eliminating mandatory sentencing and incarceration for | ||||||
6 | low-level nonviolent drug offenses and provides the universal | ||||||
7 | option of treatment, counseling, and community service instead | ||||||
8 | and wishes to explore whether such a system will save valuable | ||||||
9 | state funds, increase the public safety in our communities, | ||||||
10 | reduce the state prison population, and help low-level | ||||||
11 | nonviolent drug offenders learn to function as profitable | ||||||
12 | members of our communities; therefore, be it | ||||||
13 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE | ||||||
14 | NINETY-FOURTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that | ||||||
15 | we congratulate the Developing Justice Coalition in its efforts | ||||||
16 | to encourage participation in a series of public hearings | ||||||
17 | beginning in May, 2006, aimed at defining the depth of the | ||||||
18 | problems associated with untreated drug addictions and to find | ||||||
19 | ways to identify resources to support treatment, to identify | ||||||
20 | policy changes that can improve diversion opportunities and | ||||||
21 | outcomes, and to develop solutions that will address the public | ||||||
22 | safety concerns of residents of Illinois communities; and be it | ||||||
23 | further
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24 | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this Resolution be | ||||||
25 | presented to the Developing Justice Coalition.
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