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Wednesday, May 7, 2008
The Drug Policy Alliance
Network (DPA’s lobbying entity) has collected more than 760,000 voter signatures
to put the Nonviolent Offender Rehabilitation Act (NORA), the most ambitious
sentencing and prison reform in U.S. history, on the California ballot in
November. We submitted all of those signatures—nearly double the number
necessary—to the counties’ registrar offices all around the state at the end of
April. The signature gathering finished ahead of schedule and with numbers well
above our goal!
When NORA goes before voters
in November, Californians will have a historic opportunity to push past
legislative paralysis in Sacramento and implement common-sense solutions to
prison overcrowding. By safely shrinking the size of the nonviolent prison
population by tens of thousands within just a few years, NORA will protect
public safety and save taxpayers billions of dollars.
Before we can be sure that
NORA will go before voters in November, counties must count and verify the
signatures we have turned in. We are feeling confident! We need just 435,000
valid signatures to meet the legal requirement, and we have 175 percent of that
goal. A big thanks to all of our California volunteers and paid petitioners who
worked so hard to collect signatures. Voters would not have the opportunity to
support NORA if it weren’t on the ballot. Thank you for making the whole
campaign possible!
In November, voters will
decide whether they want to stop letting addiction drive record-breaking
incarceration rates in California. They will decide whether tens of thousands of
nonviolent offenders should have access to treatment-instead-of-incarceration
programs—a change that would dramatically reduce the number of people locked up
unnecessarily and at the same time decrease the likelihood of recidivism. They
will decide whether to make treatment accessible to young people for the first
time in the state. And they will decide whether to make low-level marijuana
possession an infraction—equivalent to a traffic ticket—rather than a
misdemeanor, a sentencing change that could affect 40,000 people a year and
conserve millions of dollars in court resources for other, more serious cases.
In a year of fiscal crisis,
NORA presents the state with an option for more effective—and less
costly—policies to protect public safety and CONSERVE SCARE RESOURCES. The
nonpartisan legislative analyst projects that NORA will save at least $2.5
billion in prison construction savings because new facilities will not need to
be built.
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