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Corrections Department Secretary Named to National Charles Colson Task Force on Federal Corrections

12/10/2014

News for Immediate Release

Dec. 10, 2014

 

Corrections Department Secretary Named to National Charles Colson Task Force on Federal Corrections

 

Harrisburg -- Pennsylvania Department of Corrections Secretary John Wetzel, this week was named as a member of the national Charles Colson Task Force on Federal Corrections.  The committee members were announced in Washington, D.C., by Task Force Chairman J.C. Watts, Jr. and Vice Chairman Alan B. Mollohan. 

 

“Secretary Wetzel has led Pennsylvania’s successful criminal justice reform efforts and I am confident that he will bring new and innovative concepts to the task force table,” Gov. Tom Corbett said. “I am pleased that a national organization is recognizing Secretary Wetzel’s expertise.”

 

As part of the nine-person, bipartisan, blue ribbon task force, Wetzel and other members are charged with addressing the challenges in the federal corrections system.

The task force will:

- Undertake a comprehensive analysis of relevant federal criminal justice data; identify factors driving the growth in prison populations; study “lessons learned" from successful state-level justice reinvestment initiatives; and evaluate current and potential criminal justice policies, including the cost-effectiveness of spending on corrections. 

- Examine overcrowding in federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) facilities and options to avert continued growth in the system population; measures to address overcrowding within facilities; violence in the system, including gang violence, and improved public safety measures; prison rehabilitation and employment programs; and reentry programs and policies to reduce recidivism. 

- Develop practical, data-driven policy options to increase public safety, improve offender accountability, reduce recidivism, and control growth of spending on corrections. 

- Prepare and submit a report that contains a statement of its findings, conclusions, and recommendations to the Congress, Attorney General and President, not later than 12 months after its first meeting.

 

The task force, which will convene for five meetings in 2015, will hold its first meeting in January.  In addition to the meetings, a number of roundtable discussions will be held to gather and understand the diverse perspectives and experiences of relevant stakeholders, practitioners and national experts.


Funding for the task force was approved Jan. 17, 2014, under the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2014, and it mandated that the Department of Justice (DOJ) establish and support the operations of the task force.

The need for the task force is due to the fact that the federal prison population has grown by a factor of eight since 1980, with 214,000 prisoners at the close of fiscal year 2014. While fiscal year 2014 saw the first reduction in the federal prison population in 34 years, the consequences of the unprecedented growth that predated that decline are both far-reaching and long-lasting.

“I tasked Secretary Wetzel with improving our state corrections agency,” said Gov. Corbett.  “He and the hard working men and women of the Department of Corrections have made significant changes that have resulted in Pennsylvania’s prison system experiencing its first reduction in its inmate population growth in more than 24 years.  In addition, his use of incentive-based contract language in the area of community corrections is beginning to show a reduction in offender recidivism.  It is an honor for Pennsylvania’s successes to be shared at the national level.”

To learn more about the task force, visit http://www.colsontaskforce.org

 

Media contact: Susan McNaughton, PA DOC, 717-728-4025

 

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