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Sponsor:  The Barber Amendment ~ Federal Good Time Bill
  1. Signatures
    32,139 out of 100,000
    Petitioning
    1. The President of the United States (+ 2 others)
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      • The President of the United States
      • The U.S. Senate
      • The U.S. House of Representatives
  2. Created By
    FedCURE

Dear FedCURE Members, Supporters and Friends: Many thanks to the tens of thousands of American's who supported H.R. 1475 in the 111th Congress.  Although the bill did not pass, it is not the last hurrah for federal good time legislation.   FedCURE  announces The Sentencing Reform Act of 2011 and The Barber Amendment.   Please continue to have your friends sign the petition and contact your Congresspersons urging them to sponsor The Barber Amendment in 112th Congress.   GO:  http://www.fedcure.org/ContactCongressREP-SEN.shtml
SECOND LOOK:  Introducing The Sentencing Reform Act of 2011 ~ A Bill to establish a hybrid system of parole, increased good time allowances and reentry opportunities; repeal mandatory sentencing; and establish a 1 to 1 sentencing ratio for crack and powder cocaine for federal offenders.     FedCURE NEWS Special Video Presentation:  http://www.fedcure.org/SecondLook.shtml    BARBER Amendment:  A bill to amend Title 18 U.S.C. § 3624(b)(1) as follows:  by striking the number "54" in the first sentence as it appears and inserting in lieu thereof the number "128"; and in the same sentence, by striking "prisoner's term of imprisonment"  and inserting in lieu thereof  "sentence imposed" .   This Amendment is retroactive. [END]. Note:   The Barber Amendment  and The Sentencing Reform Act of 2011  have not been introduced.  FedCURE is seeking bipartisan support for the bills in the 112th Congress.   You can help make that happen! Action Alert:  Do your part.  Contact your Congressperson(s) and urge them to support this bill. Contact Congress:  http://www.fedcure.org/ContactCongressREP-SEN.shtml
Another thing you can do to help this cause is call the U.S. Capitol switchboard at 202-224-3121. You can call this number every day to voice your support for The Barber Amendment. Here is a message you can give them:    "I am calling to have you to introduce and cosponsor the Barber Amendment, because I am concerned that almost 211,000 people are "Endlessly" languishing in federal prisons in the U.S.  The average age is 38 years old. Most are serving long sentences, for a non-violent offense like marijuana; the majority of whom are first time offenders. There is no parole.   As last year's H.R. 1475 ~ Federal Prison Work Incentive Act (Winner of the "Top 10 Ideas for Change in America for 2010") was a bill to restore the former system of good time allowances toward service of Federal prison terms, that would increase good time allowances from 54 days per year to 120 days per year.  The Barber Amendment does the same thing and allows the Federal Bureau of Prisons to maintain correctional worker staffing and help relieve overcrowding of prisons.  Releasing 10% of the federal prison population pursuant to existing Federal Bureau of Prisons policy and procedures poses no risk to public safety."     To wit: Barber Amendment  - Title 18 U.S.C. § 3624(b)(1) is amended as follows:  by striking the number "54" in the first sentence as it appears and inserting in lieu thereof the number "128"; and in the same sentence, by striking "prisoner's term of imprisonment"  and inserting in lieu thereof  "term of sentence imposed" .  This bill is retroactive.  END. It's working!  The leak in the Wall Street Journal article  (27 Jan. 2011) was not rumor.  Albeit, the President's Budget for 2012 confirms that $48.8 million in offsets are included for a proposed legislative initiative that would allow additional Good Conduct Time for inmates, . . . Id., at:  p. 732, par. 5, it does not go far enough.  We are looking for $1.2 billion annually.  See: Federal Prison System  |  Federal Funds-2012:  at:  Page 731 thru 734  PDF here:  http://www.fedcure.org//documents/FederalPrisonSystem-FederalFunds-2012_Page731-734_cFedCURE2011.pdf  If you have any particular item or issue on the budget that you wish us to address, please let us know.    Pass It On!  . . .  Pass It On! Best Regards,  Mark Mark A. Varca, J.D., Chairman,
FedCURE
P. O. Box 15667
Plantation, Florida 33318-5667 FedCURE@FedCURE.org  For more discussions on The Barber Amendment goto:  CHANGE: http://www.change.org/ideas/view/increase_federal_good_time_allowances and POPVOX at:  https://www.popvox.com/orgs/fedcure   
              FedCURE NEWS Special Video Presentation SECOND LOOK  |  The Sentencing Reform Act of 2011 http://www.fedcure.org/SecondLook.shtml   Second * Look          

Why People Are Signing
Recent Signatures

Sponsor: The Barber Amendment ~ Federal Good Time Bill

Dear Members of the 112th Congress of the United States:

Attention Member:

Subject: The Barber Amendment - Increased Good Time Allowances.

I am asking you to please support The Barber Amendment which would amend Title 18 U.S.C. § 3624(b)(1) as follows: by striking the number "54" in the first sentence as it appears and inserting in lieu thereof the number "128"; and in the same sentence, by striking "prisoner's term of imprisonment" and inserting in lieu thereof "sentence imposed" . This bill is retroactive. [END]

Second Look: The Federal Bureau of Prisons is operating at 149% over capacity. A 10% reduction in the federal prison population would save taxpayers $1.2 billion dollars per year. Put that against the President's pay freeze for Federal employees that will save $28 billion over the next five years--the measure is a continuation of the administration’s Accountable Government Initiative, designed to cut cost and save taxpayer dollars.

Bipartisan Support: Republican's (www.RightOnCrime.com) and Democrat's (http://www.besmartoncrime.org) and members of Congress agree that the current prison system is way so ineffective and that we have been wrong on crime for the past 28 years. It has been a escalating burden on taxpayers who are footing the bill for more prisons. The penal model enacted by Public Law 98-473 (Sentencing Reform Act of 1984) of "incapacitation" in lieu of "rehabilitation and reentry" has failed miserably. We can and must do better.

Our economic crisis is due in part to the state of our judicial system where so many first time non violent offenders are given Draconian sentences and no means to redeem themselves. Once in the prison system, they have no reason to desire rehabilitation or work towards early release.

Americans want to see results, not stiffer sentences. We can change they way the judicial system enforces punishment and how inmates serve their time in a way that would benefit both the inmate and society. The Barber Amendment would benefit the following:

* The Barber Amendment allows the Federal Bureau of Prisons to maintain correctional worker staffing and help relieve overcrowding of prisons.

* The Federal Bureau of Prisons has a budget that exceeds $6.8 billion dollars a year. After the FBI, the BOP has the largest budget of any unit in the Department of Justice.

* The Barber Amendment saves taxpayers $1.2 billion dollars per year.

* Releasing 10% of the federal prison population pursuant to existing Federal Bureau of Prisons policy and procedures poses no risk to public safety.

* The Barber Amendment - Good Time Allowances rewards those inmates who have shown positive behavior.

* Although early release would not be guaranteed, it would allow a Second Chance to those who prove they are deserving of it.

* The cost to house an inmate for 12 months is almost $30,000.00. Costs rise significantly for all inmates over age 60 and nearly double or quadruple for inmates with medical issues.

* People in prison do not receive the same health care as free people and lengthy non-parolable sentences cause medical emergencies for those in facilities; and huge indigent health care costs upon release.

* The Federal Bureau of Prisons (FBOP) is the largest police force in the United States. The AFGE.org, the FBOP's labor union, is battling on the Hill to add 15,000 correctional officers because of safety concerns due to overcrowding and budget cuts. Both Republicans and Democrats agree that building additional bed space in prisons will not resolve the systemic issues of the prison system. We can not build our way out of this.

* The BOP has been triple bunking because of lack of bed space, which heightens tensions and makes it more dangerous for both staff and inmates.

Federal Sentencing data collected, post Sentencing Reform Act of 1984 (over 25 years) provides the gold standard of evidence on what works and what does not; and when is the proper time to release an offender from a sentence while posing no risk to public safety. I would also direct you to these facts:
http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=164544453571541

The government's experts on these issues all support reforms, as evidenced by the FedCURE NEWS Presentation on Second Look. Take the time to watch U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer (Video #1), U.S. Attorney General, Eric Holder (Video #2) and most of all, Patricia Cushwa, Commissioner of the United States Parole Commission (Video #11) and Harley G. Lappin, Director of the Federal Bureau of Prisons (Video #8). I would be remiss, however, if I did not strongly urge you to view all of the video's on "Panel Four: Good Time, Community Corrections and Re-Entry." See the exclusive videos here: http://www.fedcure.org/SecondLook.shtml

Since inmates "earned" the right to be in prison, why can't they also "earn" the right to be out?

The Barber Amendment of 2011 would greatly contribute to the healing of our economy and the healing of our nation. There are almost 211,000 people incarcerated in federal prison today and the majority of these are first time non violent offenders, whom under current Federal Bureau of Prisons and U.S. Probation Office procedures, can be safely released via increased good time allowances, with no threat to public safety.

Accordingly, I urge you, in the most strongest terms, to please support The Barber Amendment.

Sincerely Yours,

[Your name]