President Barack Obama said
Monday that he hopes his legacy will include sparking a new discussion on
solving issues of racial inequity, including those that warp the criminal
justice system and that his successor will pick up where he left off.
One of the things that I've
consistently said as president is that I'm the president of all people. I am
very proud that my presidency can help to galvanize and mobilize America on behalf of issues of racial disparity
and racial injustice, Obama told NBC Nightly News anchor Lester Holt during a
visit Monday to Newark , New Jersey , to highlight efforts to help
former inmates return to society.
Obama has used an increasing
amount of his second term to talk candidly about the troubled relationship
between law enforcement and minority communities, part of a national debate
that was sparked by the killings of young black men by white police officers.
Pretty much up and down the line,
what we see is disparities in how white, black, Hispanic suspects are treated,
[with] higher arrest rates, tougher sentencing, longer sentences, Obama said.
Where it's happening, you can't
always isolate within the system, he said. There may be subtle biases that take
place. There may be predispositions that end up resulting in these disparities.
But we know they're happening.
His stop in Newark was part of a tour of places that
highlight points in the criminal justice system in need of reform. In recent
months he has touted community policing work in Camden ,
New Jersey , visited a federal prison in Oklahoma and traveled to West Virginia to talk about the rise in
heroin abuse.
The point is to push for reforms
that will make the U.S.
justice system — which holds 2.2 million people in prisons and jails at a cost
of $80 billion a year — more fair and less costly.
In Newark , Obama focused on efforts to ease
former inmates' transition back into society, a process known as re-entry, in
which an estimated 600,000 people return from prison every year. Obama visited
Integrity House, a renowned residential drug-treatment clinic, and took part in
a roundtable on criminal justice reform at Rutgers
University at Newark .
Speaking after the Rutgers-Newark
event, Obama said he'd been inspired by the stories of former convicts and drug
addicts working to turn their lives around and by the communities of
supporters, many of them working within federally funded programs, who are
helping them.
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When you meet folks who are
taking that step to beat addiction and overcoming great odds and you see what
they have already accomplished and what they are going to accomplish in the
future, you cannot help but feel hopeful, he said.
Obama also announced two
initiatives that he said would move re-entry efforts forward. One provides a
new set of grants to fund education, job training, legal help and children's
services for former prisoners. The second expands to federal agencies the
movement to ban the box — to delay the point in a job application when a felon
is asked his or her criminal history.
The president acknowledged that
the steps were small. But he said he hoped they would help build momentum for
reform.
He pointed out that more than 70
million Americans have a criminal record — which works out to about 1 of every
3 who are of working age.
That means millions of Americans
have difficulty getting their foot in the door to try to get a job, much less
actually hang on to that job, Obama said. That's bad, not only for individuals,
but it's bad for our economy and bad for young people who need more role models
who are gainfully employed.
And it will have the long-term
goal of reducing crime, Obama said.
The goal is to prevent crime, to
make sure that folks are fairly punished when they break the law, he said. But
the ultimate goal is to make sure folks are law-abiding, self-sufficient, good
citizens.
Everything we do should be
designed toward that goal. And if we're doing a good job there, then crime will
go down, and it will stay down, he said. That's our goal, that everyone has a
chance to contribute.
Obama was talking about people
like Terry Williams, 23, who ended up at Integrity House after entering a
jail-diversion program following a drug-distribution arrest. Had he not
accepted the offer, he would have faced more than four years in prison, he told
Holt in an interview before the president's visit.
For the first time in his life,
Williams said, he is proving that he is capable of changing. He doesn't plan on
blowing it.
I realize this is a one-shot
deal, Williams said. This is now or never for me, honestly, because I've been
down the road before. (Nbc news)
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