The Governor’s justice task force gives lawmakers a chance to address the scale of Oklahoma’s prison crisis

Criminal justice reform is paying dividends in Oklahoma. The single largest commutation in American history happened here in November. More than 400 Oklahomans were reunited with their families and communities, and the commutation is estimated to save taxpayers $11.9 million. These are significantly positive developments, but they represent the first steps in the long journey towards getting Oklahoma’s imprisonment rate closer to the national average

Building on the state’s recent momentum towards criminal justice reform, Gov. Kevin Stitt this spring created the criminal justice RESTORE Task Force to make recommendations that could be considered during the upcoming Legislative session. This task force has the potential to fundamentally alter Oklahoma’s justice system for the better and is expected to release its recommendations in January. The RESTORE task force could bring greater justice to the state’s prison system by strengthening investments in alternatives to incarceration and treatment, reducing fines and fees, lowering the impact of cash bail on the poorest Oklahomans, and creating a dedicated re-entry system. 

Treatment should be easier to access than prison

The Governor’s RESTORE task force must continue to encourage investments in treatment and alternatives to prison. This should begin by increasing access to prison diversions like mental health courts, drug courts, and other treatments. The majority of low-income, uninsured Oklahomans struggling with mental illness and substance addiction don’t get treatment. When these issues lead to a crisis many Oklahomans end up in jail. Too many Oklahomans can’t access treatment courts because District Attorneys, rather than mental health providers, are the gatekeepers. Increased access to addiction treatment is already happening in states like Texas. This treatment first model is both more cost-effective and fundamentally more just than incarceration.  Determining drug court access based on evidence-based, best practices would serve far more Oklahomans.

This task force should also advocate for more mental health funding alongside adequate funding of the State Question 781 fund. By statute, lawmakers are required to take the estimated incarceration cost savings from recent justice reforms and re-invest those dollars in community mental health care. So far, the Legislature has not funded this reinvestment process. Our prisons are filled with people suffering from the impacts of trauma and struggling with addiction. The majority of these individuals aren’t receiving the treatment they need in prison, and the waiting lists for public services in the outside world can be months long. Lawmakers should provide better funding for community mental health services that would help many defendants to avoid jail in the first place. The RESTORE Task Force must work to upend the state’s failed investment strategy — prisons over treatment — if they hope to get to the root of Oklahoma’s incarceration crisis. 

Money shouldn’t buy you better access to justice in Oklahoma

The RESTORE Task Force should recommend that legislators build on progress from the last session and reduce the impact of court fines and fees on the poorest Oklahomans. More than 80 percent of court funding in Oklahoma now comes from court fines and fees. Each year millions of dollars in fees are assessed against criminal defendants who are often unable to pay. As the graph below shows, between 2012 and 2018, this court-funding model led to more than $600 million in delinquent court debt. Critical court services are not being funded.  This economic system also harms the most vulnerable Oklahomans.

In Oklahoma, failing to pay court debt can cost someone their driver’s license or result in arrest. The resulting jail stay can cost someone their job, their home, and even custody of their children. Arrest warrants due to failure to pay are particularly prevalent in communities of color like North Tulsa, where judges issued more than 20,000 such warrants in 2017. The RESTORE Task Force should end these modern-day debtor’s prisons and ensure equal access to justice regardless of money. 

The task force should also recommend that every defendant in each county across the state gets a timely bail hearing with an individualized determination of their ability to pay. There are counties in Oklahoma where a defendant in a non-violent felony case sits in jail for an average of six months before trial simply because they can’t afford to buy their freedom from a bondsman. The task force should mandate automatic release for low-level misdemeanors unless a judge deems the defendant a flight risk or risk to public safety. Commissioners in Harris County, Texas, recently adopted a similar reform and the early results are promising. The bottom line is that Oklahomans don’t deserve less justice than people in other states simply because of their income.  

Oklahoma needs a dedicated re-entry system for those returning from prison 

The task force should recommend better investments in supervision and services for those exiting prison. For the past three years, the Oklahoma Department of Corrections budget has targeted less than a quarter of its funding on services for those exiting prison or put on probation or parole. The system is critically understaffed and under-resourced. There are only three permanent re-entry case managers for 22 Oklahoma Department of Corrections facilities, and they are expected to work with the thousands of people exiting state prisons annually. This fundamental lack of investment means that too many formerly incarcerated Oklahomans lack the support they need to succeed.

Oklahoma voters should be respected 

Oklahoma voters in 2016 sent clear messages by their overwhelming support of reclassifying low-level drug offenses to misdemeanors (SQ 780) and reinvesting resulting savings (SQ 781). In 2018, voters passed SQ 788, legalizing medical marijuana. Oklahomans want fewer people accused of low-level offenses in prison. The task force must build on these positive efforts and make these criminal justice changes more robust. Hopefully, the Governor’s RESTORE Task Force will help advise lawmakers about justice reforms that can build on the positive progress started by voters. 

[Image Credit: Derivative work MagentaGreen – This file was derived from: OklahomaStatePen.jpg by Charles Duggar, CC BY-SA 2.0]

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Damion served as the criminal justice policy analyst for the Oklahoma Policy Institute from July 2018 until June 2022. He grew up in Jackson, Mississippi and has lived in Oklahoma since the late 90s. Prior to joining OK Policy, he was an educator at Jenks Public Schools and the Oklahoma School for the Performing Arts. He’s written education and justice features as a contributing writer for the Tulsa Voice since 2016, and he was awarded best Education and General News Reporting features by the Society for Professional Journalists in 2017. Damion earned a Bachelor’s Degree from Oral Roberts University and started several voter registration and political advocacy initiatives during his time on campus. He lives in Tulsa with his wife Rachel.

4 thoughts on “The Governor’s justice task force gives lawmakers a chance to address the scale of Oklahoma’s prison crisis

  1. My name is Brent Riggs. I’m a pastor. I have prisoner friend in Oklahoma (Alex Moreno #217311 – JCCC). When he was 16, he robbed a van, and was surprised by two women, took them in the van out of the city limits, raped one of them twice, and let them go. Awful. Been in prison 27 years and deserved every year of it. But he was sentenced SEVEN CONSECUTIVE LIFE SENTENCES PLUS 10 YEARS. I won’t comment on what I think the motives of the judge were but leave it only to say that while the prisoner certainly deserved a just and harsh sentence, he has served 27 years – TWENTY SEVEN YEARS – for a crime he committed when he was sixteen years old. His sentence is absurdly extreme and far harsher than murderers, pedophiles, repeat offenders, serial adult rapists, etc… he has no family and no money. I’m a nobody with no money. I have no experience and no idea what if anything can be done. So all I know is to contact people. Can you help?

  2. Well now that we are a little further down the road, perhaps everyone can see this was not reform it was early campaigning. Reform efforts stalled after the task force released their statement. I am sure their were members of the task force with recommendations that were not brought forward due to leadership. I attempted to be heard on re-integration more than once. I contacted several people and only one person returned my call. I was able to express some ideas, but not like the people newly released. I’ve been out of prison since 2008. I have quite a bit more experience with re-integration than those newly released. Chip Keating said I could be heard in Lawton at the next meeting and gave me his e-mail, of course he never returned my e-mail. I know sometimes those who have never been in a system tend to believe in it for the most part, but once you have been in the system you have a new understanding of it. We need to follow evidence based treatment strategies. The Governor and Legislature doesn’t want to hear from someone who has really been through it. I have been brushed off by both parties they have their agendas. I suppose sometimes they forget, my fines are paid, I am done with all my time, and I vote. I think it is going to be a while before we see real reform, we have to hold our legislators accountable.

  3. Shade Hagan, seems to e that you seem to have some knowledge on Oklahoma system, maybe you can assist my wife and i with information. our son is in Lawton Correctional facility and we have attempted to communicate with them on regards to our sons release date. they are not able to give me a projected nor a calculated date. he has been there for 3 years and was sentenced to 15yrs how do we know when he is either going to drop levels and change prisons before going into re-intergration process .

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