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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Bush Signs into Law a Program That Gives Grants to Former Convicts
Title:US: Bush Signs into Law a Program That Gives Grants to Former Convicts
Published On:2008-04-10
Source:Washington Post (DC)
Fetched On:2008-04-10 18:04:41
BUSH SIGNS INTO LAW A PROGRAM THAT GIVES GRANTS TO FORMER CONVICTS

President Bush yesterday reached across traditional political
dividing lines to sign into law a broad program that provides federal
grants for assistance to ex-convicts, pointing to his own struggle
with alcohol addiction as an example of redemption.

The Second Chance Act represents a bit of accommodation by Bush
during his final months in office, even as his relations with
congressional Democrats continue to deteriorate over Iraq war policy,
housing assistance and, as of yesterday, an apparently doomed
Colombian trade agreement.

During a signing ceremony at the Eisenhower Executive Office
Building, the president was flanked by lawmakers from both parties,
including frequent foe John Conyers Jr. (D-Mich.), chairman of the
House Judiciary Committee, and Rep. Danny K. Davis (D-Ill.), a key
backer of the bill.

"We believe that even those who have struggled with a dark past can
find brighter days ahead," Bush said in his remarks, which included
numerous references to renewal and a brief mention of his own vow
years ago to quit drinking.

The new law has broad support among prisoner advocacy groups, liberal
criminal-justice organizations, and many Democrats who otherwise
differ with Bush or his policies. It grew out of at least five years
of negotiations between Democrats and Republicans, partly about the
participation of religious organizations in counseling financed by
Washington, according to administration officials, lawmakers and
others involved in the process.

The law would provide $326 million in grants to local governments and
nonprofit groups for various programs aimed at departing or former
convicts, including housing and medical assistance, drug treatment
and employment services. Appropriations for the grants still await
approval by Congress and Bush, however.

The compromise allows "faith-based" nonprofit groups to receive
grants but would not include direct participation by churches,
temples or other purely religious entities, officials said.

Davis, a member of the Congressional Black Caucus who has represented
his Chicago district since 1997, said a compromise was reached
because both Democrats and Republicans agree that more needs to be
done to accommodate the 650,000 people released from U.S. prisons and
jails each year.

"I've been talking to the president for a good little while about
this," Davis said. "We knew all along that conceptually, the White
House was in agreement, but we needed to work on the details and
technicalities."

Since his 2000 election campaign, Bush has billed himself as a
"compassionate conservative" and has made faith-based programs a
central part of his domestic policy agenda.

At the same time, the administration has advocated longer prison
sentences for many crimes over the last seven years. It also strongly
opposes new guidelines from the U.S. Sentencing Commission reducing
sentences for those convicted of crack-cocaine-related crimes, many
of whom were black and were given far longer prison terms than whites
convicted of using powder cocaine.

Current and former White House aides characterize Bush's approach as
a marriage of get-tough sentencing policies with sympathy for those
who have made mistakes, often because of alcohol or drug addiction.
James Towey, who served as Bush's director of faith-based initiatives
from 2002 to 2006, noted that aspects of the Second Chance Act are
based on pilot programs that Bush announced in 2004.

"He is deeply touched by these stories of transformation," said
Towey, now president of Saint Vincent College in Pennsylvania.

White House spokesman Tony Fratto compared Bush's support of the
Second Chance Act to administration initiatives to combat AIDS and
malaria in the developing world, efforts to combine a moral goal with
pragmatic concerns.

"It's the confluence of a belief in the power of redemption, which is
something that he feels strongly about, and the practical side of
it," Fratto said. "He doesn't believe our prisons should be crime factories."

Julie Stewart, president and founder of Families Against Mandatory
Minimums, said she supports the prisoner reentry initiative, but she
hopes that Bush will also begin focusing on easing sentencing
policies that have led to record incarceration rates.

"If we're concerned [about] people coming out of prison, maybe we
should think about how many people are going to prison in the first
place," Stewart said. "This is the back end of the problem. We need
to look at the front end."

At the end of yesterday's ceremony, Bush made an oblique reference to
his past drinking and said his sobriety is a "product of a
faith-based program," albeit not a government-sponsored one.

Bush has frequently referred to a drinking problem that he overcame
at age 40, but many details remain obscured. He has often used his
history with alcohol as a symbol of the ability to overcome mistakes
or hardship. "I quit drinking -- and it wasn't because of a
government program," Bush said. "It required a little more powerful
force than a government program, in my case."
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