Senator Cropsey asked and was granted unanimous consent to make a statement and moved that the statement be printed in the Journal.
The motion prevailed.
Senator Cropsey’s statement is as follows:
This is the conference report on the boot camp bill. The bill expands the eligibility for allowing repeat offenders to be placed in prisoner boot camp. The conference committee report in front of you reflects an agreement with the administration caused by, quite honestly, giving us a Michigan Department of Corrections budget with a large budget hole.
The Michigan Department of Corrections has promised, finally, after six years, to implement the Michigan Prisoner Reentry Initiative in boot camps, and that is in this bill. All of the research has shown that prisoner boot camps don’t work no matter what type of programming is used. Repeat offenders are probably the last prisoners you want in boot camp, but the Michigan Department of Corrections has insisted and so has the administration that this bill be passed. The only redeeming quality in the bill is the sunset of September 30, 2009, at which time all prison boot camps will be sunsetted. That is part of our agreement, and I am very publicly telling the administration that I expect this part of the agreement to be upheld.
Let me get it quite clear. When we are given a Michigan Department of Corrections budget next February for 2010, I do not expect it and it should not include boot camps. We have all had to face the consequences of an out-of-control department spending, and it has to stop. No more unbalanced budgets. No more fantasy budgets based on policies that don’t exist.
As of October 1, 2009, prisoner boot camps under this legislation will no longer exist in Michigan—prisoner boot camps in the Michigan Department of Corrections. So while I do not like expanding boot camps to repeat offenders, it does reflect an agreement I have with the administration.