Teny Oded Gross talks about locating a parole office in downtown Providence


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Photo courtesy of Ryan T. Conaty.
Photo courtesy of Ryan T. Conaty.

Teny Oded Gross, the executive director of the Institute for the Study and Practice of Nonviolence, works with people who are trying to turn their lives around after being in trouble with the law. And as such, he had some choice words for Angus Davis, Ed Achorn and others who don’t want the state to locate a parole office in downtown Providence. But his choice words were, to my mind, surprisingly balanced.

He said Davis, the Swipley CEO who ignited the debate, made some good points that may have been overshadowed by his use of the term “criminal convention centers.” He said it was “unfortunate” that the Providence Journal editorial chose to re-purpose that phrase rather than the more reasoned points in Davis’ letter. He also took issue with the ProJo headline: “Protect the downtown.”

He also said parolees may prefer to drive to their parole visits, and downtown isn’t the best place for that. And that the NetworkRI location on Reservoir Avenue may be a better locale considering all transportation options.

My favorite thing he said: “The business people are not leeches on our city and the poor who are being serviced by the government are not leeches either. We cannot step on each other.”

Listen to the entire podcast here:

 

Furor over Probation and Parole Offices Proves Need for Genuine Prison Reform


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angus davis
Angus Davis, CEO of Swipley, has asked the state not to locate a parole office in downtown Providence.

The response to a plan to move parole and probation offices to Downtown Providence has been a disappointing chapter in recent events. Angus Davis, four contenders for Democratic nominee, the Providence Chamber, and everyone else who took up the call against placing these offices in Downtown should be ashamed of themselves.

Davis’ intellectual dishonesty is especially disgusting in his use of the phrase “government-mandated criminal convention center” as though B&ECon14 and Larceny Conference 2015 will be renting space out at 40 Fountain St. with the intent of spreading best practices and instilling values. It’s representative of Davis’ clear disdain for our criminal justice system. Ostensibly, probation and parole offices are to check in on how criminal offenders are doing rehabilitating back into society. Davis views these offices as doing the opposite.

This view isn’t limited to Davis. It’s in everyone who thinks that as they walk along Fountain Street or walk by Kennedy Plaza (these are not the kind to wait for a bus in Kennedy Plaza) that they can spot a parolee or a person on probation. It’s in everyone who refuses to get out of their car in Providence because of its “high crime” (despite massive reduction in crime rates since the heyday of the “super criminal”). And its in every employer who views a criminal conviction as a scarlet letter to be carried around for the rest of one’s life.

Recently, the State of Rhode Island passed “Ban the Box” legislation that prevents employers from asking about criminal convictions on job applications (in interviews, employers are allowed to fire away). This was a positive first step aimed at dealing with the effects of our twisted prison system.

And make no mistake about it, our prison system is twisted. What was supposed to be a genuine reform from hangings, beatings, and mutilations to a reflective period has turned into a for-profit enterprise, complete with school-to-prison pipelines, mandatory minimum sentencing, three-strike laws, and a plethora of policies that add up to give the United States the highest rate of incarceration in the world; possibly our only rival for this position in North Korea. Even the most policed country in the world, Russia, still manages to come in many places below.

What’s on display in the reaction to this simple relocation is a classic example of Rhode Islanders hiding their heads in the sand when it comes to genuine problems in the state. If Davis was at all concerned about reducing the number of parolees and people on probation around his offices he would be calling for serious prison reform in the state of Rhode Island. Perhaps along a Scandinavian model. Instead Davis and his partners in opposition are perfectly fine with moving the location to Cranston (a proposition which I doubt Cranston residents and businesses are particularly in love with).

The implied threat, as always, is “I will take my ball and go play with it elsewhere” the classic employer flight threat that’s used to pressure government on everything from taxes, not enough parking, the education system, etc. And lawmakers listen.

I expect, given his propensity to kowtow to parochial interests, Governor Chafee will listen to Davis rather than his own agencies which oversee this population and have said that such offices are not the sites of dangerous criminal activity. Such a give-in will be another loss in a state which refuses to take serious action against the ills which plague our state; whether it’s lack of affordable housing, high unemployment (especially long-term unemployment), our incarceration and recidivism rates, etc. Focusing on all of these would save the State money and reinvigorate our economy. Instead we focus on ill-advised band-aids, half-measures and one-off deals: creating higher-risk casinos, giving away our limited land to the expensive and tax-free “meds and eds” which can only support a weak service economy, or paying $75 million for an unproven video game company.

I’d argue that there are those in state and local government who are willing to tackle the big issues, but given the cowardice in the vast majority of the Providence mayoral candidates in their handling of this issue, I don’t have much… hope.

Where Should Parole and Probation Offices Be Located?


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Downtown ProvidenceSo I understand that a number of people are upset about the plan to move some of the probation and parole offices to downtown.  This really came to my attention when on Facebook, Angus Davis posted the following:

Governor Lincoln Chafee plans to relocate a parole office serving over 1,500 convicted criminals to the heart of Providence, which my company and others are trying to revitalize. This is an inside deal, a no-bid crony contract that would triple costs to taxpayers and was rushed through the state property commission with no debate just before Christmas. My letter: http://ang.us/KhkkK8 Please share + call Governor, (401) 222-2080 to oppose turning Kennedy Plaza into a Criminal Convention Center. Many of us are working to move Providence forward – this sets us back.

While I appreciate the concern, I also want to raise a few questions to help people fully reflect on this matter.

  1. Where, ideally, should parole and probation offices be located?  It would seem to me they should be located near the central bus line, where people can most easily access them if they rely on public transportation.  While the offices in the Dix Building of the Pastore complex are fine and will continue to serve many ex-offenders, they are not very centrally located and are not as easily accessed by bus as the Providence downtown area is.
  2. Do Angus Davis and others who have businesses downtown realize that ex-offenders are already downtown?  Do they realize that many of them take the bus from Cranston and other outlying shelters to Providence and spend time there anyway?  Do they also realize that current offenders do landscaping and garbage collection, among other jobs, and are also frequently downtown?
  3. What would it be like if, instead of categorically rejecting ex-offenders in the community, employers like Angus Davis considered setting up employment opportunities for ex-offenders in their businesses?  They might find that some ex-offenders are quite employable and have a valuable contribution to make to society.

I welcome your feedback on this important matter.