Which Way, L.A.?
Supreme Court Rules California-s Prisons Must Integrate
California-s prison system is the nation-s largest--and dangerously overcrowded. For 25 years, it-s had an unwritten policy of segregating incoming and transferring prisoners by race and ethnicity. While the Department of Corrections has defended the practice as a safety measure, the US Supreme Court now agrees with the Bush Administration that California-s prison system may be violating the Constitution. The decision-s being hailed as a victory for constitutional rights and denounced as a recipe for chaos and violence. We hear what-s in store for the future inside prison walls from Democrat Gloria Romero, Majority Leader of the State Senate, who-s conducted a series of public hearings on state prison conditions, the head of the California Correctional Peace Officers Association, and constitutional law expert Eugene Volokh. Reporter-s Notebook: California Gets Low Marks in Study of State Governments LA Times- Sacramento columnist George Skelton writes in today-s paper, -California government has hit rock bottom. State governments don-t get any worse-anywhere.- That-s his reading of a report on Governing by Congressional Quarterly, a rigorously nonpartisan magazine in Washington. The Co-Editor of the project is Richard Greene.
California-s prison system is the nation-s largest--and dangerously overcrowded. For 25 years, it-s had an unwritten policy of segregating incoming and transferring prisoners by race and ethnicity. While the Department of Corrections has defended the practice as a safety measure, the US Supreme Court now agrees with the Bush Administration that California-s prison system may be violating the Constitution. The decision-s being hailed as a victory for constitutional rights and denounced as a recipe for chaos and violence. We hear what-s in store for the future inside prison walls from Democrat Gloria Romero, Majority Leader of the State Senate, who-s conducted a series of public hearings on state prison conditions, the head of the California Correctional Peace Officers Association, and constitutional law expert Eugene Volokh.
California Gets Low Marks in Study of State Governments
LA Times- Sacramento columnist George Skelton writes in today-s paper, -California government has hit rock bottom. State governments don-t get any worse-anywhere.- That-s his reading of a report on Governing by Congressional Quarterly, a rigorously nonpartisan magazine in Washington. The Co-Editor of the project is Richard Greene.
US Supreme Court on Johnson v California
Skelton's LA Times column on California's State governments rating