by Paul Kiefer
(This article was originally published by PubliCola and has been reprinted under an agreement)
On Wednesday afternoon, King County Executive Dow Constantine previewed a number of new programs he will propose as part of his 2021-2022 county budget plan next week, including alternatives to jail, community-based public safety alternatives, and divestments from the current criminal legal system. "We took up a simple refrain to guide our budget: divest, invest, and reimagine," Constantine said. "As we support community members in co-creating our shared future, we make an important down payment on building a strong, equitable, and racially just county."
Toward that end, Constantine proposed spending $6.2 million over the next two years on a new program called Restorative Community Pathways. According to Department of Public Defense Director Anita Khandelwal, the program would refer 800 juvenile offenders away from the criminal justice system per year and instead provide "community-based support, mentorship, and targeted interventions."
Those services would be provided largely by the three nonprofits involved in the program's development: Community Passageways, Creative Justice, and Choose 180, which also all contract with the City of Seattle for violence prevention or youth diversion programs. The initial $6.2 million investment would also fund support for victims of crimes and a new "restitution fund," which would cover court-mandated fines and financial obligations for juvenile offenders who can't afford them.
According to a press release from Constantine's office, the county hopes to get the program off the ground by 2022, and "eventually" fund it entirely through cost savings from the King County Superior Court, the Department of Public Defense, and the King County Prosecutor's Office.
Constantine's budget proposal also includes $2.7 million for restorative justice services for adults facing their first criminal charges for nonviolent crimes. According to King County Prosecutor's Office spokesman Casey McNerthey, the program would primarily serve those charged with property or low-level drug crimes, but could also include other nonviolent offenders. The adult program would rely on the same three nonprofit partners responsible for Restorative Community Pathways.
After the press conference, Community Passageways CEO Dominique Davis told PubliCola that his group would assume responsibility for felony diversion, while Creative Justice would manage other elements of both restorative justice programs. Community Passageways doesn't take referrals for anyone older than 27, but if the county decided to expand the program to serve people over 27, Davis is hopeful that other nonprofits could pitch in. "If in the first year we actually save the city and the county a lot of money [in court and incarceration costs], then we could tap groups like LEAD that already work with older adults," Davis said. "We really don't need to reinvent the wheel."
The proposed restorative justice programs would work in tandem with Constantine's vision of a $1.9 million decrease spending on the the county jail. "With fewer people in jail," Constantine said, "we will be able, in this biennium, to close one of the [12] floors of the downtown jail." Since the beginning of the year, the county has already reduced the jail's daily population from 1,900 to 1,300, and Constantine said he intends to continue that downward trend and increase the county's savings in future years.
Constantine also proposed transferring $4.6 million of the county's marijuana tax revenues from the sheriff's office to three new programs: one helping those with past marijuana convictions clear their records and settle unpaid court fines and restitution; a "youth marijuana prevention" and employment program run by the county's Department of Local Services in unincorporated King County; and a "community-centered advisory body" that would determine how the county spends marijuana tax revenue in the future.
The county also plans to suspend fare enforcement on King County Metro buses, even as they reinstate fares in October, and reassess the county's $4.7 million fare enforcement contract with the private company Securitas. Interim Metro general manager Terry White added that when fare enforcement resumes in 2021, Metro will "use non-fine alternative approaches" for those who can't afford to pay fare, ranging from community service to providing connections to social service agencies.
Constantine will present his budget to the King County Council, which has final say over most aspects of the proposal, on September 22.
Paul Faruq Kiefer is a journalist, historian, and born-and-bred Seattleite. He has published work with KUOW, North Carolina Public Radio, and The Progressive Magazine, and he is currently working on a podcast for KUAF in Fayetteville, Arkansas. He was recently hired on as the police accountability reporter for The C Is for Crank.
Featured image is attributed to King County Executive Dow Constantine under a Creative Commons 2.0 license.
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