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McDuffie’s FY17 Budget Unanimously Approved by Committee on the Judiciary

For Immediate Release: May 5, 2016

Contact: Dionne Calhoun, 202-297-0152, dcalhoun@dccouncil.us

(Washington, DC) – Today, the Committee on the Judiciary chaired by Councilmember Kenyan R. McDuffie (D-Ward 5), unanimously approved the Fiscal Year 2017 (FY 2017) budget. The Committee’s budget was developed after months of public and stakeholder engagement and research. At its core, the budget reflects a community- and victim-centered public health approach to the provision of public safety and social services. It supports evidence-based programs for District residents, and, importantly, it maintains or enhances current funding for our core public safety agencies and programs.

The Committee’s recommended budget includes the following:

Improves Public Safety and Justice Adds 60 new sworn officers and 16 new civilianized positions to the Metropolitan Police Department, utilizing savings from vacant civilian positions to:

Funds several provisions of the “Neighborhood Engagement Achieves Results Amendment Act of 2016”, including:

Reforms Fire and Emergency Medical Services Enacts significant fire and emergency medical services reforms by:

Safeguards Human Rights Supports the Office of Human Rights by increasing staffing to handle the case backlog for the Fair Criminal Record Screening Amendment Act of 2014, or “Ban the Box”.

Investment in New DC Correctional Facility CM McDuffie has allocated $5 million in 2022 to fund the design phase of a new correctional facility. This facility will be designed to not only replace the Central Detention Facility (CDF) and the Central Treatment Facility (CTF), but it is proposed to have the capacity to house all individuals convicted under the D.C. Code who currently get transferred to Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) facilities across the country. CDF and CTF are outdated and underutilized due to the steadily decreasing inmate population. In addition, there is a severe lack of proper programmatic space. Moreover, individuals transferred to BOP may be in facilities as distant as California, creating detachment from the community, resources, and network to which they will eventually return. This new facility will promote successful reentry for all incarcerated DC residents and as a result our returning citizens will be in the best position possible to maintain productive citizenship and avoid recidivating.

 

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