By Joe Robbat This year’s election is important. We need to reelect Rick Rundell and Lynn DeLisi to the Planning Board because, like their current board colleagues, they are committed to town planning — the board’s most important contribution to the town, in my view. Thoughtful, prescient land use recommendations to town meetings from Planning…
My Turn
My Turn: Many are disenfranchised at Town Meeting
By Carol DiGianni Since the pandemic is still clearly a hazard for those of us who are seniors, or otherwise incapacitated, it seems like an oversight not to have options for some form of remote voting on Town Meeting warrant articles. There is remote voting in the upcoming election — why not for those of…
My Turn: BLM movement must extend to prison reform
By Laura Berland
Nowhere are racial disparities more starkly on display than in our nation’s prison system. African-Americans are incarcerated in state prisons across the country at more than five times the rate of whites, and at least ten times the rate in five states.
If you think Massachusetts is an exception to this terrible reality, you would be mistaken. While black and brown people make up 20% of Massachusetts residents, they make up 55% of the state’s prison population. Over 1,000 men and women serve life without parole sentences in Massachusetts, the fifth-highest rate in the country. Our parole board is so dysfunctional that it has a backlog of over 250 commutation and pardon petitions that have not been acted on.
As the vast majority of people in prison are sentenced by the states rather than the federal government, it is imperative to direct reform efforts at the state level if we are serious about addressing this issue.
Data tracking of racial disparities in incarceration shows numerous ways that communities of color are disproportionally targeted. Blacks are nearly four times as likely to be arrested for drug possession despite overwhelming evidence that whites and blacks use drugs at roughly the same rates. Then there is the policing that targets specific areas either covertly or overtly as in the case of “stop and frisk.” These are just a couple of examples.
The negative impacts of incarceration extend well beyond the actual sentence and include limited job prospects, housing instability, family disruption, stigma, and disenfranchisement. Because of concentrations of poverty and imprisonment in certain areas, entire communities feel these negative impacts.
Crime has been steadily declining since 1990 but police department budgets keep growing, and the endless building of prisons and jails continues. There are so many vested interests in keeping and expanding the prison and jail population, from the food and phone vendors to the Correction Officers’ Union, that it has become a beast that continually needs to be fed.
The massive protests signal that the time has come for a different approach. As budget season is upon us, let’s turn the words “black lives matter” into meaningful action. Currently, there is a proposal in the Massachusetts legislature to build a $50 million women’s prison (roughly 500 women are currently incarcerated in Massachusetts) as well as regional lockup for pre-trial detainees.
Let’s demand that our state representatives and senators say no to more prisons and jails and increased policing and instead direct funding towards investment in communities of color through community-based organizations. Let’s seize the moment to put maximum effort towards true criminal “justice” reform legislation that begins to address the brutalization of people of color through mass incarceration.
Laura Berland
15 Hillside Rd., Lincoln
”My Turn” is a forum for Lincoln residents to offer their views on any subject of interest to other Lincolnites. Submissions must be signed with the writer’s name and street address and sent via email to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. Items will be edited for punctuation, spelling, style, etc., and will be published at the discretion of the editor. Submissions containing personal attacks, errors of fact, or other inappropriate material will not be published.
My Turn: DeLisi makes her case for reelection to Planning Board
(Editor’s note: DeLisi is one of three residents running for two seats on the Planning Board. The Lincoln Squirrel published statements by all three candidates in March and new statements from Rick Rundell and Bob Domnitz earlier this week. There will be an online forum for the candidates on June 11.) Dear neighbors, I am…
My Turn: Feinberg endorses Domnitz for Planning Board
Dear Lincolnites, It’s been a while since you heard from me. Some of you may remember me as the guy who wrote that weekly column in the Lincoln Journal about life and politics in Lincoln. Well, I’m ba-ack! At least for this one time, to wholeheartedly endorse Bob Domnitz for the Planning Board. Bob is…
“My Turn” replaces “Letters to the Editor”
To our readers: Starting today, the Lincoln Squirrel will run opinion pieces and letters under the banner of “My Turn.” This is more in line with how other newspapers and websites handle their “op ed” sections (opposite the editorial page, though the Squirrel does not feature editorials by editor/publisher Alice Waugh). In the past, we’ve…
Planning Board candidate forum on June 11
Lincoln resident Sharon Antia will host a forum on Zoom with the three Planning Board candidates running for two openings in the June 15 election on Thursday, June 11 at 7 p.m. If you have a question you’d like to ask one or more of the candidates, please email it to sharon.antia@gmail.com and she will compile…
My Turn: Robert Domnitz on why he’s running for Planning Board again
(Editor’s note: Following is a statement submitted to the Lincoln Squirrel by Robert Domnitz, who is running in the only contested race in this year’s local election. He was included in a roundup of Planning Board candidates published on March 5. In 2015, he narrowly lost a race for reelection to Gary Taylor.) By Robert…
My Turn: Minneapolis police conduct is offensive to the values of our department
(Editor’s note: This statement was published on the Lincoln Police Department’s Facebook page on May 29, 2020 and is reprinted here with permission.) By Kevin Kennedy To the Lincoln community: Today, I join my fellow Massachusetts Police Chiefs and law enforcement across the country in condemning the actions and inactions of the four Minneapolis police…