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Flores, Dora <br />From: Karen Hernandez < <br />Sent: Monday, September 16, 2024 9:15 PM <br />To: eComment <br />Cc: Amezcua, Valerie; Bacerra, Phil; Phan, Thai; Penaloza, David; Lopez, Jessie; Hernandez, <br />Johnathan; Vazquez, Benjamin <br />Subject: Agenda Item 21: Oppose Resolution in Support of Prop 36 <br />Attention: This email originated from outside of City of Santa Ana. Use caution when opening attachments or links. <br />September 16, 2024 <br />Mayor Amezcua and City Councilmembers <br />20 Civic Center Plaza <br />Santa Ana, CA 92701 <br />ecomment(o)-santa-ana.org <br />Via Email <br />RE: OPPOSE ITEM 21: Resolution in Support of Proposition 36 <br />Dear Mayor Amezcua and City Councilmembers, <br />Decarcerate Orange County (formerly Transforming Justice Orange County) urges you to vote NO on <br />Item 21, the resolution supporting Proposition 36. Decarcerate Orange County is committed to reimagining <br />justice, safety, and accountability, through ending individual, collective, and systemic oppression by carceral <br />systems. Our work is centered around righting the social wrongs carried out by the carceral system through <br />social -systemic transformation, while at the same time working to meet the immediate needs of incarcerated <br />and system -impacted individuals and communities. We do this by working locally to build alternatives through <br />community engagement and mobilization; public education; public advocacy; and leadership development. <br />We, along with our community members, strongly believe that approving this resolution will have harmful <br />consequences for the City of Santa Ana's (City) most vulnerable communities and roll back years of progress <br />in criminal justice reform. Proposition 36's punitive approach will not only lead to increased incarceration but <br />will disproportionately affect communities of color and perpetuate racial inequities in our justice system. <br />Proposition 36, which seeks to undo the gains of Proposition 47, is a misguided measure that emphasizes <br />punishment over prevention. Proposition 47, passed by the voters in 2014, has saved the state over $800 <br />million, reduced racial disparities, and directed savings toward crucial services like drug treatment, mental <br />health care, and homelessness prevention. The City has directly benefited from Proposition 47's programs, <br />with organizations like Project Kinship and Neutral Ground providing essential re-entry services to help <br />residents successfully reintegrate into the community after incarceration. These services are critical to reducing <br />recidivism and supporting public safety. <br />By supporting Proposition 36, the City would be endorsing policies that take us back to the failed "tough on <br />crime" era. Proposition 36 will reinstate harsh penalties, increase the prison population, and worsen racial <br />disparities —without addressing the root causes of crime like poverty, mental health, and substance use. In the <br />City, we've seen firsthand the benefits of reform -focused policies, and we should be moving forward, not <br />backward. <br />Moreover, Proposition 36's provisions will be costly and ineffective. It will drain resources that could be better <br />spent on education, housing, job training, and other community -based services that prevent crime and uplift <br />