Tide Turning for Sustainable Seafood
Worried about dwindling supplies of fish, negative effects on the coastal and ocean environments, and concerns about pesticides, sustainable seafood practices are gaining momentum in the United States.
A new study from UCLA reports California has saved about $800 million over the last five years by sentencing non-violent drug offenders to community-based drug treatment programs rather than prison.
When Californians passed by referendum proposition 36, which gave non-violent drug offenders a chance to enter drug rehab rather than serve jail time, many thought it would lead to a crime wave, including the Contra Costa Times editorial staff. Today they are encouraged by the numbers and are urging the Legislature to re-fund Prop. 36 before it expires this year. Worth Sharing agrees with their reasoning:
With California's prisons bursting at the seams, hardly able to accommodate all of the violent felons, Prop. 36 is a common sense way of relieving pressure on the criminal justice system… Even if only one in four non-violent offenders manages to turn his or her life around, that has a significant impact not only on the individuals, but on their families and, by extension, society as a whole. (Full Opinion here)
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