Cost Of Education Vs. Funding For Prison System In Alabama

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To Educate or To Reform How can the funding prisons be more important than the education children receive ? Among the state of Alabama and many other states worldwide have dire downfall in funds for in higher education, plus trying to make room in the budget for prison across systems Alabama. Alabama is not the only State (s) has been cutting funding for higher education over the past years. Since 2008 education have been cut about 20% for public universities have been cut about 20%, while in 1986 funding for prisons have jumped to almost 140% (Online Degrees.org, 2006-2016). In this paper I will discuss cost of education versus funding for prisons system in Alabama. As Politicians try to find ways to balance prisons versus to funding …show more content…

If many states would properly invest in opening schools, hire quality teachers, monitor school attendance, offer more after school programs, maintain low classroom sizes, education will be higher thus making crime low in poor cities. By making sure school-aged children are in school during school hours, it’s less likely these children will have time to commit crimes. To remove funding priorities, state policy-makers have to choose profitable criminal-justice policies and turn their attention to giving more tax dollars to educate our

children. For the fiscal year 2010 Alabama Department of Corrections (ALDOC) had $445.5 million in prison expenditures. However, the state also had $17 million in prison-related costs outside the

department’s budget. The total cost of Alabama’s prisons to incarcerate on an average daily population of 26,758 was therefore $462.5 million, of which 3.7 percent were costs outside the corrections budget. (The Price of Prisons-Alabama, 2012). To fund an inmate, Alabama ALDOC spends about $17,285 annually on just (1) …show more content…

The ETF funds education and /or education activities. The ETF also funds colleges and universities across Alabama. The main source of taxes for the Education Trust Fund (ETF) is income tax. The ETF budget then outlines how the money will be spent by making ETF budgets. Next, in August of the previous year many state agency heads, department head sends in their requests for funds to the Executive Budget Office (EBO). After the EBO gets the budget a budget hearing is held. EBO then looks at the requests, the projected revenue, and places the numbers into the Executive Budget. The Governor’s Office then sends it the Senate on the first or second day of the new legislative session. In cooperation and voting (Senate and the House of Representatives) must pass the budget in order for it to become the