{"id":25656,"date":"2017-10-24T00:49:00","date_gmt":"2017-10-24T07:49:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spijue.wpengine.com\/news\/as-special-session-starts-house-puts-criminal-justice-bill-on-fast-track\/"},"modified":"2017-10-24T00:49:00","modified_gmt":"2017-10-24T07:49:00","slug":"as-special-session-starts-house-puts-criminal-justice-bill-on-fast-track","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/as-special-session-starts-house-puts-criminal-justice-bill-on-fast-track\/","title":{"rendered":"As special session starts, House puts criminal justice bill on fast track"},"content":{"rendered":"
It started slowly, but the fourth special session of the 30th Alaska Legislature appeared to be on a fast track by the end of its first day.<\/p>\n
Lawmakers in the House moved rapidly to advance a measure that aims to roll back a portion of last year’s criminal justice reform known Senate Bill 91.<\/p>\n
In a 25-12 vote<\/a>, the House advanced Senate Bill 54 to the House Judiciary Committee, which began taking public comment before the day ended.<\/p>\n Public comment on SB 54 will continue at 6 p.m. tonight in the Capitol.<\/p>\n “I think there’s an emphasis by the Legislature on getting SB 54 heard and passed as swiftly as we reasonably can,” Speaker of the House Bryce Edgmon, D-Dillingham, told the Empire.<\/p>\n As signed into law by Gov. Bill Walker in 2016<\/a>, SB 91 encouraged alternatives to jail — probation, electronic monitoring and drug treatment, for example — for nonviolent crime. The bill was intended to reduce the number of Alaskans who return to jail after being released once. In turn, that would reduce the chance that the state will need to build another prison, saving millions<\/a>.<\/p>\n SB 91 will not be fully implemented until next year, but Alaskans, particularly in Southcentral, say it has contributed to a surge in property crime. In a series of town hall meetings organized by lawmakers, Southcentral residents have clamored for passage of SB 54 or a complete repeal of SB 91.<\/p>\n In Juneau, the reaction<\/a> to SB 54 has been mixed.<\/a><\/p>\n Earlier this year, Sen. John Coghill, R-North Pole and the author of SB 91, introduced SB 54<\/a> to revise SB 91. Those revisions were recommended<\/a> by the Alaska Criminal Justice Commission, which spent years crafting guidelines that formed the backbone of SB 91.<\/p>\n