41 Monday, July 20, 2009 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@unich.edu ERIKA MAYER I Prison break JAMIE BLOCK EDITOR IN CHIEF ROBERT SOAVE MANAGING FDITOR RACHEL VAN GILDER FDITORIAI PAGF FDITOR Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. Obama goes back to college Congress should support plan to improve community colleges Community colleges are colleges, too. While it may be easy to forget that fact at a large research university, President Barack Obama recently announced a plan that recognizes the impor- tance of community colleges. He's proposing a 10-year, $12-billion invest- ment in community colleges to improve their ability to educate America's workforce. The plan, called the American Graduation Initiative, sends a message from the Obama administration that it hasn't forgotten about those for whom a bachelor's degree at a four-year university isn't a real- istic possibility. It's Congress's job to reinforce Obama's admirable com- mitment to community colleges by passing the initiative. At least 62 convicted but acci- dentally released sex offenders walked free on Michigan streets for days between May 22 and 24. Due to misclassifications dur- ing their release evaluations, the prisoners were released without enrollment in a parole program. Some of the prisoners may have been ready for release, but others may have been recommended for further observation before their release. Though it's being por- trayed as an innocent mistake, the accidental release of these prison- ers illustrates the danger of Gov. Jennifer Granholm's proposed early release program. To cut down inmate popula- tion, Granholm initiated a plan to release prisoners once their minimum sentence had been completed. While saving money is a laudable goal, if the actual result is the repeated bungling of pris- oner releases, this plan becomes a serious danger to the state's residents. When the Department of Corrections's incompetence allows a security breach like this, the safety of innocent, unknowing residents is at stake. The releases in question were the result of two psychologists misclassifying thesesexual pred- ators in a fourth category, instead of one of the three expected categories - parole, outpatient or inpatient. And while the sex offenders were returned to prison within a few days after their acci- dental release, it was clear that in the days between the events, no one in the Department of Cor- rections knew what was going on. When asked, officials gave vary- ing numbers for how many pris- oners had been released. Thesesexual predators were free for days. Though they were wearing electronic tethers that were being monitored, they were not enrolled in any sort of parole program. And as far as I know, a tether that alerts officials when a child molester approaches a child hasn't been invented yet. The released sex offenders weren't people convicted of some controversial statutory rape charg- es. They ranged from child molest- ers to rapists. And they walked freely down the streets for days. According to the Department of Corrections, these rapists and molesters didn't commit any addi- tional crimes while released. But it's unclear on what grounds this conclusion was reached. Less than I THUMBS UP Finally getting your driver's license at the age of 27 -- 1 years after most Americans. 40 percent of all rapes were report- ed in 2003, according to the U.S. Department of Justice, and this number is even lower for attempt- ed rapes. Less than 20 percent of molested adolescents tell an adult, accordingtothe 1995 National Sur- vey of Adolescents. If any of these scumbags tried to force themselves on someone else, chances are good the assault remains unreported. Victims of sexual assault are afraid of their attackers. And those brave enough to fight to have their attackers put in prison deserve the satisfaction of some sense of safety. There's even a website that allows victims in Michigan to track the status of their assailant. The dis- tress that the victims of the 62 released predators must have felt is unimaginable. Knowing there was nothing but an electronic tether between them and their worst nightmare could have had horrible psychological effects onthem. And that's not taking into account the possibility of new victims. tn 1995, astudyfrom theNation- al Survey of Adolescents found that 13 percentofgirls and 3.4 per- cent of boys had been molested. And about 17.6 percent of women have beensexuallyassaulted, with the percentage hovering between 20 and 25 for college co-eds, according to a 2006 Department of Justice survey. These numbers are staggering. The last thing this country needs is to see those numbers rise. And if "innocent mistakes" like this prison release start happening frequently, that is easily what could happen. Surprisingly, Republicans in the state House of Representa- tives seem to be the only ones making noise over this incident. They are calling for the elimina- tion of the program. But surely there should be more outrage over the release of at least 62 depraved men. If the released prisoners had been murderers, wouldn't there be more anger? People place their trust in the Department of Corrections to keep perverts behind bars. Thanks to the carelessness of two psychiatrists and the disor- ganization of the Michigan pris- on system, the department has failed. Until failures like this one are eliminated, Granholm's early release program has to be tabled. It's not worth the risk. Erika Mayer is the summer assistant editorial page editor. * THUMBS DOWN Starting the accident that melted and collapsed the 9 Mile Road bridge over 1-75. Obama announced the initia- tive on Tuesday at Macomb Com- munity College in the nearby Detroit suburb of Warren, a blue- collar town hit hard by the recent economic meltdown. Obama proposed a number of methods that would improve community colleges nationwide by helping them provide online courses and modernize facilities. The AGI pledges to make earning an asso- ciate's degree easier. It encourag- es merit-based scholarships and classes that work around full- time schedules. Obama's goal is an additional 5 million associate degrees by 2020. The AGI will be funded by an elimination of subsidies the federal government pays to banks that run student loan programs, which Obama proposed in April. Now it's Congress's turn to fol- low Obama's initiative and make it happen - because Obama was right when he said that jobs requiring a college degree would grow faster than jobs that don't. This is especially true for Michi- gan. As the state loses its manu- facturing base, its future will depend on job growth in fields that require college degrees. But getting a college degree to enter a new profession isn't easy for workers who've already been in the manufacturing workforce for years and can't afford to go to school full time. And it isn't easy for students whose fami- lies have been hit hard by the economic downturn and can't afford a four-year degree. With college tuition rising across the country, the need for quality community colleges is greater than ever. Community colleges could offer affordable school- ing for people who need it - and Obama's AGI could drastical- ly improve the quality of this affordable education. Community colleges provide essential educational oppor- tunities and ensure that our workforce can change with the demand for jobs. And improving the accessibility of community colleges will help this happen. Giving tools for community col- leges to design programs around work schedules and provide online courses will help students already in the workforce. The option to train for a job in a high- growth field while maintaining a full-time job will entice more to take advantage of this oppor- tunity. And since the federal government is paying for these improvements, community col- leges will be able to keep their tuition low - something that all universities need to do better. Community colleges provide an education for people who can't afford a four-year college education. Obama's new plan to bolster such important institu- tions could help bring the nation out of this economic slump, and Congress should ensure this becomes reality. Editorial Board Members: Raghu Kainkaryam, Sutha K Kanagasingam, Erika Mayer, Asa Smith, Brittany Smith, Vivian Wang, Patrick Zabawa