2/16: Urban, rural areas battle over prison population count
NPR: Urban, rural areas battle over who gets to count prison population in census
Prison inmates are counted as residents of the prisons where they are locked up, which can inflate the population of mostly white, rural towns with prisons. Activists say counting the prisoners in the census unfairly shifts political and economic power away from the poor, innercity areas where most inmates came from.
As reported last week in The New York Times, a number of states, including Florida, are considering legislation requiring that prisoners be counted at their last known address — for purposes of reapportionment, a change that would likely favor larger and mostly Democratic cities.
However, Rep. William Lacy Clay (D-Missouri), who is chairman of the census subcommittee, said the 2010 census “will again be counting incarcerated people as residents of the rural, predominantly white communities that contain prisons.”
Also in the South:
ALABAMA: State Senate enters bingo battle -- to legalize or not
ARKANSAS: Gov. Beebe reports more than $1 million raised in January for campaign
FLORIDA: Editorial: Oil drilling could change Florida for the worse
GEORGIA: Gov. Perdue's plan to use lottery funds may be unconstitutional
KENTUCKY: New report shows Kentucky, Tennessee rank low in quality of life
LOUISIANA: Mardi Gras 2010 kicks off
MISSISSIPPI: State sees transition in farming from crops to tree farms
NORTH CAROLINA: Analysts say it'll be a tough election year for state Democrats
SOUTH CAROLINA: Naturalists worried about boom in feral hog population
TENNESSEE: Stimulus funds to pay for health information technology improvements
VIRGINIA: Lawmakers look to loosen firearm restrictions in state
If you have a news story about public policy to suggest, send an email to info@bettersouth.org
Labels: Beebe, bingo, farming, firearm, lottery, oil drilling, prison, stimulus

