HR-7247-119
Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.
Sponsored by Emanuel Cleaver (D-MO)
What it does
This bill would direct the Attorney General to establish a federal grant program providing up to $10 million per year (through 2031) to states and territories to create or expand library services in correctional facilities. Eligible uses include hiring librarians, purchasing books and digital materials, offering education and job training programs, and building relationships with local public libraries. Grants would last up to six years, and grantees would be required to report annual performance data and could not charge incarcerated individuals fees for library access.
Who benefits
Incarcerated individuals in participating state and federal facilities, who would gain free access to books, digital resources, education, and job training. People recently released from prison, who may have improved employment prospects and lower recidivism rates. Families of incarcerated people, who could participate in family literacy activities during visits. Communities with high incarceration rates, which may see reduced crime if recidivism declines. Librarians and library staff, who would gain new employment opportunities. Local public libraries, which would receive new partnership and resource-sharing opportunities. Post-secondary educational organizations, which would gain access to prison library spaces for programming.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who fund the $10 million annual appropriation. States and territories that do not receive grants due to the competitive process or geographic prioritization requirements, despite having demonstrated need. Correctional facilities that currently use library budgets for other inmate services, which may face pressure to restructure spending. Private vendors currently providing limited library or educational services to prisons under contract, who may face displacement. Applicants in densely populated urban states may be disadvantaged by the geographic diversity requirement favoring rural and smaller-population jurisdictions.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that access to education and literacy programs in prison is one of the most evidence-backed tools for reducing recidivism — a RAND Corporation study found that incarcerated people who participate in educational programs are 43% less likely to return to prison. They contend that prison libraries directly advance public safety by preparing people for reintegration, reducing long-term incarceration costs that far exceed the $10 million annual appropriation, and addressing the reality that the majority of incarcerated individuals have less than a high school education.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that prison programming is a state responsibility under the Tenth Amendment and that a federal grant program adds bureaucratic overhead — reporting requirements, eligibility criteria, and Attorney General oversight — without guaranteeing that funds reach the facilities with the greatest need. They contend that $10 million spread across 50 states and territories is too small to produce measurable system-wide outcomes, and that the same funds directed to victims' services, law enforcement, or mental health diversion programs might produce greater public safety returns per dollar spent.