S-4320-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.
Sponsored by Adam Schiff (D-CA)
What it does
This bill would direct the Attorney General to create a federal grant program providing up to $10 million per year (fiscal years 2026–2031) to states and territories for establishing or expanding prison libraries. Eligible grantees would submit plans demonstrating need and outlining how funds would be used for library services, educational programming, digital access, and reintegration activities. Grants would last up to one year and could be renewed annually for a maximum of six years, with grantees required to submit annual performance and expenditure reports.
Who benefits
Incarcerated individuals who would gain access to books, computers, internet, educational programs, job training, and other library services at no cost. People recently released from prison who may have improved literacy, job skills, and civic knowledge due to programming. Families of incarcerated individuals who could participate in family literacy activities during visits. Qualified librarians and library staff who would be hired under the program. State and territorial correctional systems that would receive federal funding to offset library costs. Local public libraries that may build partnerships and interlibrary loan arrangements with prison libraries.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who would fund the $60 million authorization over six years. States and territories that do not receive grants due to the competitive process or geographic prioritization requirements. Correctional facilities that currently charge fees for library or educational materials, which would be prohibited under the bill. Vendors or contractors currently providing paid library or educational services to prisons who may face displacement. Applicants that lack existing physical library infrastructure may be disadvantaged in the competitive grant process despite having high need.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that access to education and literacy programming in prison is one of the most evidence-backed tools for reducing recidivism — a RAND Corporation study found that incarcerated individuals who participated in educational programs were 43% less likely to return to prison. They contend that the bill's broad menu of allowable uses, from digital literacy to career readiness to restorative justice, addresses the full range of barriers to reintegration, and that the $60 million six-year authorization is a modest federal outlay relative to the estimated $35,000+ annual cost of incarcerating a single individual.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that prison library programming, however beneficial, is a state and local responsibility and that a new federal grant program adds bureaucratic overhead — application requirements, reporting mandates, and Attorney General oversight — that may consume resources better spent on direct services. They contend that the bill's broad list of 24 allowable uses, including internet access, artistic programming, and cultural exchange events, may be difficult to administer consistently across facilities with varying security levels, and that without stronger outcome accountability, grants could fund low-impact activities with limited measurable effect on recidivism.