Saturday, September 23, 2006

Archives > Editorial

Print | E-mail | Comment (No comments posted.) | Rate | Text Size

The Hi-Desert Star's view: Law could put rural kids at risk


Published: Saturday, September 23, 2006 2:32 AM CDT
On ballots this Nov. 7, Proposition 83, called Jessica's Law, is a well-intentioned campaign to toughen punishments for and protect children from sex offenders.

But one provision, by protecting children who live in big cities, could endanger youth who live in less populated areas like the Hi-Desert.

If passed by voters, Prop 83 would ban all convicted sex offenders from living within 2,000 feet of schools or parks anywhere in California.

The bill also allows local governments to declare more locations off limits to sex offenders.


Jessica's Law will make it difficult for registered sex offenders to find homes in densely populated urban areas. A review of a map provided by state lawmakers reveals that offenders won't legally be able to live almost anywhere in San Francisco; most of urban Los Angeles will be off limits, too.

So where are they going to go?

It's likely more sex offenders will move to less populated rural areas, like the Morongo Basin. Here, it will be less easy to keep track of offenders. There are fewer law officers here and an area like the Basin does not have as many support resources such as job services and mental-health clinics to treat or monitor sex offenders.

State Sen. Dean Florez, whose district is in a mostly rural region of Central California, calls Prop 83 “predator dumping.”

He could be right.

Prop 83 contains some excellent provisions. It lengthens prison sentences and parole for violent sex offenders.


It would make possession of child pornography a felony, although Governor Schwarzenegger already has signed a law that does the same thing.

But it could also mean that rural children are endangered by an influx of sex offenders.

It looks likely that Jessica's Law is going to pass. Polls have found it to be popular among voters.

If it does become law, the state cannot be allowed to strand the Hi-Desert with scores of new residents with dark pasts.

The Hi-Desert already has too many sex offenders who are out of compliance with their registration - in other words, whose whereabouts are unknown by law enforcement.

The Megan's Law Web site indicates that of the sex offenders listed under that law, four in Yucca Valley, one in the Landers and Johnson Valley area, one in Morongo Valley and two in Twentynine Palms are missing. Officers don't know where they are. Eight may seem like a small number, but eight missing sex offenders are eight too many. What will happen if law officers must keep tabs on many new sex offenders forced into the area?

As it stands now, the Morongo Basin does not have the resources to cope with Prop 83. If - or when - it passes, the state and especially the bill's sponsors in the legislature must make sure our children are as safe as those in the big city.



  Next
  Reader's letter: Shakespeare, music are welcome

Article Rating

Current Rating: 0 of 0 votes!Rate File:

Reader Comments

The following are comments from the readers. In no way do they represent the view of hidesertstar.com.
You must register with a valid email to gain access to this site feature.

Already a Member?

Login Here:
*Member ID:
*Password:
Remember login?
(requires cookies)
  Forgot Your Password?
 

Become a Registered Member

Fill out the form below.

Do not use usernames or passwords from your financial accounts!

Note: Fields marked with an asterisk (*) are required!

*Create a Member ID:
*Choose a password:
*Re-enter password:
*E-mail Address:
*Year of Birth:
 

(children under 13 cannot register)

*First Name:
*Last Name:
*Zip Code:
Check here if you are currently a subscriber to one of our products

Review and Agree to the Terms of Service

To use this site, you must review and agree to the following Terms of Service:

Terms of Service - hidesertstar.com

-----------------------------

PLEASE READ THESE TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF USE CAREFULLY BEFORE USING THIS SITE.

Privacy Notice

The following guidelines apply for information collected from visitors to the Hi-Desert Star web site:

The Hi-Desert Star is committed to protecting your privacy. We believe you have a right to know what information we collect about you when you visit our web site, and how that information is used and safeguarded.

Your Personal Information

We collect personally identifiable information (name, e-mail address, etc.) and/or demographic data (ZIP code, gender, etc.) that you submit when you:

Register for our services

Complete a survey

Enter a contest, promotion, or sweepstakes

Order a subscription to our newspaper

Place a classified ad

Send us an e-mail

Submit reader opinions

We do not give or sell any personally identifiable information to advertisers or other outside parties. We may use this information to process and maintain your account, reply to your specific questions and requests, verify submitted editorial information (ie: wedding and birth announcements,) inform you of special offers from us, and compile aggregate demographic statistics about our users.

The Hi-Desert Star is not responsible for the policies or actions of third parties that may collect any information you disclose in the Opinions, Guest Book, Classifieds, Community Calendar, or other public forums on this site.

Our partners and other Internet sites and services that may be accessible through the Hi-Desert Star have separate data and privacy practices. These sites include, but are not limited to, TownNews.com and dotPhoto.com. Please contact those sites directly if you have questions about their privacy policies.

Children's Privacy

The Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) stipulates that Web site operators cannot knowingly collect personal information from children under age 13 without verifiable parental permission. While we offer information on our site that is appropriate for, available to, and useful to children, we do not seek children's participation in services that require registration.

You must be 18 years or older to participate in the following services:

Register for our services

Complete a survey (unless otherwise noted)

Enter a contest, promotion, or sweepstakes

Order a subscription to our newspaper

Place a classified ad

Submit reader opinions

Cookies and IP Addresses

We use cookies (small text files transferred from our Web site to your hard drive) to recognize repeat users, track content preferences and traffic patterns. Cookies do not damage files or give anyone access to your personally identifiable information. They simply provide us with information about how visitors are using Hi-Desert Star to help us improve and enhance the site. We may share aggregate site usage statistics and demographic information with third parties, but this information does not contain any personally identifiable information.

We do not use IP addresses to track use traffic patterns and content preference.

How to contact us

If you have any questions or comments regarding our privacy policy, please contact Jay Thomas at jthomas@hidesertstar.com

* I have read and agree to the Terms of Service.

 

 
Return to: Editorial « | Home « | Top of Page ^

Stocks