The Minnesota Department of Corrections will soon seek citizen help with deciding who gets out of prison and who remains locked up.
Because of a 2023 change by the Legislature, Corrections Commissioner Paul Schnell will no longer make release decisions on his own. Starting in July, a new citizen panel will decide which inmates serving life sentences are released and which stay in prison.
“This has been one of the most incredible experiences of this job, the parole responsibilities,” Schnell said. “It’s really brutally difficult, and yet I’ve met some of the most incredible people.”
The idea behind the change is to have a broader group of Minnesotans decide who is released rather than only the commissioner making the call. Schnell said the new approach will be more open and balanced, including appointees from both political parties. A simple majority of the panel will determine what happens with a release request.
Until 1982, the state Board of Corrections decided who was paroled. That board was abolished and the authority was vested in the commissioner.
When he was appointed by Walz five years ago, Schnell said he wasn’t initially aware that the commissioner made these decisions on his own.
“One of the things that the governor and I talked about was this is an incredible responsibility and perhaps this is one of those places where there should be a higher level of shared governance,” Schnell said.
Walz said Wednesday he supported the change as a way to bring in experts and depoliticize the process. He will appoint the members, but the legislative caucuses will make recommendations.