Sen. Kamala Harris unveiled her expansive vision for Criminal Justice Reform on Monday. The senator's plan comes after receiving widespread criticism for her time as a prosecutor and California attorney general.

Harris discussed the plan as well as other issues in a video released by her campaign with Angela Rye, Phillip Atiba Goff, and Jamira Burley. Harris went into detail about how her plan would end federal mandatory minimums, increase federal funding to support police officers’ mental and physical health, and establish a national deadly force standard and bolster federal oversight of local police departments by collecting data from police shootings and other misconduct through a National Police Systems Review Board.

Harris's proposal gained the support of Goff, who is the president of the Center for Policing Equity, and was also consulted on the elements of the proposal. He told Huff Post the elements of the plan that allow for more data collection have him impressed.

“Open data are great,” Goff said. “But without analyses, the conversation can quickly regress to the same talking points as before. The emphasis on analyses is welcome.”

 

Harris's plan would also change the roles of prisons in the process, mandating that federal facilities provide educational and vocational training. They will also be required to allow mental health and addiction treatment to all in custody.

“Americans deserve a criminal justice system that focuses on fairness,  rehabilitation, and accountability to build trust and safe communities,” Harris said in a statement reported by Huffington Post. “We can end mass incarceration and combat the bias and racism that fuels it. We can ensure accountability for all parts of the system to build foundations of trust in our communities. We can stop profit from incarceration and stop criminalizing poverty. As president, I’ll fix this broken system to make it fairer and more accountable for communities across the country.”

The timing of the plan comes as each of the campaigns that qualified prepare for the third Democratic debate Sept. 12. Harris is currently standing in fourth place in the most recent ABC News poll, 20 points behind former Vice President Joe Biden who remains in the lead.