Not if they have been detained because they had a second and perhaps spurious outstanding charge. That's an important factor to take into account. This bill has the potential to have a grossly disparate and unfair effect on those kinds of people. People who may be entirely innocent of one charge but who are detained on a second charge may get hammered at one for one through no fault of their own.
I don't think you can simply ignore that and ask me to agree with you that this can give you 1.5 to one. Yes, it can. The reality is that some of those people who get 1.5 to one might have been eligible for parole at one-third, or for the halfway house early release program at one-sixth in the federal system. So 1.5 just doesn't cut it, frankly, and if you read Professor Doob's calculations carefully, you'll see exactly why 1.5 for one is really the norm for people who do nothing towards rehabilitation.