This is Today in America’s Prisons.

Confiscated Mail

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Telephonic Lockdowns

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No Work Programs

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Money Poured into Lobbying

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Solitary Confinement

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No Food

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Daily Violence

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Confiscated Mail - Telephonic Lockdowns - No Work Programs - Money Poured into Lobbying - Solitary Confinement - No Food - Daily Violence -

With American prisons remaining a source of revenue for the federal government, a hard look is needed as to how American prisoners are treated physically and mentally.

The Number of Prisons in the U.S. more than Tripled between 1970 and 2000, from 511 to nearly 1663.

The Low Cost of Private Prisons Make a Compelling Pecuniary Argument.

How do Private Prisons Cut Costs? Reducing Food Quantity & Quality.

  • When inmates speak up about their conditions, prisons are quick to enforce telephonic rules. Prisons consider phone calls to be a privilege, and so can curb telephonic access at any time. Before the 1980s, prisoners in federal facilities were commonly only allowed one personal phone call every three months. Today, phone calls may be restricted to a time length and phone calls usually cannot be made in succession. An exception is phone calls to an attorney. However, different prisons impose different conditions on telephonic lockdown. For example, some Texan prisons do not permit phone calls to inmates on treatment or work programs. In Utah however, 15-minute phone calls are regularly permitted. Federal courts have commonly cited the fact that, even when prisons deny phone privileges, the inmates are often still free to receive visits from people or send and receive letters, so their ability to communicate is not unreasonably restricted. In this way, federal courts allege that they are upholding the First Amendment Freedom of Speech for inmates. However, prison mail can be unduly delayed or confiscated without redress.

  • Prison mail can be unduly delayed or confiscated without redress. In 2021, dozens of prisoners complained that they were never receiving their original mail and just photocopies. Dozens of the Bureau of Prison's facilities have adopted practices of scanning mail and keeping the original in an effort to stop drugs from entering the facilities by being sprayed on mail. According to the Arizona State University, there is little evidence to support this claim and reports suggest that corrections officers are the main source of illegal drugs in prisons. Photocopies can be poorly done or blurry with pages missing, leaving inmates without a proper communication channel to the outside.

Prisoners Face Difficulty when Expressing Prison Conditions.

Keeping Prisoners Active Benefits Society as a Whole.

  • Keeping inmates active is an important component to their overall health. According to a 2017 survey by the Prison Policy Initiative (PPI), of the more than 2.2 million people incarcerated in state and federal prisons and local jails across the United States, 61 percent are employed in some way. Many of the items produced by the Federal Prison Industries workforce ("UNICOR") are purchased by the federal government, including the U.S. military. The federal Bureau of Prisons generated over $502.8 million in sales in fiscal year 2018. Since 2011, Congress also allowed the prison industry program to produce and sell millions of dollars’ worth of prisoner-manufactured goods to private companies.

  • Different private companies approach this labor force differently. In California, The Last Mile, a San Francisco-based nonprofit, is focused on curbing recidivism. The program allows inmate students to learn computer coding, helping them prepare for a 21st century workforce. Many prison graduates feel hopeful for the future by having the skills to code.

  • Large companies such as Victoria’s Secret, Wal-Mart and Whole Foods use prison labor in employment such as call centers. The federal Bureau of Prisons recognized the talent in their prisons and retooled employment programs via the Prison Industry Enhancement Certification Program (PIECP). PIECP permits prisoners to earn at least minimum wage for work done for large companies. Part of the prisoners' pay is seized to cover incarceration costs, along with any alimony, child support or court-ordered restitution they owe. Some is also placed in a savings account for prisoners’ use upon release.

  • A study conducted in the 1990s and early 2000s by the National Institute of Justice found that PIECP participants were twice as likely as other UNICOR-employed prisoners to find and hold steady employment upon release. As of 2017, however, just two UNICOR factories were participating in PIECP. So, despite demonstrated success, the federal Bureau of Prisons and privately run prisons choose not to enroll in such a work program.

By Sara Sass