Wednesday, December 31, 2014
The Prison State Of America
Prisons employ and
exploit the ideal worker. Prisoners do not receive benefits or
pensions. They are not paid overtime. They are forbidden to organize and
strike. They must show up on time. They are not paid for sick days or granted
vacations. They cannot formally complain about working conditions or safety
hazards. If they are disobedient, or attempt to protest their pitiful wages,
they lose their jobs and can be sent to isolation cells. The
roughly 1 million prisoners who work for corporations and government industries
in the American prison system are models for what the corporate state expects
us all to become. And corporations have no intention of permitting prison
reforms that would reduce the size of their bonded workforce. In fact, they are
seeking to replicate these conditions throughout the society.
States, in the name of
austerity, have stopped providing prisoners with essential items including
shoes, extra blankets and even toilet paper, while starting to charge them for
electricity and room and board. Most prisoners and the families that struggle
to support them are chronically short of money. Prisons are company towns.
Scrip, rather than money, was once paid to coal miners, and it could be used
only at the company store. Prisoners are in a similar condition. When they go
broke—and being broke is a frequent occurrence in prison—prisoners must take
out prison loans to pay for medications, legal and medical fees and basic
commissary items such as soap and deodorant. Debt peonage inside prison is as
prevalent as it is outside prison.
States impose an array of
fees on prisoners. For example, there is a 10 percent charge imposed by New
Jersey on every commissary purchase. Stamps have a 10 percent surcharge.
Prisoners must pay the state for a 15-minute deathbed visit to an immediate
family member or a 15-minute visit to a funeral home to view the deceased. New
Jersey, like most other states, forces a prisoner to reimburse the system for
overtime wages paid to the two guards who accompany him or her, plus mileage
cost. The charge can be as high as $945.04. It can take years to pay off a
visit with a dying father or mother.
Fines, often in the
thousands of dollars, are assessed against many prisoners when they are
sentenced. There
are 22 fines that can be imposed in New Jersey, including the Violent Crime
Compensation Assessment (VCCB), the Law Enforcement Officers Training &
Equipment Fund (LEOT) and Extradition Costs (EXTRA). The state takes a
percentage each month out of prison pay to pay down the fines, a process that
can take decades. If a prisoner who is fined $10,000 at sentencing must rely
solely on a prison salary he or she will owe about $4,000 after making payments
for 25 years. Prisoners can leave prison in debt to the state. And if they
cannot continue to make regular payments—difficult because of high
unemployment—they are sent back to prison. High recidivism is part of the
design.
Corporations have
privatized most of the prison functions once handled by governments. They run
prison commissaries and, since the prisoners have nowhere else to shop, often
jack up prices by as much as 100 percent. Corporations have taken
over the phone systems and charge exorbitant fees to prisoners and their
families. They grossly overcharge for money transfers from families to
prisoners. And these corporations, some of the nation’s largest, pay little
more than a dollar a day to prison laborers who work in for-profit prison
industries. Food and merchandise vendors, construction companies, laundry
services, uniforms companies, prison equipment vendors, cafeteria services,
manufacturers of pepper spray, body armor and the array of medieval instruments
used for the physical control of prisoners, and a host of other contractors
feed like jackals off prisons. Prisons, in America, are a hugely profitable
business.
Our prison-industrial
complex, which holds 2.3 million prisoners, or 25 percent of the world’s prison
population, makes money by keeping prisons full. It demands bodies,
regardless of color, gender or ethnicity. As the system drains the pool of
black bodies, it has begun to incarcerate others. Women—the fastest-growing
segment of the prison population—are swelling prisons, as are poor whites in
general, Hispanics and immigrants. Prisons are no longer a black-white issue.
Prisons are a grotesque manifestation of corporate capitalism. Slavery is legal
in prisons under the 13th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. It reads:
“Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as punishment for crime
whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United
States. …” And the massive U.S. prison industry functions like the forced labor
camps that have existed in all totalitarian states.
Corporate investors, who
have poured billions into the business of mass incarceration, expect long-term
returns. And they will get them. It is their lobbyists who write the draconian
laws that
demand absurdly long sentences, deny paroles, determine immigrant detention
laws and impose minimum-sentence and three-strikes-out laws (mandating life
sentences after three felony convictions). The politicians and the courts,
subservient to corporate power, can be counted on to protect corporate
interests.
Corrections Corporation of America (CCA), the
largest owner of for-profit prisons and immigration detention facilities in the
country, had revenues of $1.7 billion in 2013 and profits of $300 million. CCA
holds an average of 81,384 inmates in its facilities on any one day. Aramark
Holdings Corp., a Philadelphia-based company that contracts through Aramark
Correctional Services to provide food to 600 correctional institutions across
the United States, was acquired in 2007 for $8.3 billion by investors that
included Goldman Sachs.
The three top for-profit
prison corporations spent an estimated $45 million over a recent 10-year period
for lobbying that is keeping the prison business flush. The resource center In the Public Interest documented in its report “Criminal:
How Lockup Quotas and ‘Low-Crime Taxes’ Guarantee Profits for Private Prison
Corporations” that private prison companies often sign state contracts that
guarantee prison occupancy rates of 90 percent. If states fail to meet the
quota they have to pay the corporations for the empty beds.
CCA in 2011 gave $710,300 in political
contributions to candidates for federal or state office, political parties and
so-called 527 groups (PACs and super PACs), the American Civil Liberties Union
reported. The corporation also spent $1.07 million lobbying federal officials
plus undisclosed sums to lobby state officials, according to the ACLU.
The United States, from
1970 to 2005, increased its prison population by about 700 percent, according
to statistics gathered by the ACLU. The federal Bureau of Justice Statistics,
the ACLU report notes, says for-profit companies presently control about 18
percent of federal prisoners and 6.7 percent of all state prisoners. Private
prisons account for nearly all newly built prisons. And nearly half of all
immigrants detained by the federal government are shipped to for-profit
prisons, according to Detention Watch Network.
But corporate profit is
not limited to building and administering prisons. Whole industries now rely
almost exclusively on prison labor. Federal prisoners, who are
among the highest paid in the U.S. system, making as much as $1.25 an hour,
produce the military’s helmets, uniforms, pants, shirts, ammunition belts, ID
tags and tents. Prisoners work, often through subcontractors, for major
corporations such as Chevron, Bank of America, IBM, Motorola, Microsoft,
AT&T, Starbucks, Nintendo, Victoria’s Secret, J.C. Penney, Sears, Wal-Mart,
Kmart, Eddie Bauer, Wendy’s, Procter & Gamble, Johnson & Johnson, Fruit
of the Loom, Motorola, Caterpillar, Sara Lee, Quaker Oats, Mary Kay, Microsoft,
Texas Instruments, Dell, Honeywell, Hewlett-Packard, Nortel, Nordstrom’s,
Revlon, Macy’s, Pierre Cardin and Target. Prisoners in some states run dairy
farms, staff call centers, take hotel reservations or work in slaughterhouses.
And prisoners are used to carry out public services such as collecting highway
trash in states such as Ohio.
States, with shrinking
budgets, share in the corporate exploitation. They get kickbacks of as much as
40 percent from corporations that prey on prisoners. This kickback money is
often supposed to go into “inmate welfare funds,” but prisoners say they rarely
see any purchases made by the funds to improve life inside prison.
The wages paid to prisoners for labor inside
prisons have remained stagnant and in real terms have declined over the past
three decades. In New Jersey a prisoner made $1.20 for eight hours of work—yes,
eight hours of work—in 1980 and today makes $1.30 for a day’s labor. Prisoners
earn, on average, $28 a month. Those incarcerated in for-profit prisons earn as
little as 17 cents an hour.
However, items for sale in prison
commissaries have risen in price over the past two decades by as much as 100
percent. And new rules in some prisons, including those in New Jersey, prohibit
families to send packages to prisoners, forcing prisoners to rely exclusively
on prison vendors. This is as much a psychological blow as a material one; it
leaves families feeling powerless to help loved ones trapped in the system.
A bar of Dove soap in 1996 cost New Jersey
prisoners 97 cents. Today it costs $1.95, an increase of 101 percent. A tube of
Crest toothpaste cost $2.35 in 1996 and today costs $3.49, an increase of 48
percent. AA batteries have risen by 184 percent, and a stick of deodorant has
risen by 95 percent. The only two items I found that remained the same in price
from 1996 were frosted flake cereal and cups of noodles, but these items in
prisons have been switched from recognizable brand names to generic products.
The white Reebok shoes that most prisoners wear, shoes that lasts about six
months, costs about $45 a pair. Those who cannot afford the Reebok brand must
buy, for $20, shoddy shoes with soles that shred easily. In addition, prisoners
are charged for visits to the infirmary and the dentist and for medications.
Keefe Supply Co., which
runs commissaries for an estimated half a million prisoners in states including
Florida and Maryland, is notorious for price gouging. It sells a single No. 10
white envelope for 15 cents—$15 per 100 envelopes. The typical retail cost
outside prison for a box of 100 of these envelopes is $7. The company marks up
a 3-ounce packet of noodle soup, one of the most popular commissary items, to
45 cents from 26 cents.
Global Tel Link, a
private phone company, jacks up phone rates in New Jersey to 15 cents a minute, although some states, such
as New York, have relieved the economic load on families by reducing the charge
to 4 cents a minute. The Federal Communications Commission has determined that
a fair rate for a 15-minute interstate call by a prisoner is $1.80 for debit
and $2.10 for collect. The high phone rates imposed on prisoners, who do not
have a choice of carriers and must call either collect or by using debit
accounts that hold prepaid deposits made by them or their families, are
especially damaging to the 2 million children with a parent behind bars. The
phone is a lifeline for the children of the incarcerated.
Monopolistic telephone
contracts give to the states kickbacks amounting, on average, to 42
percent of gross revenues from prisoner phone calls, according to Prison Legal
News.
The companies with exclusive prison phone contracts not only charge higher
phone rates but add to the phone charges the cost of the kickbacks, called
“commissions” by state agencies, according to research conducted in 2011 by
John E. Dannenberg for Prison Legal News. Dannenberg found that the phone
market in state prison systems generates an estimated $362 million annually in
gross revenues for the states and costs prisoners’ families, who put money into
phone accounts, some $143 million a year.
When strong family ties
are retained, there are lower rates of recidivism and fewer parole violations.
But that is not what the corporate architects of prisons want: High recidivism, now at
over 60 percent, keeps the cages full. This is one reason, I suspect, why
prisons make visitations humiliating and difficult. It is not uncommon for
prisoners to tell their families—especially those that include small children
traumatized by the security screening, long waits, body searches, clanging
metal doors and verbal abuse by guards—not to visit. Prisoners with life
sentences frequently urge loved ones to sever all ties with them and consider
them as dead.
The rise of what Marie
Gottschalk, the author of “Caught: The Prison State and the Lockdown of
American Politics,” calls “the carceral state” is ominous. It will not be reformed
through elections or by appealing to political elites or the courts. Prisons
are not, finally, about race, although poor people of color suffer the most.
They are not even about being poor. They are prototypes for
the future. They are emblematic of the disempowerment and exploitation that
corporations seek to inflict on all workers. If corporate power continues to
disembowel the country, if it is not impeded by mass protests and revolt, life
outside prison will soon resemble life in prison.
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