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State Budget Battles Converge on Prison Labor Force
Prison isn't just about doing hard time. For many, it's about working full-time, too. These days, state governments seem ready to squeeze their captive workforces to plug budget gaps on the cheap.
Prisoners at work in Georgia. (RevolutionaryFrontlines.wordpress.com)
From the chain gang to the gulag, labor in the prison population predates our modern labor regulations and to this day, remains relatively untouched by the legal protections afforded to regular workers. So in most states, prison work has come to be seen as a hybrid between conscript labor and rehabilitation, putting otherwise “idle” inmates to work on farms, manufacturing plants, and janitorial jobs.
The New York Times reports that in many areas, laborers in prison uniforms are a growing presence at public work sites, suggesting that they're being used to alleviate fiscal pressures that are now eroding common public sector services:
[O]fficials are expanding the practice to combat cuts in federal financing and dwindling tax revenue, using prisoners to paint vehicles, clean courthouses, sweep campsites and perform many other services done before the recession by private contractors or government employees.
In New Jersey, inmates on roadkill patrol clean deer carcasses from highways. Georgia inmates tend municipal graveyards. In Ohio, they paint their own cells. In California, prison officials hope to expand existing programs, including one in which wet-suit-clad inmates repair leaky public water tanks. There are no figures on how many prisoners have been enrolled in new or expanded programs nationwide, but experts in criminal justice have taken note of the increase.
As we reported in December, prison labor conditions have sparked some noteworthy revolts. A wave of strikes rocked several prisons in Georgia late last year, touching off a national campaign for the dignified treatment of prison workers.
The uprisings shed light on how vulnerable inmates are when the prison-industrial complex operates not just as a warden and dictator but a boss as well, marshalling the labor of thousands with little oversight. The Georgia inmates drafted a list of grievances ranging from abusive treatment and work without wages.
The inmates' direct actions resonated with civil rights groups who have pointed out disturbing continuities between the era of slavery and the racialization of imprisonment, and by extension, the industries tied to it. The mass incarceration of black men, and their punitive deployment—explicitly sanctioned under the Constitution—in the dregs of industrial capitalism, speaks loud and clear to the theory of prison as America's “new Jim Crow.”
Allegations that prison guards severely beat an inmate protester in retaliation underscore the inequality endemic to this labor system, even though the programs are typically endorsed as a form of rehabilitation and self-help.
Of course, today's prison labor is more regulated and considerably less brutal than the post-Civil War convict-lease system—a regression to slavery disguised as a criminal penalty. (Some reforms were enacted during the Great Depression to prevent downward-spiraling competition between “free labor” and incarcerated workers.)
Yet the institutional parallels are striking. From the late-19th through the early 20th century, southern states, including Georgia, turned to prison labor as a release valve for dealing with fiscal crisis, and the white supremacist power structure, through “leases” with the private sector, enabled forced labor, torture and abuse on a massive scale.
How interesting, then, that in this latest economic crisis, states once again seem to be looking to prison as a convenient resource for carrying out various government services. As an inexpensive “public” labor source, a cash-strapped bureaucracy might see inmates as a convenient alternative to, say, real public workers. Particularly the kind of workers who vote, and who have collective bargaining rights, which tend to get in the way of budget deals.
Is there any way to get around the historically ingrained perverse incentives to exploit prison labor? A budding campaign in Canada could bridge the civil rights debate and the underlying labor struggle. In Vancouver, some prisoners could soon get a full-fledged union, potentially a watershed in protecting both inmates and blue-collar workers, reports the Canadian Press:
Their lawyer, Natalie Dunbar, said Friday organizers at Mountain Institution in Agassiz are trying to sign up members for ConFederation, Canadian Prisoners' Labour Union, Local 001.
A spokeswoman for the institution said administrators are moving very carefully because no penal institution in Canada has ever been confronted with the issue.
"It's a new element for us," assistant warden Brenda Lamm said. "We've never had inmates trying to organize a labour union before so that's why we're proceeding cautiously and thoughtfully."
Dunbar said there's a lack of resources at federal institutions to address issues that plague prison populations as a workforce, such as proper work boots and qualified first-aid personnel.
Such a social experiment probably won't be attempted in America's prison-industrial complex, which is one of the world's largest and deeply embedded with the profit interests of corporations and officials. Unionization alone would never cure the racial disparities and human rights abuses that plague the system.
But these are strange times. Inspired by the Wisconsin standoff, we see new labor solidarity movements popping up across the country, new momentum for public sector labor organizing, and rising political backlash against policies that degrade working people. Maybe the workers taking to the streets have some courage to share with their brothers and sisters trapped behind bars.
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12 Comments so far
Show AllAnything to avoid paying workers a decent wage. Only in America.
Government can use slave labor. It is exempt from slavery prohibitions.
Very nice piece Ms. Chen. If you happen to wander in today, thanks for the write up. An underreported topic to be sure.
Maybe the prisoners could organize into a union. Well, that will never happen because the guards and administrators are too good at keeping them in their "form gangs and oppose each other" mode, which keeps them from becoming a threat.
If the Bloods, Crips, Mexican Mafia, the Aryan Nation and all the rest could stop going after each other and team up, who knows what wonders could be accomplished.
13th Amendment:
Section 1. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.
Section 2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.
Slavery is not illegal in the USA!
"Dear Warden. You were right. Salvation lies within."
Andy Dufresne
The Shawshank Redemption (1994)
Question- why do they "work"? Are they somehow forced to, or is it voluntary?
If I was in the prison system, I would refuse to do ANYTHING along the line of a prison job. If it is forced, they would regret any assignment I was forced to do as it would be intentionally be done wrong.
Yeah, they'd probably try to beat me and all that, but I'd get them back with a shank eventually.
More likely than beat you they would put you in solitary confinement and treat you like Bradley Manning. Easy to think you'd "get them back with a shank" but those who try that are . . . frequently made profoundly uncomfortable, if they survive. I don't know if you've ever had occasion to talk to anyone who has ever done hard time but who isn't a true badass, but it ain't easy to refuse to cooperate with authorities who have complete control of you.
This review is from: Prison Nation: The Warehousing of America's Poor (Paperback)
The articles that comprise Prison Nation not only offer perspectives on prison life and the legal system, but make for a very in depth primer in American politics. A continuing thread through many of the works is an emotional and fact based analysis of how the U.S. legal system works against the poor and working classes, while generally ignoring or even rewarding the crimes of the upper classes and corporations, while corporate crime does far more economic and even physical damage (as in deaths due to workplace hazards and malpractice, for instance). George Winslow's article "Capital Crimes" lays out in plain terms the damage done by corporate crime, while giving the facts on how little our system does to stop it. Noam Chomsky's "Drug Policy as Social Control" is a very brief, but extremely inciteful look at the politics behind the "war on drugs". There are 3 essays contributed by Mumia Abu-Jamal, who is simply one of the most eloquent and powerful political writers of our day, free man or not. Other essays deal with the cultural effects and ethical implications of the "private prison" industry and the prison labor trade, and many other potent topics. Of course, many of us already know that around 85% of prisoners are locked up for non-violent offenses. Many of us are aware of police brutality in our own neighborhoods, of race and class profiling... but what do these things mean in the bigger picture of American ideology and U.S. culture. Prison Nation offers many valuable facts, insights and questions about these topics which are central to our society. Routledge has once again published another invaluable book that many publishers would not take a chance on. Their reputation in publishing is solid in many subjects and this book certainly lives up to their reputation. Highly recommended.
http://www.amazon.com/Prison-Nation-Warehousing-Americas-Poor/product-reviews/0415935385
Prisons are also being used to house the mentally ill. Courtesy of the PIC, prison industrial complex which with the christain Taliban have created their version of Sharia law for the USA. This is evidenced by the quadrupling of the prison population from 750,000 to 3,000,000 since 1980, courtesy of Reagan who had a vendetta against the mentally ill. One of his 1st acts of Calif., governor was to close all the States mental facilities, throwing the patients into the streets to fend for themselves. Their is huge bribery and corruption in prisons. The PIC creates laws to increase the prison population and then bribes the pretend christian Taliban fundamentalists to lobby legislatures to pass the laws to ensure an increase in the prison population. Recidivism of prisoners is assured as they are not provided with rehabilitation programs.
If you want a full time job, you have to do the time.
"America's prison-industrial complex, which is one of the world's largest..."
Actually, it IS the world's largest, by a longshot.
Nice summary, Ms. Chen, of an authoritarian system of violence, that is fully prepared to exercise control against anyone that opposes corporate power--even though many have complacently allowed it's malignant growth in the false assumption they were shielded from the violence inflicted on others in the name of "drug war" and "broken windows" theories.
Though I support the struggle of public sector unions against the forces of Koch industries, et al, we should remember how those same public sectors--corrections, police, social workers, "health" workers," lawyers, judges, ad nauseum--have profited handsomely from the immiseration of others, black, young, poor, addicted, homeless and mentally ill citizens drafted into the carceral gulag, and stigmatised for life.
Let's also remember how the same corporations eager to employ convict labor at pennies on the dollar are responsible for excluding them from employment the moment they are released into the lower echelons of the labor force, forcing them into recidivism and destroying their families, their communities, their lives.
A nod should go here to Michelle Alexander, author of "The New Jim Crow" who has provided much of the material that Ms Chen has set forth so concisely here.