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New York Should Make Milk, Not Prisons
Casimer Trybuskiewicz has been a dairy farmer his whole life, and his father before him was, too. He runs Casey Dairy Farm with his family in Attica, N.Y., a small town about 30 miles east of Buffalo. A short drive from Casey Dairy and its 45 cows are two prisons.
As a resident of New York City, I can help Attica’s economy in two ways: either by buying milk from Casey Dairy, or getting locked up.
Cows graze just outside the minimum security prison Camp Pharsilia in Chenango County, which closed in 2009. The advocacy group Milk Not Jails hopes that dairy farming can replace the prison business as an economic engine in upstate New York. Photo by Lauren MelodiaFor decades, New York State policy makers counted on a lot of city residents getting arrested and sent to rural prisons. Afraid that farm jobs were forever lost, they staked the upstate economy on incarceration. State Sen. Betty Little put it this way: “The area I represent is northern New York, it’s very rural, and we built an economy around these [prison] facilities.”
Today, with fewer people incarcerated and New York’s farms showing signs of a resurgence, the economic picture is starting to change.
Milk is poised to be a strong jobs generator for rural New York. Dairy accounts for over half of New York’s agricultural receipts, and the state is one of the top-five producers of milk, cottage cheese and sour cream, according to the New York Farm Bureau. A recent boom in Greek yogurt consumption will also benefit New York, with two of its largest producers, Chobani and Fage, based here.
So dairy farming seems to be making a comeback, albeit an uneven one. After three years of a steady or increasing number of farms in New York, the number dropped in 2010. With many farms forgoing needed improvements or selling parcels of land to make ends meet, there is room for the government to spend money saved on corrections to promote dairy.
We can spend the money we save by closing more prisons. In a trend reversing the explosive 500 percent rise in people incarcerated between 1970 and 2000, the last decade has seen New York State’s prison population decrease by 22 percent. Gov. Andrew Cuomo shuttered seven prisons in 2011. That is a huge savings for all New Yorkers during these tight budgetary times. $184 million, to be exact. There are still more prisons than we need, and we still have a long way to go to get to our pre-1970 levels, but the trend is encouraging.
Milk Not Jails is building an economic alternative to the prison industry. We are a dairy marketing and distribution co-operative and we are a political campaign growing the alliance between criminal justice reformers and dairy farmers.
In May, we are launching a new line of dairy products in New York City. We will be selling milk, yogurt and butter from local, family-owned farms that have signed on to our political agenda of fewer prisons and more farms. Our distribution and marketing cooperative is worker-owned and, come May, will be staffed by formerly incarcerated drivers and distribution coordinators.
The products will be available first through CSAs (community supported agriculture), and then at coffee shops and day care centers. We’re talking to about 30 CSAs from across the city, mostly Brooklyn and Manhattan, and will finalize our deals with them before the CSA season starts in May.
We exist to encourage New York’s economic move away from the false promise of incarceration and towards the healthful and mutually beneficial promise of farms. We push our state elected officials to increase the amount of New York milk and food in our schools, reform parole policy, end dairy-industry monopolies and stop marijuana arrests that target blacks and Latinos.
We are doing this work to correct decisions made over the last four decades. Starting in the 1970s, prison boosters and some rural legislators said correctional officer jobs, construction jobs and government spending related to new prisons would make correctional facilities an economic boon for rural towns like Attica, where Casey Dairy is located.
The state budget reflected this boosterism. New York built 52 new prisons between 1970 and 2000, and, due mostly to tough new drug sentencing laws, the state’s prison population exploded during that time. The long-term infrastructure costs and stigma of hosting a prison, however, meant that the benefits never materialized for small towns.
Each dollar our state spent imprisoning people during the last 40 years was a dollar it could have given to the farm next door. As a result, dairy farmers suffered. Nationally, there were 650,000 dairy farms in 1970 and today there are only 54,000. Encouraging dairy growth is necessary for rural New York.
It is true that closing prisons will mean lost jobs for correctional officers, people the dairy farmer Casimer Trybuskiewicz knows as neighbors and former schoolmates.
“I went to school in Attica,” he said. “So, of course, the people I meet and my neighbors are people who work there.”
But while closing Attica Prison and Wyoming Correctional Facility might increase unemployment in the area, that does not justify locking so many people up.
“I hope for some kind of prison reform. To throw these young people in jail for 20 to 25 years for things like pot possession,” said Trybuskiewicz. ”It doesn’t seem cost efficient. Maybe you could achieve the same ends a different way.”
Cuomo agrees. He has stated in each of his State of the State addresses that, “an incarceration program is not a jobs program.”
Money into the dairy farms multiplies into other sectors in a way that prison spending does not. Dairy processing and distribution creates jobs, and small towns known for farm-fresh butter and milk attract more tourists than being known for caging people.
Milk and jails aren’t just connected by the state budget and by geographic proximity, of course. People who live in cities drink milk. In some neighborhoods it’s easier to get milk duds than local milk. Milk Not Jails is trying to change that.
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15 Comments so far
Show AllNY is lucky if it's prison costs only went up by 500% from 1970-2000. Here is Colorado, we privatized prisons back in the early 80's, and since then, out costs have gone up by 1100% Back before these "savings" from privatization, we spent an average of $70 million per year on prisons, probation, the whole deal. Now, thanks to the privatization savings, we spend $770 million per year. We spend the same just on cannabis law as we used to for the entire game. Welcome to the world of privatized SAVINGS!
ANYONE who votes to make money by locking up their fellow citizens should be the FIRST ones locked up. This is the most disgusting, perverse approach to having a society I've ever run across. To hell with prison privatization, and to hell with privatization in the first place. Unless you want to make rich people even richer at your own expense, don't fall for this crap. It's nothing but an attempt to steal even more of your money and give it to the already too damned rich. It's NEVER been anything more than that.
Do you have figures on the cost per prisober before and after privatization?
That would better give an idea of how the Private susyem is looting the taxpayer.
Same could be said for food not bombs.
Same could be said about GMOs and development based on massive monoculture.
Bless these young folks!!
Please meet an up and coming colleague: A 10 yr old student named Cole who took on KFC for sourcing paper products from North Carolina deforestation:
http://www.storyofstuff.org/2012/02/22/kid-versus-kfc/
You guys make my day - actually much more than that, you should know what a profound joy in life you are these days for this old gray hair!!! And I'd wager I'm not alone!
in amerika there is no more industry - its been sent to china and mexico
so the prison industrial complex has grown as a kind of new industry
run by private corporations, what else is new
some stats:
number of prisoners by nation" - the top ten
# 1 United States: 2,019,234 prisoners
# 2 China: 1,549,000 prisoners
# 3 Russia: 846,967 prisoners
# 4 India: 313,635 prisoners
# 5 Brazil: 308,304 prisoners
# 6 Thailand: 213,815 prisoners
# 7 Ukraine: 198,386 prisoners
# 8 South Africa: 181,944 prisoners
# 9 Mexico: 172,888 prisoners
# 10 Iran: 163,526 prisoners
http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cri_pri-crime-prisoners
we're number 1, we're number 1, we're number 1,
yeah baby
one of the main functions of the pic is to cull the black population in amerika - a new form of eugenics
"About 10.4% of the entire African-American male population in the United States aged 25 to 29 was incarcerated, by far the largest racial or ethnic group—by comparison, 2.4% of Hispanic men and 1.2% of white men in that same age group were incarcerated. According to a report by the Justice Policy Institute in 2002, the number of black men in prison has grown to five times the rate it was twenty years ago. Today, more African-American men are in jail than in college. In 2000 there were 791,600 black men in prison and 603,032 enrolled in college. In 1980, there were 143,000 black men in prison and 463,700 enrolled in college."
Read more: Prison Population Exceeds Two Million — Infoplease.com http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0881455.html#ixzz1nPvc3wma
"A new American slave trade is booming, warn prison activists, following the release of a report that again outlines outrageous numbers of young Black men in prison and increasing numbers of adults undergoing incarceration. That slave trade is connected to money states spend to keep people locked up, profits made through cheap prison labor and for-profit prisons,"
http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0881455.html
some more stats:
'State…Black Population…Black Prison Pop.
Georgia 29% -- 64%
Ohio 12% -- 52%
Iowa 2% -- 24%
Minnesota 3% -- 37%
Wisconsin 6% -- 48%
Illinois 15% -- 65%
Missouri 11% -- 45%
Arkansas 16% -- 52%
Louisiana 33% -- 76%
Mississippi 36% -- 75%
Alabama 26% -- 65%
Tennessee 16% -- 53%
Kentucky 7% -- 36%
Indiana 8% -- 42%
Michigan 14% -- 55%
i could go on...but you get the picture
iowa - 2% black = 24% of prison population
owww!!!!!!
the new eugenics, lock up the black boys and make some money to boot
god bless amerika
Michelle Alexander makes the case quite well in The New Jim Crow. CD ran an article of hers a while back if anyone wants to look it up.
Thank you Elizabeth H for mentioning Michelle Alexander's article.
"The New Jim Crow: How the War on Drugs Gave Birth to a Permanent American Undercaste" by Michelle Alexander,
Article URL: www.commondreams.org/view/2010/03/08-6
Here's a link to Michelle Alexander speaking about the book at Riverside Church here in New York City:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4BSwEYyFu2E
For anyone who is interested, the book is worth the time -- if you have the time.
.
Thanks Kay Johnson for the link.
Michelle Alexander's speech is about 53 minutes long, but worth a listen.
This article doesn't discuss the extent to which the dairy industry is subsidized by state and federal governments currently, or the costs and benefits between dairy and soy-based products.
Decriminalize drugs/prostitution and other ills and start collecting the taxes. Locking up people does not cure the problem. Very few if any convicts have had a pleasant stay in a State or Federal Prison.
Prisons should be only used to house the really violent offenders who commit the
really heinous crimes especially crimes against children or women.
The biggest problem is wrongfully convicted citizens who have spent years incarcerated yet are completely innocent. As far as milk goes I am no expert but maybe education and job training would be a better solution. Recidivism is very high when an unskilled convict is released.
Also I think a good source of information and skills are with the Correction Officers who have to spend a lot of hours just trying to do a job and stay alive. I am quiet sure that these men and women would better be served and safer if they had a smaller prison population to deal with.
You don't get it. Doing something besides imprisoning people and killing them and throwing them in the streets takes talent, humanity, and thought. You can't expect these people to do something to help people when there is so much money to be made by simply abusing people like animals, tricking them into signing something you can use to rob them blind,,or, of course, blowing their brains out. Especially, when the powers that be can't throw enough money at these no talent losers making boat loads of money doing these things. Apparently, our government has nothing for the creative and talented. It is the exploiters they love to fund and continue to expand... endlessly... programs and bailouts for these people's misery mill bizznizzes.. Be serious
The privatized prisons are for making profit . The Judge in Pa was sending kids to prison who did not deserve it because he got a cut of the profits. The Book " Bedlam " is about kids getting picked up off the street and incarcerated for no criminal reason and the Mentally Ill citizens being sent to prison instead of to a Psychiatric hospital for the profits of the privatized prison corporate owners.
How about almond milk?
After all, dairy is rape, and meat is murder.