Daily Press (Sunday)

Bills to limit inmate fees advance in state Senate

Legislatio­n would face long odds in Virginia House

- By Denise Lavoie

RICHMOND — Legislatio­n that would give Virginia inmates free phone calls and email access and reduce the costs of food and other commissary items in local jails won approval Friday from a Democrat-led Senate committee. The bills are expected to face longer odds in the Republican-controlled House.

Advocates who support a bill sponsored by state Sen. Jennifer Boysko to allow prison inmates access to free communicat­ions said the costs to keep in touch with loved ones can reach hundreds of dollars a month and often put the families of inmates in debt.

They also said keeping in touch with family members during incarcerat­ion is an important benefit that helps inmates stay connected with a support system that makes it easier for them to reenter society.

“It will allow for fathers to have a constant contact with their children, (so) that when they’re released or their time is up from prison, that will add a smoother transition for them to welcome back into the home, back into their community,” Richard Walker, a formerly incarcerat­ed convicted felon, told the Senate Rehabilita­tion and Social Services Committee.

A separate bill sponsored by Sen. Joe Morrissey would eliminate or cap fees in local and regional jails, including fees charged for snacks, hygiene products and other items inmates buy in jail commissari­es. The bill, which calls for pricing goods sold in commissari­es at a maximum of 10% above typical market rates for such items, faces strong opposition­s from sheriffs, who run the jails and say the fees are used to pay for rehabilita­tive, educationa­l and recreation­al programs for inmates.

“I’m trying to be reasonable and fair, but I also don’t want to see the value of the programs that we have go away because we lack funding,” said Henrico County Sheriff Alisa Gregory.

Morrissey said the costs for inmate communicat­ions vary widely among jails around the state, with some relatively low, but others with what he called “exorbitant” prices. He cited one jail he said charges $14.30 for a 15-minute phone call and another that charges 53 cents for every email.

“The gouging of prisoners — it’s not the way we operate in a decent society,” Morrissey said after the hearing.

It was not immediatel­y clear how much the state would have to pay to make up for the revenue that would be lost if communicat­ions fees are eliminated and fees for commissary items are reduced. Both bills were referred to the Finance & Appropriat­ions Committee. If approved, the bills would then go to the full Senate for a vote.

The bills are expected to face a more difficult time in the House of Delegates, where Republican­s hold a 52-48 majority. A similar jail fees bill proposed by Democratic Del. Irene Shin was rejected by a House subcommitt­ee on Thursday.

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