The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

America’s business of prisons thrives amid pandemic

- By Robin Mcdowell and Margie Mason

MINNEAPOLI­S » As factories and other businesses remain shuttered across America, people in prisons in at least 40 states continue going to work. Sometimes they earn pennies an hour, or nothing at all, making masks and hand sanitizer to help guard others from the coronaviru­s.

Those same men and women have been cut off from family visits for weeks, but they get charged up to $25 for a 15-minute phone call — plus a surcharge every time they add credit.

They also pay markedup prices at the commissary for soap so they can wash their hands more frequently. That service can carry a 100% processing fee.

As the COVID-19 virus cripples the economy, leaving millions unemployed and many companies on life support, big businesses that have become synonymous with the world’s largest prison system are still making money.

“It’s hard. Especially at a time like this, when you’re out of work, you’re waiting for unemployme­nt … and you don’t have money to send,” said Keturah Bryan, who transfers hundreds of dollars each month to her 64-year-old father at a federal prison in Oklahoma.

Meanwhile, she said, prisons continue to gouge.

“You have to pay for phone calls, emails, food,” she said. “Everything.”

The coronaviru­s outbreak has put an unlikely spotlight on America’s jails and prisons, which house more than 2.2 million people and have been described by health experts as petri dishes as the virus spreads.

Masks and hand sanitizer often aren’t provided. Testing is rarely carried out, even among those with symptoms, despite fears that surroundin­g communitie­s may be affected. And in some parts of the country, those sickened by the virus languish in sweltering buildings with poor ventilatio­n.

The concerns extend to outsourced prison health care, frequently accused by experts of offering substandar­d treatment even in the best of times.

Sheron Edwards shares a dorm with 50 other men at Chickasaw County Regional Correction­al Facility in Mississipp­i. Given his past experience­s with the prison’s medical provider, Centurion, he worries about what will happen if coronaviru­s hits.

“I’m afraid they’ll just let us die in here,” he said.

When he was at the state’s notorious Parchman prison several years ago, Edwards said the company refused to pay for costly heart medication and only provided one session of physical therapy when he had to have a sixinch rod and screws placed in his broken ankle.

“Even though that wasn’t life threatenin­g, it was serious,” he said. “With COVID-19, I could actually lose my life.”

More than 20,000 prisoners have been infected and 295 have died nationwide — from Rikers Island in New York City to federal, state, and local lockups coast to coast, according to an unofficial tally kept by the COVID-19 Behind Bars Data Project run by UCLA Law.

On Wednesday, officials

“The industry behind mass incarcerat­ion is bigger than many appreciate. So is the harm they cause and the power they wield.” — Bianca Tylek

in San Diego announced the first death of a detainee in a U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t detention center.

When incarcerat­ion rates soared to record highs in the 1980s and ‘90s, some corporatio­ns saw a business opportunit­y. They promised lower costs and, in many cases, profit-sharing agreements. Prison and jail administra­tors started privatizin­g everything from food and commissary to entire operations of facilities.

Proponents of for-profit prisons say it’s cheaper for private companies to run facilities than the government, arguing it’s easier to cancel contracts and there is more incentive to provide better service. They say that leads to improved living conditions and more effective rehabilita­tion of the incarcerat­ed back into society with the ultimate goal of reducing recidivism.

But not everyone agrees. In 2019, criminal and immigratio­n justice advocates successful­ly moved nine major banks, including J.P. Morgan and Bank of America, to stop lending money to private prisons.

Today, some of corporate America’s biggest names, and many smaller companies, vie for a share of the $80 billion spent on mass incarcerat­ion each year in the U.S., roughly half of which stays in the public sector to pay for staff salaries and some health care costs, according to the Massachuse­tts-based nonprofit Prison Policy Initiative.

A new report released Thursday by New York-based advocacy group Worth Rises detailed some 4,100 corporatio­ns that profit from the country’s prisons and jails. It identified corporatio­ns that support prison labor directly or through their supply chains. The group also recommende­d divesting from more than 180 publicly traded corporatio­ns and investment firms considered to cause the greatest harm to people behind bars and the communitie­s that support them.

“The industry behind mass incarcerat­ion is bigger than many appreciate. So is the harm they cause and the power they wield,” said Bianca Tylek, the group’s founder and director.

“They exploit and abuse people with devastatin­g consequenc­es,” she said. “Of course, they aren’t unilateral­ly responsibl­e for mass incarcerat­ion,butthey’repartof theecosyst­empropping­itup.”

The report includes vendors that stock commissari­es with Cup Noodles and Tide laundry detergent, along with contracted health care providers that have been sued for providing limited or inadequate coverage to those behind bars.

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