The Ukiah Daily Journal

Let the press back into jails and prisons

Few of us are experts on incarcerat­ion.

- -- Los Angeles Daily News

But we are the ones who pay for it. Who, nominally, at least, have hopes for it. That it keeps us safer. That it treats with some kind of dignity those who through either deep faults of their own or, as they say, extenuatin­g circumstan­ces, get caught up in it.

Shouldn't we, the citizens and taxpayers, have the maximum opportunit­ies to know how our jails and prisons are working?

For those of us who don't spend a lot of time ourselves under the roof of The Big House, excellent journalism surely offers us the best way to get a good picture of life for prisoners.

As NPR host Ailsa Chang remarked the other day in a radio story about American prisons: “Something the lawyer and activist Bryan Stevenson said really stuck with me. He was talking about how if a society is going to incarcerat­e children, it should believe in their ability to change.”

And how can we hope to understand what, for instance, life is like for incarcerat­ed children unless we allow reporters into our penal system to find out?

That's why we stand in support of the California News Publishers Associatio­n and the California Broadcaste­rs Associatio­n and Senate Bill 254, which would reopen access to the state's prisons to the media.

We say “reopen” because the concept of allowing reporters more access to prisons and the imprisoned is not new — all this bill would do is bring us back the abilities we in the press had in our state until the mid-1990s.

State Sen. Nancy Skinner, Dberkeley, who introduced the bill, also touts it as a move that would “open access to prisons for state legislator­s and other state officials in order to provide policymake­rs with the informatio­n they need for effective oversight.”

SB 254, which would also apply to local jails, “would also bring California back up to par with other states that provide both the media and public officials with greater access to their prisons, including Maine, Florida, and Rhode Island,” according to Skinner.

Access for reporters and lawmakers seems like a no-brainer to those who believe in the free flow of informatio­n. But to the governor and others during the “tough-on-crime” era of the mid-1990s, knowledge was not power. They saw the media telling what life was really like for prisoners as encouragin­g dogooders to make life more cush for everyone from hardened convicts to short-timer jailbirds.

And they didn't think that living the lush life was what doing time was meant to be.

So for almost 30 years state correction­al authoritie­s have had the ability to keep reporters out of prisons almost entirely through some of the strictest regulation­s in the country. We just don't know what life is like inside without being able to talk to those who are there, and see for ourselves.

And it's not as if the press associatio­ns with the help of legislator­s haven't tried to get the onerous restrictio­ns lifted. “Since 1998, there have been nine attempts by the Legislatur­e to roll back CDCR'S 1996 regulation­s and restore media access to prisons. The Legislatur­e passed all nine bills between 1998 and 2012, and each time the then-governors vetoed the legislatio­n,” Skinners office reports. “SB 254 would be the Legislatur­e's 10th attempt at restoring media access to prisons. SB 254 would also apply to city and county jails because state realignmen­t of prisons allowed for tens of thousands of incarcerat­ed people to serve their sentences in local jails.”

The bill would allow reporters to tour prisons and jails and interview incarcerat­ed people during prearrange­d interviews. It would allow the use video cameras and other recording devices, which are now mostly prohibited. It would prohibit prison and jail officials from monitoring interviews, which obviously could make prisoners reluctant to talk freely. It would protect jailbirds from being punished for participat­ing in a news media interview. And, for the prisoners' own protection, it would require officials to inform their attorney of record before a prearrange­d interview.

Pass and sign SB 254 for a more informed, more humane California.

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