Vancouver Sun

On mom’s special day, families get chance to visit jailed mothers

- DON THOMPSON

FOLSOM, Calif. — “Hi, baby,” Catherine La France cooed as she swept granddaugh­ter Arianna into her arms and danced around the prison yard with the three- year- old.

She pulled her two daughters into a bear hug, and the girls burst into tears. La France hadn’t seen Arianna’s mother, 18- year- old Samantha La France, in six months, and she last saw Summer La France, 14, nearly three years ago.

They soon dropped into easy banter as barbed concertina wire high above them glinted in the sun and guards armed with pepper spray patrolled nearby.

“This is my birthday present and Mother’s Day at the same time,” Catherine La France said at the stark, concrete- block-walled prison for low- risk offenders where she has been locked up for nearly two years.

La France, who has prior residentia­l-burglary conviction­s, turned 39 two days earlier and won’t be released for three more years, when she completes a sentence for using a bogus credit card to defraud businesses.

Three generation­s of La France women got 4 ½ precious hours together at Folsom Women’s Facility east of Sacramento more than a week before Mother’s Day, which is Sunday. It happened through a free, nonprofit program called Get on the Bus that arranges for children to visit their incarcerat­ed parents in California prisons around Mother’s and Father’s Days.

Get on the Bus appears to be unique in providing free transporta­tion to children for the two holidays and in offering counsellin­g and other support, said Ann Adalist- Estrin, director of the National Resource Center on Children and Families of the Incarcerat­ed at Rutgers University, Camden.

A handful of programs in other states, including Florida and New York, provide transporta­tion to kids as part of a larger mission to help prisoners and their families.

“We have kids every year that are meeting their moms or dads for the first time,” California program organizer Hilary Carson said. Others haven’t seen their parent in years.

The organizati­on’s survey of participan­ts, who average eight years old, shows that more than half wouldn’t otherwise be able to see their imprisoned parent without the program.

Last Saturday, 40 minors and four young- adult children of prisoners made the trip to Folsom Women’s Facility. Tears of joy streamed down mothers’ smiling faces as their kids arrived, and lingering, emotional embraces came before the bus pulled away. The trip began before dawn in San Jose, and the bus made stops to pick up children along the way.

It’s the second Mother’s Day the bus chartered by the nonprofit Center for Restorativ­e Justice Works visited the prison designed to house 400 lowrisk women. But this year there were about half as many children, Carson said. Not enough participan­ts from Southern California signed up to justify chartering a second bus.

Similar buses fan out to 10 of the state’s 34 adult prisons each year. On Friday, more than 250 children visited two prisons in central California.

At Folsom Women’s Facility, Erica Carmona, 21, tirelessly chased her three- year- old son the entire visit, grinning as he kicked a soccer ball around the yard or tugged her along with a jump rope. Other children played pingpong on two concrete tables, had their faces painted and played with footballs and basketball­s.

“I was worried he would forget who I was,” said Carmona, who is serving a sentence for assault with a deadly weapon.

When the youngsters boarded the bus for the ride home, they each received a teddy bear and a letter written by their moms.

With their time together running out, Lisa Mercuri, 33, sat quietly blowing soap bubbles with her four- year- old son, Noah, on a bench bolted to the prison wall. His face was painted like a pirate, with an eye patch, roguish handlebar moustache and goatee.

“Let’s get your car and go,” he said suddenly, tugging at her. “Get your car. Let’s go.”

Mercuri won’t be going anywhere until January, when she completes her sentence for forgery and fraud.

“How do you explain that to a four- year- old?” she wondered aloud. “I just tell him I’m on a big- girl timeout.”

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Prisoner Erica Carmona, 21, tosses a soccer ball back and forth with her three- year- old son during his visit to the Folsom Women’s Facility in Folsom Calif.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Prisoner Erica Carmona, 21, tosses a soccer ball back and forth with her three- year- old son during his visit to the Folsom Women’s Facility in Folsom Calif.

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