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CARE For People, Defund Police. Screen-printed by formerly incarcerated people and our loved ones.
#defundthepolice#abolish prisons#abolish ice#abolition is creative#abolitionist fashion#abolition#police abolition#prison abolition#formerly incarcerated
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By Gloria Verdieu
As an organizer of the Prisoners Solidarity Committee, one of the many things that registered with me in Cuba’s new Families Code is its promise to promote happy, healthy families. There are over 2 million people in prison in the U.S. Many more are detained in immigration centers and holding cells awaiting litigation, affecting millions of families.
#Cuba#Families Code#socialism#prisoners#formerly incarcerated#solidarity#prison-industrial complex#healthcare#families#Gloria Verdieu#racism#repression#Struggle La Lucha
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Incarcerated women risk their lives fighting California fires. It's part of a long history of prison labor
For most of the 23 years Romarilyn Ralston spent in a California prison, she made 37 cents an hour, unable to afford crafty birthday cards for her two sons, let alone the financial support she desperately wanted to give them.
Ralston did clerical and recreational work at the California Institution for Women in Chino, while voluntarily training women who have recently made national headlines for being on the front lines of the state’s biggest wildfires. The state has deployed more than 15,000 people to combat fires ripping through more than 220,000 acres in recent weeks, including as many as 1,600 trained inmates who earn, at the high end, a base pay of close to $2 a day.
Ralston said her friends on the outside were shocked to hear about the low wages and the tough work, and she, as well as a woman who said she trained for the program, said it deserves much more scrutiny.
Describing dangerous, backbreaking labor — they use hoes and chainsaws to manipulate the landscape and redirect fires in their tracks — Ralston compared it to a slave-era practice.
“Prisoners are leased out and thrown down to public and private corporations for labor,” she said. “That’s part of the convict-leasing system from Reconstruction, unfortunately, and it’s shameful.”
The second clause of the 13th Amendment to abolish slavery and involuntary servitude made an exception for people convicted of crimes, allowing landowners to incriminate newly-freed slaves with arbitrary laws and rent them out for cheap labor.
Since then, prisons have relied on this labor — including cleaning, serving food, laundry, plumbing and construction — to run their facilities as well as to provide the state with other workers, including those who make license plates or pave roads.
Though firefighting, Ralston said, is particularly high-risk.
“I’ve seen women come back with broken ankles and broken arms, burns or just suffering from exhaustion, you know, the psychological stress that people go through trying to just pass the requirements because if they don’t pass the requirements, they don’t get to camp,” she said. “It’s very stressful, not only on the body but also on the mind.”
California corrections spokesperson Bill Sessa said he did not anticipate the women would get so much attention. The female California Conservation Camp program has been intact since 1983 and 40 of the 43 camps are male.
“The men were getting all the coverage, so I just happened to mention to a reporter, ‘You know, we do have women who do this,’” Sessa said. “The fact that it’s women, the fact that it’s Malibu, it’s just got all the elements for lack of a better term, a sexy story.”
He also described the positions as coveted among inmates — the environment is nicer, the pay can be higher, the food is better and he said it can accelerate their release dates. For every day most of them are at camp and are on good behavior, they can get two days off their sentence, according to corrections.
A fireman who has managed prison crews for the past seven years, watches over a team of female prisoners in a remote mountainous area of the Witch Fire past Santa Ysabel, California to build a protection line against spreading fire, October 25, 2007. Of about 9,000 firefighters battling the southern California flames, nearly 3,000 are inmates. About 300 are from all-women prisoner brigades. Picture taken October 25, 2007. Photo by Adam Tanner/Reuters
Ralston agreed that it is more humane than other prison jobs for those reasons and that plenty of people get satisfaction out of the work, but that given the history of prison labor, and the low pay for risky work, it can still be demeaning. Corrections estimates the program saves the state $124 million a year, amounting to 3 million hours of firefighting work.
“When it costs $70,000 a year to incarcerate someone, then training them to be a high-functioning state worker and fight fires and put their lives on the line,” she said. “To treat people that way is absolutely shameful.”
While Ralston was incarcerated, she was serving a life sentence, unable to stay at a camp – those spots are for people who are deemed as minimum flight risks.
“It was tough. I tried to send little birthday cards and gifts home but it’s hard to support your kids,” she said. “Even when you make things, sometimes materials are free but sometimes you want to buy materials, or order something from a catalogue because they did well in school, but you can’t afford it.”
She was sentenced to life in 1988 when her sons were 2 and 5 years old. In the 23 years she served, she had bought savings bonds that had amounted to about $500, which she retrieved upon her release in 2011. Since then, she has earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees and become a program coordinator at Project Rebound at Cal State Fullerton, a resource for incarcerated people who want access to higher education.
The director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s National Prison Project David Fathi said that not all prison jobs are inherently bad. Voluntary jobs can lower recidivism rates, provide routine and a valuable sense of worth and responsibility. But whether they are actually “voluntary” is an important nuance, he said.
“Little in prison is truly voluntary,” Fathi said. “It’s hard for most people to understand the pervasively and inherently coercive nature of the prison environment.”
While California corrections states on its fact sheet that no one is involuntarily assigned to the fire program, Ralston and Ingrid Archie disagree.
Most people in California prisons go through a classification system every year so the facility can assess where they should work based on skills, attitude, work habits and education level.
They are often placed on a pay scale that is anywhere from 8 cents an hour for labor, maxing out at $12 a month, to 37 cents an hour for a lead position, maxing out at $56 a month.
Archie, who was released about two years ago, said she was assigned to the camp without her input.
“If you refuse the program, that’s a disciplinary infraction,” she said.
She said the infraction is called “refusal to program” and that it can layer an additional 30 to 60 days onto a person’s sentence.
Ralston, who did administrative work for the fire program, said that people risk an infraction and added time if they do not cooperate.
California corrections spokesperson Terry Thornton said that there is an infraction called “refusal to program,” but that she still considers the fire program voluntary because corrections “cannot force an inmate” to comply.
Regardless, Fathi said there are clearer lines to better wages.
“State minimum wage laws don’t apply to prisoners. This is something the legislature could fix very easily. The minimum wage could apply to everyone who works,” he said. “Same with worker’s compensation laws.”
California corrections states in its fact sheet that people in the program make $2 a day, but most of them are actually making $1.45. There is a ranking system: $1.45 a day is grade 1, while “skilled and experienced” people get $1.67 a day and “a limited number of skilled inmates who have been given special assignments” get $1.95 per day.
Ralston maxed out at $56 a month as a clerk for the fire crews and Archie said she was compensated $1 a day to clean the camp.
With their earnings, they could buy items like soap or lotion, pre-made birthday cards, vitamins, allergy tablets, cough drops, or Saltine crackers. They could spend it on co-pays for health concerns, but it was never enough money to save or send it home.
Sessa says part of the appeal of the fire program is the extra pay for being in the field. In those circumstances, firefighters get an extra $1 an hour.
Given the severity of the fires in recent weeks, he said some of the crews were working up to 80 hours in a row before they could get a break.
“They can put it in special accounts which gives them a financial cushion when they go back to their home community,” he said.
READ NEXT: Oklahoma lawmakers, voters disagree on punishments for drug crimes
But Ralston says that money is not what lures women to these jobs. Most of them, she said, risk their well-being to get out of prison faster so they can get home to their children and prove that they are “redeemable.”
The majority of women in prison have children, are victims of violence or trauma and are most often there for nonviolent offenses, as opposed to their male counterparts. While California has one of the lowest female incarceration rates, it has come under scrutiny in recent years for its failure to adequately address some of their unique mental health issues.
And even if they are making top prison dollars, the wages are still “shameful,” especially given the many obstacles women face, she said.
“A lot of women in the program are in there because they want to get to their children, but they don’t need a broke down mom when she gets home,” she said.
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06.02.19 Close Riker's Campaign
We’re proud of the opportunity to produce, film, and witness Just Leadership USA’s Close Rikers Campaign in action in 2016. They rallied outside the Borough Halls of Queens, Brooklyn, Manhattan, and the Bronx to pressure Mayor Bill DeBlasio and other key elected officials, to keep the commitment to close down Rikers.
Close Rikers advocates met with key stakeholders to encourage and discuss Alternatives to Incarceration (ATIs) in New York City. During the discussions, activists urged elected officials to end overcrowding, poor sanitary/safety conditions, widespread abuse from correctional officers, and substandard healthcare that plagues the 12 jails on the island.
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I have a personal request. Please hire people with criminal records. Approximately 1 in 3 people in the US have a blemish on their rap sheet. If you’re not in a hiring position, advocate for ban the box and clean slate legislative action.
I don’t have a record, but people I love very much do. Watching doors constantly get unnecessarily slammed in their faces is heartbreaking. Most times the only difference between them and you is that you never got caught.
But even people who fuck up egregiously still have to exist and while it’s a personal choice whether you help them, the least we can all do is not actively stand in their way while they’re walking uphill trying to rebuild their lives.
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Friday/Saturday
The staff at the RRC have apparently finally realized I'm here after almost a month as one of them just did my first 2 intakes that were supposed to have been done when I first arrived and another set up a meeting to refer me to a skills/works program :| Again these are the upstanding successful citizens of my society that I'm supposed to strive to be like.
Still doing linkedin learning classes. Done like 20 so far :| guy emailed me about a couple jobs at Boeing so we'll see how that goes... All my cheap crap I ordered from "Temu" showed up today, I'm actually really amazed/impressed by the quality for like $2 items... I have a smart watch now that does everything a fitbit does plus like 5 other things and cost $7.68. I ordered $37.58 in crap from them and the only complaint I have on anything is the belt they sent me despite being way way nicer than I expected it to be does not actually fit... it is an automatic buckle one but the band on the leather that clicks through the buckle runs out of clicks like a half inch too soon for it to be cinched tight. Probably work fine if I had shirts tucked in and such but won't work normally. Might be able to take the buckle off and cut it to size so it works which is fine if I can do that but shouldn't need to when they list and sell them by size not as one size fits all etc... Definitely no objection to ordering from them again currently though based on the quality of the items, not saying I would trust them with something health and safety related or a surge protector to use with expensive electronics or anything but for general stuff that there is no risk if it fails the stuff I ordered all looks good and is of surprising quality for the price so far.
#linkedin#seattle#rrc#seattle living#seattle washington#halfway house#prison#RRC#incarcerated people#formerly incarcerated#Temu
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"My art...was a function of survival...when you are powerless most of the time for most of your life, it becomes important to find healthy ways to exercise power" (DeWeaver).
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Anthem to Abolish the 13th Amendment
Min King X Pyeface feat. Scarface After serving 24 years behind bars for Bank robbery, 6 years in the feds, and 18 in California’s maximum security prisons, Min King X AKA Pyeface hit the ground running, when he was released in July of 2019.No other rapper in Hip Hop has done more through art-activism (Artivist), in the past three and a half years to highlight the plight of the men and women…
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#13th Amendment#African American poetry#American poets#black art#Black Culture#Black Liberation#Black Lives Matter#Die Jim Crow#Donald "C-Note" Hooker#Formerly Incarcerated#Hip Hop#Min King X Pyeface#Music Video#Prisons#Rap#Scarface
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the one thing i will say on the Trump verdict is I'm seeing a lot of posts about basically "how can we let a FELON run for PRESIDENT (and/or vote)" which is making me feel very "don't make me tap the sign" about why folks who've been convicted of felonies also deserve the right to run for office/vote and how creating categories of people who are not allowed to run for office/vote is a great way to incentivize pushing political opponents (or members of marginalized groups) into those categories in order to disenfranchise and disempower them
#i do think he should be disqualified under the 14th amendment but that's...not really what this trial was about#and i just would like folks to be a teensy bit more mindful of what you're talking about when ur like#''we're going to let a FELON run for PRESIDENT''#when like. if you get charged twice for having weed on you that could be a felony#(this is an oversimplification but like u get the point right. like US folks we know abt the injustice inherent in our ''justice'' system#and how historically that has & continues to be used to benefit folks just like trump#right?#like we know that folks convicted of felonies or formerly incarcerated people should not be excommunicated from the political system right?#it is important to me that us folks know this)#anyway this is my soapbox for the night#catch me next time when a) someone talks about how ADDICTS are inherently TERRIBLE or (more likely) b) ballet is portrayed stupidly in medi#personal
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Look I just think
#something something red/orange mascs#something something formerly incarcerated/enslaved people who find humor in their lives#something something poor girls who work their asses off to help those around them#karlach#vi arcane#gideon nav#oops I posted this on the wrong account oh well
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a new world is growing. As our roots pierce the concrete - our imaginations blossom new realities the violence-based world can see.
Abolition is Creative Hoodie by For Everyone Collective - fashion free from harm.
#prison abolition#abolitionist fashion#created by formerly incarcerated people#streetwear#ethical fashion#slow fashion#living wages#abolition is creative#police abolition#healthcare for all#housing for all#a new world is growing#for everyone
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i get that this was a joke post or whatever but for the love of god can we please please stop referring to people as inmates. even in shitposts. the term inmate is deeply dehumanizing, and people in prison already have their entire autonomy and identities stripped away from them. the very fucking least you can do is refer to them as human beings and grant them that basic minimum human decency. Stop using words like inmate, prisoner, convict, ex-con, parolee, felon, criminal, etc. Stop reblogging posts with those terms without taking a second to question why you are buying into the societal narrative that further dehumanizes already severely marginalized people by stripping away their humanity and personhood
life row inmate eating his first meal
#For fucks sake#we have recognized that it’s offensive and not acceptable to refer to people with mental illness as their mental illness#same for people with disabilities#In many other parts of society we have recognized the need to use person-first language#So why can people not use their fucking brains and extend that to justice-involved people#Incarcerated people. People in prison. People with life sentences. People in for life. Justice-involved. Formerly incarcerated men/women#Pick literally any of these terms#But for the love of god stop saying inmates and prisoners#Full fucking stop
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I like the current wave of Twitter doordash/ubereats discourse because it's like this: you want the convenience of food delivery for little to no cost and you want the luxury of having a professional-looking person stand at your door and smile as they hand you your piping hot meal (as for whatever bizarre reason, you do not pick contactless). the reality of gig apps is that they are highly exploitative and are riddled with sign-on loopholes in order to attract people willing to work for the pennies you're paying them while also being in little position to protest(new immigrants, asylum seekers, formerly incarcerated, etc). any whiff of the reality that exists to pantomime this luxury fantasy you've bought into deeply disgusts and unsettles you. this is literally the plot of Parasite.
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everyone should go check out and support the for everyone collective!!
it's an amazing group that hires formerly incarcerated people (and their families), provides unlimited pto, covers all healthcare, pays above living wage, etc. and they make amazing clothes, stickers, etc.
#my partner bought me stuff from them for christmas and i absolutely love it#for everyone collective#prison abolition#clothing#support formerly incarcerated people and their loved ones!!#shopping#amy rambles
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