home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!rich
- From: Hank Roth <odin@world.std.com>
- Subject: Prison Jobs
- Message-ID: <1993Jan3.081308.9123@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: ?
- Date: Sun, 3 Jan 1993 08:13:08 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 77
-
- <<< via P_news/p.news >>>
- {From PEOPLE'S WEEKLY WORLD, December 26, 1992}
- THOUSANDS OF JOBS LOST TO PRISON INDUSTRY CONTRACTS
-
- In recent years thousands of workers have lost good paying jobs
- that have been contracted to inmates in state penitentiaries who
- earn about $2.00 a day.
-
- Inmates in state prisons across the country are sitting at
- computer terminals performing telemarketing and data entry work
- in additon to manual labor that takes jobs from union members in
- a variety of industries: autoparts and other manufacturing,
- carpentry, warehousing, desktop publishing, typesetting,
- printing, gtourism, travel and telecommunications.
-
- Twenty states employ prisoners in interstate commerce, according
- to AFL-CIOI Research Economist John Zalusky, who noted that the
- AFL-CIO Executive Council supports skills-training programs
- designed to have a rehabilitation effect and reduce recidivism.
-
- Prison industries that employ inmates are supposed to pay the
- prevailing wage for the locality and the work done is to have no
- impact on the community. "They've supposed to discuss it with the
- local labor movement," he said, adding that seldom are any of the
- above conditions met.
-
- As an example Zalusky cited a California youth facility where
- inmates made flight reservations for Trans World Airlines. They
- were paid $5.50 an hour for work that pays $18.75 outside, he
- said. [In Raleigh, a right to work state, NC, American Airlines
- paid $6.00 and $6.50 for reservationists, whom they hired from
- the community--HR]
-
- TWA isn't the only one. AT&T uses one or another agency firm to
- subcontract telemarketing work to at least three state prison
- systems.
-
- For the last two years in one such arrangement, the Arkansas
- Valley Correctional Facility in Ordway, Colo. contracted to have
- 50 inmates market AT&T products by telephone.
-
- Allegations that AT&T has been using prison labor in Colorado
- surfaced when a former prison guard who has a lawsuit against the
- state showed her lawyer a list of telemarketing questions she had
- taken from an inmate. The attorney, Michael McDivitt, in turn,
- took his information to the local media.
-
- "The prison system had a conatract with a company called
- Unibase." McDivitt said, "Unibase contrcted with AT&T."
-
- Liz McDonough, a spokesperson for the Colorado Department of
- Corrections, confirmed the facility's arrangement with Unibase.
- Inmates were paid $2 per day - a standard prison wage. The
- company paid an additional $1,000 per month to the Department of
- Corrections to operate within the prison.
-
- Responding to Irwine's inquiry, AT&T Labor Relations Vice
- President Charles Brumfield attemapted to explain the operation
- as "part of an effort to help reduce the tax gurden upon
- Colorado's taxpayers."
-
- Unibase continues to conducgt a thriving business. The company
- headquartered in Salt Lake City, Utah, employs about 450 people,
- and from Oct. 1, 1990 to Sept. 30, 1991 generated $5,120,033 in
- sales.
-
- Fred Nichols, administrator of the program for the Oregon
- Department of Corrections, pointed out how widespread was AT&T's
- telemarketing through the prisons.
-
- On Octo. 28 he confirmed that through Unibase the Oregon State
- Penitentiary - a maximum security prison - continued to perform
- telemarketing for AT&T and had done so for over a year.
-
- "It was a huge operation," he said, "We had 70 inmates working on
- it, Arizona had 50, New Mexico had some and maybe Ohio."
-
-