"Slavery 400 years ago, slavery today. It's the same, but with a
new name. They're practicing slavery under color of law." (Ruchell Cinque
Magee)
The 13th
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution retained the right to enslave within the
confines of prison. “Neither slavery nor
involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall
have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States or any place
subject to their jurisdiction.” Dec. 6, 1865.
Even before
the abolition of chattel slavery, America's history of prison labor had already
begun in New York's State Prison at Auburn soon after it opened in 1817. Auburn
became the first prison that contracted with a private business to operate a
factory within its walls. Later, in the post Civil War period, the "contract
and lease" system proliferated, allowing private companies to employ
prisoners and sell their products for profit.
Today, such
prisons are referred to as “Factories with Fences.”
(/www.unicor.gov/information/publications/pdfs/corporate/CATMC1101_C.pdf)
The Convict-Lease System
In Southern
states, Slave Codes were rewritten as Black Codes, a series of laws
criminalizing the law-abiding activities of Black people, such as standing
around, "loitering," or walking at night, "breaking
curfew." The enforcement of these Codes dramatically increased the number
of Blacks in Southern prisons. In 1878,
Georgia leased out 1,239 convicts, 1,124 of whom were Black.
The lease
system provided slave labor for plantation owners or private industries as well
as revenue for the state, since incarcerated workers were entirely in the
custody of the contractors who paid a set annual fee to the state (about
$25,000). Entire prisons were leased out to private contractors who literally
worked hundreds of prisoners to death. Prisons became the new plantations;
Angola State Prison in Louisiana was a literal plantation, and still is except
the slaves are now called convicts and the prison is known as "The
Farm." (A documentary of that title is available on DVD.)
The inherent
brutality and cruelty of the lease system and the loss of outside jobs sparked
resistance that eventually brought about its demise.
One of the
most famous battles was the Coal Creek Rebellion of 1891. When the Tennessee
coal, Iron and Railroad locked out their workers and replaced them with
convicts, the miners stormed the prison and freed 400 captives; and when the
company continued to contract prisoners, the miners burned the prison down. The
Tennessee leasing system was disbanded shortly thereafter. But it remained in
many states until the rise of resistance in the 1930s.
Strikes by
prisoners and union workers together were organized by then radical CIO and
other labor unions. They pressured Congress to pass the 1935 Ashurst-Sumners
Act making it illegal to transport prison-made goods across state lines. But
under President Jimmy Carter, Congress granted exemptions to the Act by passing
the Justice System Improvement Act of 1979, which produced the Prison
Industries Enhancement program, or PIE, that eventually spread to all 50
states. This lifted the ban on interstate transportation and sale of
prison-made products, permitting a for-profit relationship between prisons and
the private sector, and prompting a dramatic increase in prison labor which
continues to escalate.
As the leasing
system phased out, a new, even more brutal exploitation emerged -- the chain
gang. An extremely dehumanizing cruelty that chained men, and later women,
together in groups of five, it was originated to build extensive roads and highways.
The first state to institute chain gangs was Alabama, followed by Arizona,
Florida, Iowa, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin, Montana, and Oklahoma.
Arizona's
first female chain gang was instituted in 1996. Complete with striped uniforms,
the women of a Phoenix jail (to this day) spend four to six hours a day chained
together in groups of 30, clearing roadsides of weeds and burying the indigent.
Georgia's
chain-gang conditions were particularly brutal. Men were put out to work
swinging 12 lb. sledge hammers for 16 hours a day, malnourished and shackled
together, unable to move their legs a full stride. Wounds from metal shackles
often became infected, leading to illness and death. Prisoners who could not
keep up with the grueling pace were whipped or shut in a sweatbox or tied to a
hitching post, a stationary metal rail. Chained to the post with hands raised
high over his head, the prisoner remained tethered in that position in the
Alabama heat for many hours without water or bathroom breaks. (Human Rights
Watch World Report 1998).
Thanks to a
lawsuit settled by the Southern Poverty Law Center, Alabama's Department of
Corrections agreed in 1996 to stop chaining prisoners together. A few years
later, the Center won a Court ruling that ended use of the hitching post as a
violation of the 8th Amendment's ban on "cruel and unusual
punishment."
In response to
the demands of World War II, the number of both free and captive road workers
declined significantly. In 1941, there were 1,750 prisoners slaving in 28
active road camps for all types of construction and maintenance. The numbers
bottomed out by war's end at 540 captives in 17 camps.
The Proliferation of Prisons,
Jails, and Camps
In the 1940s,
California Governor Earl Warren conducted secret investigations into the
State's only prisons, San Quentin and Folsom. The depravity, squalor, sadism,
and torture he found led the governor to initiate the building of Soledad
Prison in 1951.
Prisoners were
put to work in educational and vocational programs that taught basic courses in
English and math, and provided training in trades ranging from gardening to
meat cutting. At wages of 7 to 25 cents an hour, California prisoners used
their acquired skills to turn out institutional clothing and furniture, license
plates and stickers, seed new crops, slaughter pigs, produce and sell dairy
products to a nearby mental institution.
Within a
decade this "model prison" at Soledad had become another torture
chamber of filthy dungeons, literal "holes," virulently racist
guards, officially sanctioned brutality, torture, and murder. Though prison
jobs were supposed to be voluntary, if prisoners refuse to work they were often
given longer sentences, denied privileges, or thrown into solitary confinement.
Forced to work long hours under miserable conditions, in the 1960s,
"Soledad Brother," George Jackson, organized a work strike that
turned into a riot after white strikebreakers tried to lynch one of the Black
strikers.
The Black
Movement's resistance, led by George Jackson, W. L. Nolen, and Hugo
"Yogi" Pinell, eventually brought Congressional oversight and
overhaul of California's prison system. (The Melancholy History of Soledad
Prison, by Minh S. Yee.).
California’s
prison system rose exponentially to approximately 174,000 prisoners crammed
into 90 penitentiaries, prisons and camps stretched across 900 miles of the
fifth-largest economy in the world, as Ruth Gilmore's book, "Golden
Gulag" reports. That number can be doubled or tripled by those on other
forms of penal control, probation, parole, or house arrest.
Since 1984,
the California has erected 43 prisons (and only one university) making it a
global leader in prison construction. Most of the new prisons have been built
in rural areas far from family and friends, and most captives are Black or
Brown men, although the incarceration of women has skyrocketed. Suicide and
recidivism rates approach twice the national average, and the State spends more
on prisons than on higher education. (The seeming contradiction between the
official figure of 33 prisons relates to the additional buildings constructed
at a given prison complex, and the various camps and county jails.)
Between 1998
and 2009, the CDCR’s budget grew from $3.5 billion to $10.3 billion (the latest
figures available). At its peak in August 2007, the
department had 72 gyms and 125 dayrooms jammed with 19,618 inmate beds.
"They provided an accurate and
extremely graphic example of the crowding and inhumanity that engulfed the
entire system," said Don Specter, director of the nonprofit Prison Law
Office in Berkeley, which sued to force the state to ease crowding as a way to improve
the treatment of sick and mentally ill inmates.
The Privatizing of Federal and State Prisons
Under court order to
reduce overcrowding, by 2009, the CDCR had transferred 8,000 prisoners to private prisons in four states
–Tennessee, Mississippi, Oklahoma, and Arizona, among the most virulently
racist states in the country. The rest
of the prisoners were transferred to county jails. Currently, the inmate population is about
142,000 and must remove another 17,000 prisoners to reach the June 2013 court
deadline.
In 1985, U.S.
Supreme Court Justice Warren Burger lauded China's prison labor program:
"1,000 inmates in one prison I visited comprised a complete factory unit
producing hosiery and what we would call casual or sport shoes... Indeed it had
been a factory and was taken over to make a prison." Burger called for the
conversion of prisons into factories, the repeal of laws limiting prison
industry production and sales, and the active participation of business and
organized labor.
Heeding the
judge's call, California voters passed Prop 139 in 1990, establishing the Joint
Venture Program allowing California businesses to cash in on prison labor.
"This is the new jobs program for California, so we can compete on a Third
World basis with countries like Bangladesh," observed Richard Holober with
the Consumer Federation of California.
Currently,
California's Prison Industrial Authority (CALPIA) employs, 7000 captives assigned
to 5039 positions in manufacturing, agricultural service enterprises, and
selling and administration at 22 prisons throughout the state. It produces goods
and services such as office furniture, clothing, food products, shoes, printing
services, signs, binders, gloves, license plates, cell equipment, and much
more. Wages are $.30 to $.95 per hour before deductions.
For the
State's highest wage, $1 hour, prisoners provide the "backbone of the
state's wild land fire fighting crews," according to an unpublished CDC
report. The State Department of Forestry saves more than $80 million annually
using prison labor. California's Department of Forestry has 200 Fire Crews
comprised of CDC and CYA (California Youth Authority) minimum-security captives
housed in 46 Conservation Camps throughout the state. These prisoners average
10 million work hours per year according to the CDCR.
"Their
primary function is to construct fire lines by hand in areas where heavy
machinery cannot be used because of steep topography, rocky terrain, or areas
that may be considered environmentally sensitive." (I.e., the most
dangerous fire lines).
Now at least
37 states have similar programs wherein prisoners manufacture everything from
blue jeans to auto parts, electronics and toys. Clothing made in Oregon and
California is exported to other countries, competing successfully with apparel
made in Asia and Latin America.
One of the
newest forms of slave labor is the U.S. Army's "Civilian Inmate Labor
Program" to "benefit both the Army and corrections systems" by
providing "a convenient source of labor at no direct cost to Army
installations," additional space to alleviate prison overcrowding, and
cost-effective use of land and facilities otherwise not being utilized.
"With a
few exceptions," this program is currently limited to prisoners under the
Federal Bureau of Prisons (FBOP) that allows the Attorney General to provide
the services of federal prisoners to other federal agencies, defining the types
of services they can perform. The Program stipulates that the "Army is not
interested in, nor can afford, any relationship with a corrections facility if
that relationship stipulates payment for civilian inmate labor. Installation
civilian inmate labor program operating costs must not exceed the cost
avoidance generated from using inmate labor." In other words the prison
labor must be free of charge.
The three
"exceptions" to exclusive Federal contracting are as follows: (1)
"a demonstration project" providing "prerelease employment
training to nonviolent offenders in a State correctional facility" [CF].
(2) Army National Guard units "may use inmates from an off-post State
and/or local CF." (3) Civil Works projects. Services provided might
include constructing or repairing roads, maintaining or reforesting public land;
building levees, landscaping, painting, carpentry, trash pickup, etc.
This Civilian
Inmate Labor Program document includes in its countless specifications such
caveats as "Inmates must not be referred to as employees." A prisoner
would not qualify if he/she is a "person in whom there is a significant
public interest," who has been a "significant management
problem," "a principal organized crime figure," any "inmate
convicted of a violent crime," a sex offense, involvement with drugs
within the last three years, an escape risk, "a threat to the general
public." Makes one wonder why such a prisoner isn't just released or
paroled. In fact, the "hiring qualifications" -- makes me suspect the
"Civilian Inmate Labor Program" is a backdoor draft, especially in
lieu of a military already stretched to its limit.
Note: When I tried to find an
updated web page on the Civilian Inmate Labor Program, there was none. The date
remains 2005 for its latest report. Could the latest data be classified?
The Federal Prison Industries (FPI), a nonprofit
Justice Department subsidiary, that does business as UNICOR, was created in
1935, and began supplying the Pentagon on a broad scale in the 1980s.
The prison
privatization boom began in the 1980s, under the governments of Ronald Reagan
and George Bush Sr., but reached its height in 1990 under Bill Clinton when the
Wall Street stocks were selling like hotcakes. In fact, President Clinton accomplished a
record $10 billion prison building boom in the 1990s.
His program
for cutting the federal workforce resulted in the Justice Department’s
contracting of private prison corporations for the incarceration of
undocumented workers and high-security inmates. (Global Research, 2008)
By 2003, there
were 100 FPI factories working 20,274 prisoners with sales totaling $666.8
million. And currently FPI employs about 19,000 captives, slightly less than 20
percent of the federal prison population, in 106 prison factories around the
country. Profits totaled at least $40 million!
In 2005, FPI
sold more than $750,000,000 worth of goods to the federal government. Sales to
the Army alone put UNICOR on the Army's list of top 50 suppliers, ahead of
well-known corporations like Dell Computer, according to Wayne Woolley,
Newhouse News Service.
In 2011, the Justice Policy Institute (JPI)
released a report that exposes how private prison
companies are “working to make money through harsh policies and longer
sentences.” The report notes that while the total number of prisoners increased
less than 16 percent, the number of people held in private federal and state facilities increased by 120 and 33
percent, respectively.
Government spending on so-called corrections rose
to $74 billion in 2007. And last year (2011) the two largest private prison
companies — Corrections Corporation of America (CCA) and GEO Group — made over
$2.9 billion in profits. These
corporations use three strategies to influence public policy: lobbying, direct campaign contributions and
networking. They succeeded in getting
Arizona’s harsh new immigration laws passed, and came close to winning the
privatization of all of Florida’s prisons.
A relatively
new ordering
tool used by BOP (Bureau of Prisons) is GSA Advantage!, the federal
government’s premier online ordering system that provides 24-hour access to
over 17 million products and services, solutions available from over 16,000 GSA
Multiple Award Schedules contractors, as well as all products available from
GSA Global Supply. https://www.gsaadvantage.gov
Since the
beginning of the war in Afghanistan in 2001, the Army's Communication and
Electronics Command at Fort Monmouth, N.J., has shipped more than 200,000
radios to combat zones, most with at least some components manufactured by
federal inmates working in 11 prison electronics factories around the country.
Under current law, UNICOR enjoys a contracting preference known as
"mandatory source," which obligates government agencies to try to buy
certain goods from the prisons before allowing private companies to bid on the
work. This same contracting restriction applies to state agencies.
The demand for
defense products from FPI became so great that "national exigency"
provisions were invoked so the 20 percent limit on goods provided in each
category could be exceeded. The rules were waived during the 1991 Persian Gulf
War. Private manufacturers say they've been hurt by such practice, as they are
unable to bid on various products.
According to
the Left Business Observer, the federal prison industry produces 100% of all
military helmets, ammunition belts, bulletproof vests, ID tags, shirts, pants,
tents, bags, and canteens. Along with war supplies, prison workers supply 98%
of the entire market for equipment assembly services; 93% of paints and
paintbrushes; 92% of stove assembly; 46% of body armor; 36% of home appliances;
30% of headphones/microphones/speakers; and 21% of office furniture. Airplane
parts, medical supplies, and much more: prisoners are even raising seeing-eye
dogs for blind people.
By 2007, the
overall sales figures and profits for federal and state prison industries had
skyrocketed into the billions. Apparently, the military industrial complex (MIC)
and the prison industrial complex (PIC) have joined forces.
The PIC is a
network of public and private prisons, of military personnel, politicians,
business contacts, prison guard unions, contractors, subcontractors and
suppliers all making big profits at the expense of poor people who comprise the
overwhelming majority of captives. The fastest growing industry in the country,
it has its own trade exhibitions, conventions, websites, and
mail-order/Internet catalogs and direct advertising campaigns. Corporate
stockholders who make money off prisoners' labor lobby for longer sentences, in
order to expand their workforce.
Replacing the
"contract and lease" system of the 19th Century, private companies
that have contracted prison labor include Microsoft, Boeing, Honeywell, IBM,
Revlon, Pierre Cardin, Compaq, Victoria Secret, Macy’s, Target,
Nordstrom, and
countless others.
In 1995, there
were only five private prisons in the country, with a population of 2,000
inmates; now, private companies operate 264 correctional facilities housing
some 99,000 adult prisoners. The two largest private prison corporations in the
US, GEO Group (formerly Wackenhut) and Corrections Corporation of America (CCA)
are transnationals, managing prisons and detention centers in 34 states,
Australia, Canada, South Africa, and the United Kingdom.
A top
performer on the New York Stock Exchange, CCA called California its "new
frontier," and boasts of investors such as Wal-Mart, Exxon, General
Motors, Ford, Chevrolet, Texaco, Hewlett-Packard, Verizon, and UPS. Currently, CCA
has 80,000 beds in 65 facilities, and GEO Group operates 61 facilities with
49,000 beds, according to Wikipredia.
Employers
(Read: slavers) don't have to pay health or unemployment insurance, vacation
time, sick leave or overtime. They can hire, fire or reassign inmates as they
so desire, and can pay the workers as little as 21 cents an hour. The inmates
cannot respond with a strike, file a grievance, or threaten to leave and get a
better job.
On September 19, 2005, UNICOR
was commended for its outstanding support of the nation’s military. Deputy
Commander of the Defense Supply Center Philadelphia (DSCP), presented the
Bureau of Prisons Director with a “Supporting the Warfighter” award. The award
recognized UNICOR for its tremendous support of DSCP’s mission to provide equipment,
materials, and supplies to each branch of the armed forces. “We at DSCP are
very appreciative of UNICOR, especially with our critical need items. With more
than $200 million worth of orders during Fiscal Years 2004 and 2005, UNICOR has
not had a single delinquency.”
Mass roundups
of immigrants and non-citizens, currently about half of all federal prisoners,
and dragnets in low-income 'hoods have increased the prison population to
unprecedented levels. Andrea Hornbein points out in Profit Motive: "The
majority of these arrests are for low level offenses or outstanding warrants,
and impact the taxpayer far more than the offense. For example, a $300 robbery
resulting in a 5-year sentence, at the Massachusetts average of $43,000 per
year, will cost $215,000. That doesn't even include law enforcement and court
costs."
Nearly 75% of
all prisoners are drug war captives. A criminal record today practically forces
an ex-con into illegal employment since they don't qualify for legitimate jobs
or subsidized housing. Minor parole violations, unaffordable bail, parole
denials, longer mandatory sentencing and three strikes laws, slashing of
welfare rolls, overburdened court systems, shortages of public defenders,
massive closings of mental hospitals, and high unemployment (about 50% for
Black men) -- all contribute to the high rates of incarceration and recidivism.
Thus, the slave labor pool continues to expand.
Among the most
powerful unions today are the guards' unions. The California Corrections Peace
Officers Association (CCPOA) wields so much political power it practically
decides who governs the state. Moreover, its members get the State's biggest
payouts, according to the L.A. Times. "More than 1600 officers' earnings
exceeded legislators' 2007 salaries of $113,098." Base pay for 6,000
guards earning $100,000 or more totaled $453 million with overtime adding
another $220 million to wages. One lieutenant guard earned more than any other
state official, including the Governor, or $252,570.
California’s
per prisoner cost has raised to $49,000, and that figure doubles and triples
for elderly and high-security captives.
That’s enough money to send a person through Harvard!
The National Correctional Industries Association (NCIA),
is an international nonprofit professional association, whose self-declared
mission is “to promote excellence and credibility in correctional industries
through professional development and innovative business solutions.”
NCIA's members
include all 50 state correctional industry agencies, Federal Prison Industries,
foreign correctional industry agencies, city and county jail industry programs,
and private sector companies working in partnership with correctional
industries.
Chattel
slavery was ended following prolonged guerrilla warfare between the slaves and
the slave-owners and their political allies. Referred to as the “Underground
Railroad,” it was led by the revolutionary General Harriet Tubman with support
from her alliances with abolitionists, Black and White. It only makes sense that this new form of
slavery must produce prison
abolitionists.
As George
Jackson noted in a KPFA interview with Karen Wald (Spring 1971), "I'm
saying that it's impossible, impossible, to concentration-camp resisters....We
have to prove that this thing won't work here. And the only way to prove it is
resistance...and then that resistance has to be supported, of course, from the
street....We can fight, but the results are...not conducive to proving our
point...that this thing won't work on us. From inside, we fight and we
die....the point is -- in the new face of war -- to fight and win."
Power
to the people.
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