Prison Factories
Slave Labor for the New World Order?
by Charles Overbeck
Matrix Editor
EASTERISLE@parascope.com
The Justice Department reported in August that there are nearly
1.6 million men and women incarcerated in the United States -- currently
the highest incarceration rate in the entire world. This startling
figure tops off a decade of rapid expansion of America's prison
population, fueled by a "war on drugs" that is steadily
undermining the rights so succinctly expressed in the Bill of Rights
more than 200 years ago.
As 1995 drew to a close, one out of every 167 Americans was in
prison or jail, compared to one out of 320 in 1985, when the crack
cocaine trade began to proliferate. The total number of inmates
has more than doubled in the past decade, and we just can't seem
to build enough prisons to keep them all in.
Add the trend towards private prison facility management and corporate
use of prison labor, and you have an extremely unsettling social
situation. Are we witnessing the creation of a slave labor force
for the corporate New World Order?
Quite possibly, if the Oakhill Correctional Institute in Dane County,
Wisconsin serves as a model. Seventeen inmates crowded in a makeshift
basement factory in that facility crank out over a million dollars'
worth of office chairs per year, in exchange for wages ranging from
twenty cents to $1.50 per hour.
The operation is run by Badger State Industries, the Wisconsin
prison industries program, which employs 600 inmates and which raked
in a $1.2 million profit in 1995. In the past, to protect manufacturers
from unfair competition, Wisconsin allowed sale of prison-made goods
only to state and local government agencies. But Governor Tommy
Thompson's new state budget allows commercial entities to use prison
facilities and labor for manufacturing purposes. The money will
be used to pay for the costs of incarcerating the prisoners -- including
the ones who work in the factories.
Wisconsin is following the lead of other states, such as California,
Tennessee, Kansas, Ohio, Oregon, Texas, Nevada and Iowa, which have
incorporated prisoners into the labor force, placing artificial
downward pressure on wages. Thousands of state and federal prisoners
are currently generating more than $1 billion per year in sales
for private businesses, often competing directly with the private
sector labor force. The Correctional Industries Association predicts
that by the year 2000, 30 percent of America's inmate population
will labor to create nearly $9 billion in sales for private business
interests.
Oregon has even started advertising its prison labor force and
factories, claiming that businesses who utilize incarcerated workers
would otherwise go overseas for cheap labor (thanks, GATT and NAFTA!).
In 1995, an overwhelming majority of Oregon voters passed a constitutional
amendment that will put 100 percent of its state inmates to work.
And they'll be making a lot more than license plates and road signs.
One product of Oregon's inmate factories are uniforms for McDonald's.
Tennessee inmates stitch together jeans for Kmart and JC Penney,
as well as $80 wooden rocking ponies for Eddie Bauer. Mattresses
and furniture are perennial favorites in prison factories, and Ohio
inmates even produced car parts for Honda, until the United Auto
Workers intervened. Prisoners have been employed doing data entry,
assembling computer circuit boards and even taking credit card ticket
orders for TWA.
But private industry isn't the only sector eager to exploit cheap
prison labor. On June 14, 1995, the U.S. House of Representatives
narrowly rejected an amendment to the 1996 Defense Authorization
bill which would have permitted the Defense Department to use nonviolent
offender inmates provided by state or local corrections facilities
to do construction and maintenance services at military installations.
Although prison manufacturing facilities do offer short-term benefits
at a time when budgets are strained to the breaking point, the system
is ripe for exploitation and abuse by government and corporate entities
seeking to cut financial corners. Proponents of prison labor say
it is "good" for inmates, providing income and on-the-job
training they would have never received otherwise.
But due to a lack of restrictions to prevent abuse of the prison
labor force, many inmates view the situation very differently. At
Soledad near Monterey, California, prisoners earn 45 cents per hour
making blue work shirts, which, once deductions are taken out, adds
up to $60 for a month of 40-hour work weeks. "They put you
on a machine and expect you to put out for them," Soledad inmate
Dino Navarrete told Arm the Spirit. "Nobody wants to do that.
These jobs are jokes to most inmates here."
So why do they do it? In California, prisoners who refuse to work
are moved to discliplinary housing and lose canteen priveleges,
as well as "good time" credit that slices hard time off
their sentences. Corporatization of prison labor abuses inmates,
exploits their labor and inevitably reduces the value of the private
sector work force. What is a troubling trend today may become a
social and economic disaster in the future. ParaScope will be keeping
a close eye on the trend towards prison labor; stay tuned for future
updates on the situation.
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