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In order for people in prison to use phone or video calls to chat with family, the person on the other line must pay. As of 2021, according to research by the Prison Policy Initiative, they've paid an average of $3 for a 15-minute phone call. The new rules will force a business model change for correctional telecommunications companies as they contend with an estimated $500 million loss in revenue, according to Worth Rises. Only five states have passed legislation to make jail phone calls free, according to Prison Legal News. Wanda Bertram, a communications strategist for the Prison Policy Initiative, said prisons tend to negotiate better contracts with telecommunications companies and, therefore, tend to have better rates for prisoners.
Persons: , they've, Peter Wagner, Viapath, ICSolutions, , Bianca Tylek, Wanda Bertram, Paul Wright Organizations: Service, Federal Communications Commission, Business, FCC, Correctional, Worth, Connect, PBS, Companies, Human Rights Defense Center Locations: ICSolutions, New York , Ohio, Rhode
Reekila Harris-Dudley during a video call with her family at Genesee County Jail in Flint, Mich., on June 10. In recent years, hundreds of jurisdictions around the United States have eliminated in-person visits, making a video screen the only way detainees can see their loved ones. The financial allure of video visitation was clear to local officials when the technology was first introduced in Genesee County a decade ago. In Genesee County, video calls are free — if the “visitor” travels to the jail and uses a screen there. The video visitation scheduling kiosk at Genesee County Jail in Flint, Mich., on June 10.
Persons: Reekila Harris, Dudley, , Harris, Dudley couldn’t, Lester Holt, Alec Karakatsanis, , Brenda, Phillip Dudley, Brenda Dudley, When’s, ’ ”, I’m, ” Reekila Harris, , Wanda Bertram, Bianca Tylek, Julie Poehlmann, “ Young, ” Poehlmann, Karakatsanis, they’re, ViaPath, Securus, Chris Swanson, Swanson, Holt, Swanson —, ” Swanson, George Floyd’s, “ We’re, Kenzi Abou Organizations: NBC, Mastercard, ” Private, Technologies, NBC News, Genesee County’s, ViaPath, Initiative, PPI, Worth, U.S . “, University of Wisconsin, Michigan, , Genesee, Genesee County Sheriff's, St, Karakatsanis Locations: Genesee, Flint , Michigan, America, Genesee County, Flint, Mich, United States, , Genesee County Jail, Michigan, Travis, Texas, U.S, Madison, Clair County
Voters in three states approved ballot measures that will change their state constitutions to prohibit slavery and involuntary servitude as punishment for crime, while those in a fourth state rejected the move. The measures approved Tuesday curtail the use of prison labor in Alabama, Tennessee and Vermont. In Louisiana, a former slave-holding state, voters rejected a ballot question known as Amendment 7 that asked whether they supported a constitutional amendment to prohibit the use of involuntary servitude in the criminal justice system. After Tuesday’s vote, more than a dozen states still have constitutions that include language permitting slavery and involuntary servitude for prisoners. Several other states have no constitutional language for or against the use of forced prison labor.
Voters in Tennessee, Alabama, Louisiana, Oregon, and Vermont will be voting on changing this legislation. The landmark 13th Amendment to the US Constitution, ratified on December 6, 1865, officially abolished slavery but allowed it to continue as a punishment in prisons against convicted felons. For states in the former Confederacy, the loophole was a tool to maintain the dynamics of slavery, post-abolition, said AP. But in some states, including Alabama, inmates get paid nothing for their work. "For an entire generation, it put Black men and women back into slavery by incarcerating them and selling their labor to private corporations," said Chase.
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