Monday 23 February 2015

9 surprising industries getting filthy rich from mass incarceration

1. Food Supply Companies: Supplying food for prisons can be extremely profitable. Just ask the Philadelphia-based Aramark Corporation, which brings in millions of dollars bringing food to around 600 prisons in North America. Aramark’s profits continue to roll in even when the company does a terrible job. In 2014, Aramark received fines of $98,000 and $200,000 from the state of Michigan for a long list of infractions, including meal shortages, unsanitary conditions (maggots found in the food, for example) and Aramark employees smuggling contraband into prisons. But such fines were a small price to pay in light of the fact that, in December 2013, Aramark signed a three-year, $145-million contract with the state of Michigan. Aramark has had problems in other states as well, including Kentucky (where corrections officers said poor food service led to a prison riot in 2009), Florida (where state officials ended a contract with Aramark after accusing the company of boosting corporate profits by skimping on meals) and Ohio (where Aramark employees have been fired for having sex with inmates).
2. Telecommunications: Although corporatists love to describe themselves as believers in free-market competition, the reality is that many of them do everything they can to rig the game, avoid competition and become monopolies. One telecom company that operates as a monopoly in many prisons is Global Tel* Link (GTL). The company has been making $500 million annually in profits thanks to its exclusive contracts with a long list of prisons. When prisoners make collect calls via GTL, the person accepting the call pays inflated rates of up to $1.13 per minute. GTL can get away with charging those rates because it doesn’t have to compete with other telecom companies in the prisons where it has exclusive contracts.
3. Healthcare Companies:Inside American prisons, decent healthcare is hard to come by. Corizon, a company that specializes in prison healthcare, is making an estimated $1.4 billion annually despite doing an abysmal job caring for those they are paid to treat. In 2012, seven sick prisoners died in a Louisville, Kentucky jail where Corizon was in charge of healthcare; the city of Louisville later canceled its contract with Corizon. In the video, Prison Profiteers, a Tucson, Arizona woman whose incarcerated son had hepatitis C was told by Corizon employees that they had “no protocol for treating” the disease, which is rampant in prisons.
4. Telemarketing and Call Centers: Many American corporations have moved their call centers to India, the Philippines, Honduras and other countries where they can get away with paying slave wages. But some Americans corporations in need of call centers have found an even cheaper source of labor: American inmates. USA Today reported in 2004 that 2,000 or more prisoners in the U.S. were working in call centers. About 80 of them were in Snake River Prison in Oregon, where inmates were being paid around $120-$185 a month for working full-time. When companies can get people to sell and promote products, handle customer service or make hotel reservations for 75 cents an hour, there is much incentive for keeping the prison-industrial complex alive.
5. Clothing Manufacturers: Prisoners are making a lot more than license plates these days. A wide variety of products are being manufactured in U.S. prisons, from office furniture and bedding to sinks, toilets and clothing. All kinds of clothing is made in American prisons: shirts, hats, pants, shoes, jackets, you name it. Even Victoria’s Secret has profited from the prison-industrial complex: in the 1990s, Victoria’s Secret subcontractor Third Generation hired 35 female inmates in North Carolina to sew lingerie.
6. The Technology Sector: Back in the 1950s, ’60s and ’70s, unionized manufacturing and packaging jobs were great for the American middle class. But that was before so many of those jobs were outsourced to Pakistan, Bangladesh, China and other countries with ultra-low wages and terrible working conditions. Some corporations, however, have found a source of ultra-cheap labor right in the U.S.: inmates, whose pay can be as low as 35 cents an hour. The technology sector has been willing to make use of prison labor. Exmark (a Microsoft subcontractor) used prisoners in Washington State for shrinkwrapping Microsoft products (including mouses and software) in the 1990s, and in 2003, Dell used federal prisoners for recycling desktop computers.
7. The Bail Industry: According to research by the ACLU and the Nation, the bail industry now pulls in $2 billion in revenue annually. They described the practices of bail bondsmen like Eric Amparan, who keeps 10% of a bail amount as a non-refundable fee even if the person is found innocent. The higher the bail amounts set by judges, the more bail bondsmen stand to make—and Prison Profiteers reported that between 2002 and 2011, the American Bail Coalition (a lobbying group for the bail industry) spent $3.1 million lobbying for judges to set higher bail amounts. Prison Profiteers also noted that average bail amounts increased substantially with the growth of the prison-industrial complex, going from $39,800 in 1992 (the year ABC was founded) to $89,900 in 2006.
8. Food Processing and Packaging: The prison-industrial complex not only uses companies like Aramark that bring food to prisoners, it can also use prison labor to process food for people on the outside. In 2008, Mother Jones’ Caroline Winter reported that in California alone, prisoners were processing “more than 680,000 pounds of beef, 400,000 pounds of chicken products, 450,000 gallons of milk, 280,000 loaves of bread, and 2.9 million eggs.” Winter reported that Signature Packaging Solutions, a Starbucks subcontractor, was using prisoners to package holiday coffees.
9. Agriculture: With more states fining farmers for hiring undocumented workers and fewer agricultural workers coming in from Mexico, the prison-industrial complex has been using more prisoners as a source of farm labor. This is happening everywhere from Georgia to Arizona to Idaho, where in 2014, State Sen. Patti Anne Lodge (a Republican) sponsored a bill allowing agricultural employers to hire prisoners. The bill was quickly signed into law by Idaho’s Republican governor C.L. Otter.

15 comments:

  1. http://booksinjail.wordpress.com

    ReplyDelete
  2. Lindsay Lohan’s Court Appearance – This Is Sad Excellent goods from you, man. I’ve understand your stuff previous to and you are just too magnificent. I really like what you’ve acquired here, certainly like what you are stating and the way in which you say it. You make it entertaining and you still take care of to keep it wise. I cant wait to read far more Lindsay Lohan’s Court Appearance – This Is Sad again from you. Thanks For Share . dfmpro software

    ReplyDelete
  3. Vos paragraphe : bon quelques bons propos de désaccord mais je remets en question de la véracité des chiffres supputés ci dessus dans ce premier étude cheap software canada

    ReplyDelete
  4. I surely did not realize that. Learnt some thing new these days! Thanks for that. 먹튀검증

    ReplyDelete
  5. This is a interesting line of content, very nice article. Thanks for sharing this post, good way of bring this subject to discussion. Keep up the great work ! 먹튀검증

    ReplyDelete
  6. Pretty nice post. I recently stumbled upon your blog and wished to state that I’ve actually appreciated searching your blog content. After all I will be registering to your own nourish and i also we imagine you compose once more quickly! 먹튀인포

    ReplyDelete
  7. Exactly how is actually Google Adsense More advanced than Alternative Listing Cpa affiliate networks? 먹튀

    ReplyDelete
  8. Its mainly because the cast is very likable with its main leads resonating off each other in this pool of silliness which makes the film highly entertaining. 먹튀검증

    ReplyDelete
  9. Exactly how is actually Google Adsense More advanced than Alternative Listing Cpa affiliate networks? Mega888 game client download

    ReplyDelete
  10. I think other website proprietors should take this website as an model, very clean and fantastic user genial style and design, as well as the content. You are an expert in this topic! 918kiss mega888 apk download

    ReplyDelete
  11. The next time I just read a blog, I hope which it doesnt disappoint me just as much as brussels. After all, It was my replacement for read, but I actually thought youd have something interesting to talk about. All I hear can be a number of whining about something that you could fix in the event you werent too busy trying to find attention. 918kiss kiss918 apk download

    ReplyDelete
  12. I am continuously browsing online for posts that can help me. Thx! 토토사이트

    ReplyDelete
  13. I don’t even know how I returned, however i presumed this kind of submit has been practical. Cheers! 파워볼사이트

    ReplyDelete
  14. very good post, i certainly really like this excellent website, keep on it 파워볼사이트

    ReplyDelete


  15. Simply want to say your article is as astonishing. The clarity to your publish is just great and that i
    could think you are an expert on this subject. Well with your permission let me to take hold of
    your feed to keep up to date with drawing close post. Thanks one million and please keep up the gratifying work

    my website - 풀싸롱

    (freaky)

    ReplyDelete