See this link for details regarding the Marlene Moore story that you may not have heard before. Marlene was the first woman in Canada given the Dangerous Offender designation. As with most women having received this label and increasingly now with men too, the designation is an over-reach of the injustice system.
http://prisonstatecanada.blogspot.ca/p/women.html
Resisting the Oppressive Arm of the Canadian State and Seeking Out Human Rights Based Alternatives
Showing posts with label State Violence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label State Violence. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Friday, August 17, 2012
An Anarchist Woman in Jail Reflects on the Cage: Doing Time as a G20 Political Prisoner
Every Prisoner is a Political Prisoner
http://prisonradio.wordpress.com/2012/07/29/every-prisoner-is-a-political-prisoner/
I found Kelly's memoir below really impactful. She managed to remind me of some of the details around doing time that I'm sure most of us prefer to forget. What I really appreciated was Kelly's reflections and analysis about the oppression which the women with whom she is forcibly confined must live through and survive every single day. Oppressions which many of us are working hard to resist and indeed to eliminate, but which few of us actually have to resist daily from the inside.
from CrimethInc.
-
On July 19, Kelly Rose Pflug-Back was sentenced to eleven more months in prison for her participation in the 2010 G20 protests in Toronto. She remains unapologetic about her role in the black bloc that caused so much disruption during the summit, demonstrating that the forces that impose capitalism and patriarchy are not invulnerable.
To support Kelly and the millions like her who are imprisoned for the inconveniences they pose to the powerful, we are proud to present her eloquent and thought-provoking memoir of the time she spent incarcerated after her original arrest: “Every Prisoner is a Political Prisoner.” In this account, Kelly powerfully evokes the experience of captivity and the importance of understanding all captives of the state as political prisoners.
Our friends Strangers in a Tangled Wilderness are publishing a book of Kelly’s poetry as a fundraiser to benefit her during her incarceration. Walt Whitman argued that “to have great poets there must be great audiences,” but audiences is precisely the opposite of what there must be. To have great poetry, there must be people who are willing to act on their ideals rather than just watch from the sidelines. We are deeply grateful to Kelly for finding the courage to live her poetry as well as writing it.
-
Interview with Kelly Rose Pflug-Back
Write to Kelly:
Kelly Pflug-Back
Vanier Centre for Women
P.O. Box 1040
655 Martin Street
Milton, Ontario
L9T 5E6 Canada
When I reached Jimmie Simpson Park, where people were meeting for the day’s scheduled prison solidarity rally, I saw only a small crowd of friends standing under the drooping honey locust trees: some debriefing or consoling one another, others speaking with the reporters who swarmed like gnats around the gathering. This sparse group of about thirty was all that remained after the preemptive kidnappings and mass arrests. I can’t remember if I felt any particular sense of foreboding—any eerie apprehension of why I too hadn’t been taken away.
As our diminished group walked from the park to the detention center where our friends were being held, I hoped to be able to find some news of what had happened to my partner, or to anyone for that matter.
The gray sky sprinkled rain upon us, but we were happy and smiling. We chanted, sang, played instruments and shared whatever food we’d brought. Cops surrounded us, jostling the crowd to step farther away from the chain link fence surrounding the prison. I’d been there about half an hour when the unmarked van drove into the crowd. A group of men jumped out and forced their way toward me, yelling for people to move out of the way. One of them said my name, and within seconds they had dragged me into the van.
I can’t say I felt anything when my face hit the floor, but later in my cell I noticed a deep throbbing in my teeth and gums. The front ones were loose. My mouth tasted like blood.
One of the cops who’d pulled me into the van asked me if I was on welfare. He leered at my bare legs and told me I needed a razor. Another tied my wrists with zip ties and proceeded to rifle through my purse.
Inside, the building was a massive warehouse filled with wire cages, like some industrial chicken farm. The noise of other prisoners screaming protest songs and rattling the doors of their cages echoed off the concrete walls, making our numbers seem greater even than the 992 people occupying cells. They put me in a cage and locked the door. On the wall to my left I saw a guard scribble my name on a white board alongside the words “do not release.” I sat down on the concrete and anticipated the worst.
The following day I was hospitalized after losing consciousness from low blood sugar. All we were given to eat was a cheese sandwich every 12 to 24 hours with no alternatives for those who were vegan or had an allergy. I was unable to walk to the medical trailer; the guards informed me that this constituted refusing medical attention. Another prisoner who overheard this screamed at a guard who was busy amusing himself doing tricks in an unused wheelchair, and they brought it to my cell shortly after.
A female guard snarled at me to “close my fucking legs” while I sat sprawled inside the medical trailer with an intravenous glucose drip in my arm. I’d been arrested in a short skirt and tank top, and they had refused me, numerous times, pants or a blanket. It was freezing inside the detention center. There was no way to get off the bare concrete. My teeth chattered constantly, and I never stopped shaking. It was too cold to sleep.
After they took me back to my cell, I could hear a man nearby screaming that he needed his medication. He screamed for hours before stopping abruptly; I pressed my face to the cage door and I could see him convulsing on the floor of his cell with his tongue hanging out of his mouth. “Get up,” the guards told him, repeatedly, before finally acknowledging his unconsciousness. Then they dragged him away.
Countless people were processed and released, many of them with bruises, cuts and abrasions on their arms and faces from being slammed into the concrete. A number of the guards passed the time by spewing racist, homophobic, classist, and sexist harassment at prisoners, or threatening them with further brutalization. A number of women were threatened with rape.
Hours and hours passed, and it became increasingly clear that I would not be allowed to call my lawyer or let my family know where I was. As a matter of fact, I hadn’t yet been informed of my charges. I spent over two days in my cell, curled in a ball on the concrete or pacing the small vicinity of my cage, sometimes yelling to other prisoners or joining them in hysterical, sleep-deprived bouts of laughter.
I was unsurprised to see a few old friends from Toronto’s street community pass through the detention center. Were it not for the unfortunate situation, it would have been a welcome reunion. When an acquaintance of mine ended up in the cell beside me, we started talking about the circumstances that had brought us there. Only seventeen, he had spent the majority of his life being transferred from group home to group home. Since he had finally been appointed as his own legal guardian, his life had been plagued by poverty, class profiling, and prejudice in the court system. Although he didn’t consider himself an “activist,” he was obviously more steeped in the realities of social struggle than a large portion of the other detainees. We talked about our mutual experiences with police, shelters, group homes, and homelessness. We talked about how these experiences had politicized us, and how a person doesn’t need to understand party politics to be political. Every poor person is political, we agreed, just by nature of their experiences.
I realized at that point that I probably had more in common with him than I did with most of the other protesters. Unfortunate as it was, life had already acclimatized us to be treated like shit by the authorities. None of this surprised us. We were used to being beaten, having our rights stripped away.
After most of the detention center had been emptied, I was transferred to the general population at the women’s prison in Milton. While we waited to be processed in the holding cells, the other women and I laughed and joked, trading stories about how we’d ended up where we were. A lot of them were arrested and presumed guilty for unequivocal bullshit; for being homeless, poor, non-white, using drugs, working in the sex trade, or any combination of these factors. Others were arrested for crimes of necessity: for stealing food because they were hungry, or robbing a store to feed their young kids, for needing a way to pay rent. A few had been charged with assault after having fought back against abusive spouses. I told them my charges, and got a lot of hugs, high-fives, and congratulations. “Fucking right,” people said, slapping me on the back. “Fuck the rich bastards! Fuck the G20!”
Some people had been unclear as to what the summit had been all about, and we got into a long conversation about it. We all laughed, ranted, waited, and laughed some more. If these were the women with whom I’d be surrounded, I thought to myself, maybe prison won’t be all that bad.
My first days inside were largely spent adjusting to the prison environment, and as time went on, my new setting reminded me increasingly of the years I spent living on the street when I was a teenager.
On the streets, as in prison, you never get a decent night’s sleep or a meal that resembles real food. There are always a few arrogant people who think they run everything because they’ve been there the longest, and people in uniforms can do whatever they want to you and get away with it. In both situations, your status as a human being is revoked. Humanity is a privilege awarded to those who help perpetuate capitalism, and once you cease to do that, you’re a burden. You’re expected to express gratitude to the system that ghettoizes you, doling out a few table scraps and a thin blanket.
The first range I was sent to was renowned for being the least hospitable. We were locked in our cells for most of the day. Each had one bed, though the high volume of prisoners meant that two people usually shared a cell. The only windows were thin slats of frosted glass too opaque to see through, and we were allowed outside only once a week. “Outside” was a small walled concrete enclosure with metal grating for a ceiling. Through a small crack underneath the heavy steel door, I could see grass. It depressed me to look at it. I tried not to.
This was the range to which people were sent as punishment, for getting into fights, mouthing off to guards, being caught with contraband or generally failing to comply with prison regulations. If you were “good” you qualified for transfer to a medium-security unit, where you could go to a real outdoor exercise yard, have your own cell, and see visitors without a thick pane of Plexiglas separating you.
A lot of the women on maximum security had been on the same range for over a year. I met one woman who had been there for almost two; she’d never had a misconduct, but there was a note in her file stating that she would have to serve her entire sentence on maximum security. She came from a mafia family, she explained. Putting her on a medium security unit would have been an open invitation for any of her high-up friends to come break her out.
After visiting the classification office, I learned of a similar note in my file. “Apparently I’m a terrorist,” I shrugged, when people asked why I hadn’t been transferred yet.
I won’t say that I instantly got along with everyone on my range, or that I was the most popular prisoner. I didn’t pay attention to the hierarchies that existed between other prisoners, and some people had a problem with that. I wouldn’t join in when others ridiculed or ganged up on the less popular women. It was a total pecking order, and it reminded me too much of a schoolyard.
I became close friends with a woman named Rachel* whom I met in the common area during breakfast on a rare day when we weren’t on 24-hour lock down. She was violently ill from drug withdrawal, and the nurse hadn’t filled her methadone prescription. Apparently, her cellmate was a complete asshole, so we snuck her into my cell after the doors were buzzed open. The next guard that came by on her rounds started yelling at us, but we assured her that the other staff had transferred Rachel and forgotten to do the paperwork. I don’t think the guard believed us, but she didn’t seem to care enough to do anything about it.
When Rachel wasn’t too sick to make conversation, we passed the long hours of our confinement playing cards, singing tuneless renditions of R&B hits, washing our dirty uniforms in the sink and talking about life in general. She lived near Niagara with her partner, their four-year-old son, and their newborn daughter. She struggled with addiction, but still managed to keep her life together and be there for her kids. Her dad had been in and out of prison most of her life, and her mom had been drunk all the time. She’d spent her early teenage years working as a prostitute, and the crown attorney at her bail hearing had used this to argue that she was unfit to reenter society. It seems that when 13-year-old girls end up hooking on the streets it’s because they possess some moral defect, and not because life has given them no other choices.
Our cells looked out onto the common area, an oval-shaped concrete room. It contained five bolted-down tables, four showers at one end, a shelf with a few bad paperback romance novels, and three phones, only two of which functioned. When allowed into the common area, I went straight to waiting in line for the phones. Some women didn’t have anybody to call or only had relatives outside of the country; the phones only transmitted collect calls within North America. Other women gripped the phone receivers with white knuckles, trying to explain to their young children why mommy wasn’t coming home. Rachel said she had told her partner not to bring the kids when coming to visit her. “They’re just too young. They would only be confused by the Plexiglas in the visitor’s cubicle. Being able to see their mother, but not reach out and touch her.”
I thought of an article I’d read once about animal testing laboratories. One method the lab technicians used to create symptoms of stress and depression in mammals involved removing newborn babies from their mother, then placing the mother in isolation. I looked up at the florescent ceiling lights within their shatterproof wire cages. Soon, the nurse came and people lined up to receive their daily doses of sedatives and anti-psychotics—a precautionary measure, prescribed to virtually everyone, like cutting off the beaks of factory-farmed chickens to prevent them from pecking themselves, or each other, to death from the stress of confinement and isolation.
My views of the prison system solidified: prisons are little more than warehouses for concentrating the poor. Rather than being populated by the people most harmful to society, they are crowded with those who have been the most harmedby society.
Rather than being “correctional” facilities, they are a method of ridding the streets of those who act as living reminders of the crisis of poverty, the widening income gap, the future of hardship which may very well await many more in the coming years if something does not change. Prisons are a way of sweeping people under the rug. They are a way of pretending that nothing is wrong.
Very few of the women on my range had been imprisoned for any kind of violent crime, and most of those who did have violent charges had been defending themselves against abusive partners or assailants. Most of these women’s attackers had walked away without charges, free to roam the streets at their leisure.
The small portion of women facing violent charges not involving self-defense were often the survivors of past traumas; a history rarely taken into consideration by the courts that sentenced them. Much like the homeless community, a large portion of the women with whom I spoke were survivors of the lifelong onslaught of abuse perpetrated against poor and disenfranchised women by our society, particularly women of color. Many had been arrested for not having full citizenship, while others had been in the process of applying for refugee status. A disturbingly high number also lived with (dis)abilities like Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, Fetal Narcotic Syndrome, Schizophrenia, and ADD/ADHD.
These are women who have been bounced between abusive foster homes and youth detention facilities, graduating at 16 as wards of the Children’s Aid Society only to become wards of the State, criminalized for doing what it takes to survive the minefield of poverty.
As the days turned into weeks, I began to erase from my mind the hope of being released. The health problems with which I’ve been living the last few years became increasingly severe, and I often found it difficult to stand up or walk around without fainting. My ribs stuck out. My stomach became concave. I became depressed.
Was it stress, overly-processed food, or a general lack of fresh air and exercise that made me unhealthy? Probably some combination of all these things. Without even examining me, the doctor put me on a liquid diet, which in jail consists largely of juice crystals, water, and MSG-filled soup powder. When I was finally sent to the examination room I was told that nothing seemed to be wrong with me, regardless of the fact that I’d lost close to 20 pounds, felt tired constantly, and was in serious pain and discomfort.
I talked to my partner on the phone, but his voice sounded distant and crackly through the receiver. He came to visit me, and we pressed our hands to the inch-thick Plexiglas between us. It was almost harder than not seeing him. My mom sounded stressed whenever I called her, and I could hear my dog howling in the background at the sound of my voice through the receiver.
I needed to talk to somebody, but the prospect of being force-fed Thorazine dissuaded me from applying to see the psychiatrist. So I went to the prison Chaplain, for the sheer novelty. He was a square-jawed man in a gray suit, with the bearing of a Televangelist. He told me I was in prison because I had sinned, and that I had to repent for these sins. I was in my current situation because the Devil had led me astray.
“But Jesus was a political prisoner!” I said. “The Devil didn’t tell me to do anything; I’m a political prisoner like Jesus!” He thought I was crazy.
I was released after about a month on conditions of strict house arrest and non-association with some of my closest friends. All I felt was numb. I walked into the parking lot with my family and my partner, squinting under the bright sunlight. We drove back to the house where I lived as a kid and I slept for days. At first I felt fine. I could leave the house, if I was with my parents, to take the dogs for walks in the last of summer’s warm weather. I drank coffee, read a lot. People I’d never met sent me stickers and zines and nice letters in the mail.
Two months later I started having panic attacks, insomnia, and nervous breakdowns on an almost daily basis. When I did sleep, I had awful nightmares. It seemed as though every past instance of trauma and violence I’d seen or experienced had been consolidated into a heavy, poisonous lump, slowly turning my insides black and rotten. I felt like the world was just too ugly to live in. I was suffocating under the weight of clear-cut forests and floundering, tar-drowned shore birds. When I closed my eyes all I could see was torture and war, droughts and chemical spills, napalm.
All I wanted was to move past the negative experiences I’d had and work towards piecing my life back together. But I realized that the pain I felt was trying to tell me something: I would not be able to forget and move on as though none of this had happened. In a way, I think the disgust and pain we feel when we see or experience something horrific can be the greatest catalyst for creating positive change. When we experience something firsthand we are better equipped to understand it—and with that understanding we can educate others and give real support to those who are also experiencing it. We can see its flaws and weak points, and we can use this knowledge to criticize, discredit, and eventually destroy it.
Although I never heard this said firsthand, others told me they overheard quite a few young people say they’d never go to another protest again after their experiences at the detention center. I felt not only disappointed that everyone hadn’t been able to see the ways to reclaim these experiences and use them as further motivation, but profoundly confused by this perspective. What we went through during the mass arrests at the G20 was only a small window into the everyday experiences of countless minorities in this country who suffer police profiling, brutality, and prejudice within the legal system on a horrifyingly regular basis. As hard as I try, I simply can’t understand the notion that anyone could propose to be an ally of any marginalized group, then give up and turn away when faced with a tiny microcosm of what that group puts up with everyday.
My experience in prison and the women with whom I shared it have reminded me of the reasons I became politically active in the first place. They’ve reminded me of the sorrow, the desperation, the heartbreak, the trauma, the unlivable realities of poverty that first spurred me to get my life together and dedicate myself to helping others rather than accepting the conditions in which I lived. Being in prison reminded me of the core of my politics. At the bottom of it, we were all inside that prison for the exact same reason. We were dangerous only in the sense that our existence discredited Canada’s status as a place of liberty and equality. We were a glaring reminder that this country doesn’t offer equal status and opportunity to everyone.
Some political prisoners are arrested for staging public demonstrations that address poverty, and some are arrested for living in poverty. Some actively protest social inequality, while others turn to drugs or alcohol because they can no longer bear the brunt of this inequality. Some choose to publicly draw attention to injustice by their words and actions, while others are swept off the streets because their very presence is a public exposure of this injustice. Now is the time for everyone in our community to think about what it really means to say that every prisoner is a political prisoner. The next time we’re shocked and outraged by an experience of being targeted, harassed, or otherwise mistreated by law enforcement or society in general, we should stop to recognize how much respect we owe to the people all around us who face much more than that every day of their lives. Every prisoner is a political prisoner.
*All names have been changed to protect the identities of those mentioned.
On July 19, Kelly Rose Pflug-Back was sentenced to eleven more months in prison for her participation in the 2010 G20 protests in Toronto. She remains unapologetic about her role in the black bloc that caused so much disruption during the summit, demonstrating that the forces that impose capitalism and patriarchy are not invulnerable.
To support Kelly and the millions like her who are imprisoned for the inconveniences they pose to the powerful, we are proud to present her eloquent and thought-provoking memoir of the time she spent incarcerated after her original arrest: “Every Prisoner is a Political Prisoner.” In this account, Kelly powerfully evokes the experience of captivity and the importance of understanding all captives of the state as political prisoners.
Our friends Strangers in a Tangled Wilderness are publishing a book of Kelly’s poetry as a fundraiser to benefit her during her incarceration. Walt Whitman argued that “to have great poets there must be great audiences,” but audiences is precisely the opposite of what there must be. To have great poetry, there must be people who are willing to act on their ideals rather than just watch from the sidelines. We are deeply grateful to Kelly for finding the courage to live her poetry as well as writing it.
-
Interview with Kelly Rose Pflug-Back
Write to Kelly:
Kelly Pflug-Back
Vanier Centre for Women
P.O. Box 1040
655 Martin Street
Milton, Ontario
L9T 5E6 Canada
Every Prisoner is a Political Prisoner: A Memoir
June 27, 2010, was uncharacteristically overcast for mid-summer Toronto. My head pounded from the humidity as I walked alone down Queen Street, through a cityscape teeming with riot police, and still dusted with shards of broken glass from the day before. Construction crews had already set to work repairing the trail of wreckage, attempting to get everything back to normal before anyone noticed.When I reached Jimmie Simpson Park, where people were meeting for the day’s scheduled prison solidarity rally, I saw only a small crowd of friends standing under the drooping honey locust trees: some debriefing or consoling one another, others speaking with the reporters who swarmed like gnats around the gathering. This sparse group of about thirty was all that remained after the preemptive kidnappings and mass arrests. I can’t remember if I felt any particular sense of foreboding—any eerie apprehension of why I too hadn’t been taken away.
As our diminished group walked from the park to the detention center where our friends were being held, I hoped to be able to find some news of what had happened to my partner, or to anyone for that matter.
The gray sky sprinkled rain upon us, but we were happy and smiling. We chanted, sang, played instruments and shared whatever food we’d brought. Cops surrounded us, jostling the crowd to step farther away from the chain link fence surrounding the prison. I’d been there about half an hour when the unmarked van drove into the crowd. A group of men jumped out and forced their way toward me, yelling for people to move out of the way. One of them said my name, and within seconds they had dragged me into the van.
I can’t say I felt anything when my face hit the floor, but later in my cell I noticed a deep throbbing in my teeth and gums. The front ones were loose. My mouth tasted like blood.
One of the cops who’d pulled me into the van asked me if I was on welfare. He leered at my bare legs and told me I needed a razor. Another tied my wrists with zip ties and proceeded to rifle through my purse.
Inside, the building was a massive warehouse filled with wire cages, like some industrial chicken farm. The noise of other prisoners screaming protest songs and rattling the doors of their cages echoed off the concrete walls, making our numbers seem greater even than the 992 people occupying cells. They put me in a cage and locked the door. On the wall to my left I saw a guard scribble my name on a white board alongside the words “do not release.” I sat down on the concrete and anticipated the worst.
The following day I was hospitalized after losing consciousness from low blood sugar. All we were given to eat was a cheese sandwich every 12 to 24 hours with no alternatives for those who were vegan or had an allergy. I was unable to walk to the medical trailer; the guards informed me that this constituted refusing medical attention. Another prisoner who overheard this screamed at a guard who was busy amusing himself doing tricks in an unused wheelchair, and they brought it to my cell shortly after.
A female guard snarled at me to “close my fucking legs” while I sat sprawled inside the medical trailer with an intravenous glucose drip in my arm. I’d been arrested in a short skirt and tank top, and they had refused me, numerous times, pants or a blanket. It was freezing inside the detention center. There was no way to get off the bare concrete. My teeth chattered constantly, and I never stopped shaking. It was too cold to sleep.
After they took me back to my cell, I could hear a man nearby screaming that he needed his medication. He screamed for hours before stopping abruptly; I pressed my face to the cage door and I could see him convulsing on the floor of his cell with his tongue hanging out of his mouth. “Get up,” the guards told him, repeatedly, before finally acknowledging his unconsciousness. Then they dragged him away.
Countless people were processed and released, many of them with bruises, cuts and abrasions on their arms and faces from being slammed into the concrete. A number of the guards passed the time by spewing racist, homophobic, classist, and sexist harassment at prisoners, or threatening them with further brutalization. A number of women were threatened with rape.
Hours and hours passed, and it became increasingly clear that I would not be allowed to call my lawyer or let my family know where I was. As a matter of fact, I hadn’t yet been informed of my charges. I spent over two days in my cell, curled in a ball on the concrete or pacing the small vicinity of my cage, sometimes yelling to other prisoners or joining them in hysterical, sleep-deprived bouts of laughter.
I was unsurprised to see a few old friends from Toronto’s street community pass through the detention center. Were it not for the unfortunate situation, it would have been a welcome reunion. When an acquaintance of mine ended up in the cell beside me, we started talking about the circumstances that had brought us there. Only seventeen, he had spent the majority of his life being transferred from group home to group home. Since he had finally been appointed as his own legal guardian, his life had been plagued by poverty, class profiling, and prejudice in the court system. Although he didn’t consider himself an “activist,” he was obviously more steeped in the realities of social struggle than a large portion of the other detainees. We talked about our mutual experiences with police, shelters, group homes, and homelessness. We talked about how these experiences had politicized us, and how a person doesn’t need to understand party politics to be political. Every poor person is political, we agreed, just by nature of their experiences.
I realized at that point that I probably had more in common with him than I did with most of the other protesters. Unfortunate as it was, life had already acclimatized us to be treated like shit by the authorities. None of this surprised us. We were used to being beaten, having our rights stripped away.
After most of the detention center had been emptied, I was transferred to the general population at the women’s prison in Milton. While we waited to be processed in the holding cells, the other women and I laughed and joked, trading stories about how we’d ended up where we were. A lot of them were arrested and presumed guilty for unequivocal bullshit; for being homeless, poor, non-white, using drugs, working in the sex trade, or any combination of these factors. Others were arrested for crimes of necessity: for stealing food because they were hungry, or robbing a store to feed their young kids, for needing a way to pay rent. A few had been charged with assault after having fought back against abusive spouses. I told them my charges, and got a lot of hugs, high-fives, and congratulations. “Fucking right,” people said, slapping me on the back. “Fuck the rich bastards! Fuck the G20!”
Some people had been unclear as to what the summit had been all about, and we got into a long conversation about it. We all laughed, ranted, waited, and laughed some more. If these were the women with whom I’d be surrounded, I thought to myself, maybe prison won’t be all that bad.
My first days inside were largely spent adjusting to the prison environment, and as time went on, my new setting reminded me increasingly of the years I spent living on the street when I was a teenager.
On the streets, as in prison, you never get a decent night’s sleep or a meal that resembles real food. There are always a few arrogant people who think they run everything because they’ve been there the longest, and people in uniforms can do whatever they want to you and get away with it. In both situations, your status as a human being is revoked. Humanity is a privilege awarded to those who help perpetuate capitalism, and once you cease to do that, you’re a burden. You’re expected to express gratitude to the system that ghettoizes you, doling out a few table scraps and a thin blanket.
The first range I was sent to was renowned for being the least hospitable. We were locked in our cells for most of the day. Each had one bed, though the high volume of prisoners meant that two people usually shared a cell. The only windows were thin slats of frosted glass too opaque to see through, and we were allowed outside only once a week. “Outside” was a small walled concrete enclosure with metal grating for a ceiling. Through a small crack underneath the heavy steel door, I could see grass. It depressed me to look at it. I tried not to.
This was the range to which people were sent as punishment, for getting into fights, mouthing off to guards, being caught with contraband or generally failing to comply with prison regulations. If you were “good” you qualified for transfer to a medium-security unit, where you could go to a real outdoor exercise yard, have your own cell, and see visitors without a thick pane of Plexiglas separating you.
A lot of the women on maximum security had been on the same range for over a year. I met one woman who had been there for almost two; she’d never had a misconduct, but there was a note in her file stating that she would have to serve her entire sentence on maximum security. She came from a mafia family, she explained. Putting her on a medium security unit would have been an open invitation for any of her high-up friends to come break her out.
After visiting the classification office, I learned of a similar note in my file. “Apparently I’m a terrorist,” I shrugged, when people asked why I hadn’t been transferred yet.
I won’t say that I instantly got along with everyone on my range, or that I was the most popular prisoner. I didn’t pay attention to the hierarchies that existed between other prisoners, and some people had a problem with that. I wouldn’t join in when others ridiculed or ganged up on the less popular women. It was a total pecking order, and it reminded me too much of a schoolyard.
I became close friends with a woman named Rachel* whom I met in the common area during breakfast on a rare day when we weren’t on 24-hour lock down. She was violently ill from drug withdrawal, and the nurse hadn’t filled her methadone prescription. Apparently, her cellmate was a complete asshole, so we snuck her into my cell after the doors were buzzed open. The next guard that came by on her rounds started yelling at us, but we assured her that the other staff had transferred Rachel and forgotten to do the paperwork. I don’t think the guard believed us, but she didn’t seem to care enough to do anything about it.
When Rachel wasn’t too sick to make conversation, we passed the long hours of our confinement playing cards, singing tuneless renditions of R&B hits, washing our dirty uniforms in the sink and talking about life in general. She lived near Niagara with her partner, their four-year-old son, and their newborn daughter. She struggled with addiction, but still managed to keep her life together and be there for her kids. Her dad had been in and out of prison most of her life, and her mom had been drunk all the time. She’d spent her early teenage years working as a prostitute, and the crown attorney at her bail hearing had used this to argue that she was unfit to reenter society. It seems that when 13-year-old girls end up hooking on the streets it’s because they possess some moral defect, and not because life has given them no other choices.
Our cells looked out onto the common area, an oval-shaped concrete room. It contained five bolted-down tables, four showers at one end, a shelf with a few bad paperback romance novels, and three phones, only two of which functioned. When allowed into the common area, I went straight to waiting in line for the phones. Some women didn’t have anybody to call or only had relatives outside of the country; the phones only transmitted collect calls within North America. Other women gripped the phone receivers with white knuckles, trying to explain to their young children why mommy wasn’t coming home. Rachel said she had told her partner not to bring the kids when coming to visit her. “They’re just too young. They would only be confused by the Plexiglas in the visitor’s cubicle. Being able to see their mother, but not reach out and touch her.”
I thought of an article I’d read once about animal testing laboratories. One method the lab technicians used to create symptoms of stress and depression in mammals involved removing newborn babies from their mother, then placing the mother in isolation. I looked up at the florescent ceiling lights within their shatterproof wire cages. Soon, the nurse came and people lined up to receive their daily doses of sedatives and anti-psychotics—a precautionary measure, prescribed to virtually everyone, like cutting off the beaks of factory-farmed chickens to prevent them from pecking themselves, or each other, to death from the stress of confinement and isolation.
My views of the prison system solidified: prisons are little more than warehouses for concentrating the poor. Rather than being populated by the people most harmful to society, they are crowded with those who have been the most harmedby society.
Rather than being “correctional” facilities, they are a method of ridding the streets of those who act as living reminders of the crisis of poverty, the widening income gap, the future of hardship which may very well await many more in the coming years if something does not change. Prisons are a way of sweeping people under the rug. They are a way of pretending that nothing is wrong.
Very few of the women on my range had been imprisoned for any kind of violent crime, and most of those who did have violent charges had been defending themselves against abusive partners or assailants. Most of these women’s attackers had walked away without charges, free to roam the streets at their leisure.
The small portion of women facing violent charges not involving self-defense were often the survivors of past traumas; a history rarely taken into consideration by the courts that sentenced them. Much like the homeless community, a large portion of the women with whom I spoke were survivors of the lifelong onslaught of abuse perpetrated against poor and disenfranchised women by our society, particularly women of color. Many had been arrested for not having full citizenship, while others had been in the process of applying for refugee status. A disturbingly high number also lived with (dis)abilities like Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, Fetal Narcotic Syndrome, Schizophrenia, and ADD/ADHD.
These are women who have been bounced between abusive foster homes and youth detention facilities, graduating at 16 as wards of the Children’s Aid Society only to become wards of the State, criminalized for doing what it takes to survive the minefield of poverty.
As the days turned into weeks, I began to erase from my mind the hope of being released. The health problems with which I’ve been living the last few years became increasingly severe, and I often found it difficult to stand up or walk around without fainting. My ribs stuck out. My stomach became concave. I became depressed.
Was it stress, overly-processed food, or a general lack of fresh air and exercise that made me unhealthy? Probably some combination of all these things. Without even examining me, the doctor put me on a liquid diet, which in jail consists largely of juice crystals, water, and MSG-filled soup powder. When I was finally sent to the examination room I was told that nothing seemed to be wrong with me, regardless of the fact that I’d lost close to 20 pounds, felt tired constantly, and was in serious pain and discomfort.
I talked to my partner on the phone, but his voice sounded distant and crackly through the receiver. He came to visit me, and we pressed our hands to the inch-thick Plexiglas between us. It was almost harder than not seeing him. My mom sounded stressed whenever I called her, and I could hear my dog howling in the background at the sound of my voice through the receiver.
I needed to talk to somebody, but the prospect of being force-fed Thorazine dissuaded me from applying to see the psychiatrist. So I went to the prison Chaplain, for the sheer novelty. He was a square-jawed man in a gray suit, with the bearing of a Televangelist. He told me I was in prison because I had sinned, and that I had to repent for these sins. I was in my current situation because the Devil had led me astray.
“But Jesus was a political prisoner!” I said. “The Devil didn’t tell me to do anything; I’m a political prisoner like Jesus!” He thought I was crazy.
I was released after about a month on conditions of strict house arrest and non-association with some of my closest friends. All I felt was numb. I walked into the parking lot with my family and my partner, squinting under the bright sunlight. We drove back to the house where I lived as a kid and I slept for days. At first I felt fine. I could leave the house, if I was with my parents, to take the dogs for walks in the last of summer’s warm weather. I drank coffee, read a lot. People I’d never met sent me stickers and zines and nice letters in the mail.
Two months later I started having panic attacks, insomnia, and nervous breakdowns on an almost daily basis. When I did sleep, I had awful nightmares. It seemed as though every past instance of trauma and violence I’d seen or experienced had been consolidated into a heavy, poisonous lump, slowly turning my insides black and rotten. I felt like the world was just too ugly to live in. I was suffocating under the weight of clear-cut forests and floundering, tar-drowned shore birds. When I closed my eyes all I could see was torture and war, droughts and chemical spills, napalm.
All I wanted was to move past the negative experiences I’d had and work towards piecing my life back together. But I realized that the pain I felt was trying to tell me something: I would not be able to forget and move on as though none of this had happened. In a way, I think the disgust and pain we feel when we see or experience something horrific can be the greatest catalyst for creating positive change. When we experience something firsthand we are better equipped to understand it—and with that understanding we can educate others and give real support to those who are also experiencing it. We can see its flaws and weak points, and we can use this knowledge to criticize, discredit, and eventually destroy it.
Although I never heard this said firsthand, others told me they overheard quite a few young people say they’d never go to another protest again after their experiences at the detention center. I felt not only disappointed that everyone hadn’t been able to see the ways to reclaim these experiences and use them as further motivation, but profoundly confused by this perspective. What we went through during the mass arrests at the G20 was only a small window into the everyday experiences of countless minorities in this country who suffer police profiling, brutality, and prejudice within the legal system on a horrifyingly regular basis. As hard as I try, I simply can’t understand the notion that anyone could propose to be an ally of any marginalized group, then give up and turn away when faced with a tiny microcosm of what that group puts up with everyday.
My experience in prison and the women with whom I shared it have reminded me of the reasons I became politically active in the first place. They’ve reminded me of the sorrow, the desperation, the heartbreak, the trauma, the unlivable realities of poverty that first spurred me to get my life together and dedicate myself to helping others rather than accepting the conditions in which I lived. Being in prison reminded me of the core of my politics. At the bottom of it, we were all inside that prison for the exact same reason. We were dangerous only in the sense that our existence discredited Canada’s status as a place of liberty and equality. We were a glaring reminder that this country doesn’t offer equal status and opportunity to everyone.
Some political prisoners are arrested for staging public demonstrations that address poverty, and some are arrested for living in poverty. Some actively protest social inequality, while others turn to drugs or alcohol because they can no longer bear the brunt of this inequality. Some choose to publicly draw attention to injustice by their words and actions, while others are swept off the streets because their very presence is a public exposure of this injustice. Now is the time for everyone in our community to think about what it really means to say that every prisoner is a political prisoner. The next time we’re shocked and outraged by an experience of being targeted, harassed, or otherwise mistreated by law enforcement or society in general, we should stop to recognize how much respect we owe to the people all around us who face much more than that every day of their lives. Every prisoner is a political prisoner.
*All names have been changed to protect the identities of those mentioned.
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
Cross Border Lobbying and the Reality Behind Conservative Enthusiasm for Bill C10
Prison Expansion: Canada
There is plenty to know about prison expansion in general and specifically about what is taking place in Canada as we speak. Below I've included a link to "End the Prison Industrial Complex's" information regarding the companies which are profiting from prison expansion in Canada.
http://endthepic.wordpress.com/profiteers/
I've also included a link to a short piece by Rittenhouse on the same issue which relates to the complexities around prison building, human suffering, and the need for fair income opportunites.
http://joanr73.wordpress.com/2012/07/10/end-the-prison-industrial-complex-epic/
Then you will find a link by the California Prison Moratorium project to a handbook entitled, "How to Stop a Prison in Your Town". A timely resource for everyone living with a future prison overshadowing your town and potentially your own freedom. Whether contractors have broken ground in your community yet or not this booklet provides some real insight into all of the many impacts which prisons are apt to bring with them and provides strategy ideas, as well as responses to some of the most widely used misinformation intended to soften opposition to prison building.
www.calipmp.org/media/docs/2011_pmphdbk1-22.pdf
And finally you can read a copy of an article I've written on prison expansion and prison profiteer lobbying for the same on both sides of the Canada/US border, chock full of information on expansion plans across Canada and resources where you can learn more.
MTC, sent packing with Mike Harris
Law firm, Fasken Marineau, provided
services to the then provincial Ministry of Correctional Services on Central North Correctional Centre (CNCC) in
1998. They are “experts” in Public/Private or P3 advising. They were also responsible for advising and
structuring the 407 highway privatization agreement a decade ago and which is
set to cost taxpayers hundreds of thousands, if not millions more than it need
have.
Reports
There is plenty to know about prison expansion in general and specifically about what is taking place in Canada as we speak. Below I've included a link to "End the Prison Industrial Complex's" information regarding the companies which are profiting from prison expansion in Canada.
http://endthepic.wordpress.com/profiteers/
I've also included a link to a short piece by Rittenhouse on the same issue which relates to the complexities around prison building, human suffering, and the need for fair income opportunites.
http://joanr73.wordpress.com/2012/07/10/end-the-prison-industrial-complex-epic/
Then you will find a link by the California Prison Moratorium project to a handbook entitled, "How to Stop a Prison in Your Town". A timely resource for everyone living with a future prison overshadowing your town and potentially your own freedom. Whether contractors have broken ground in your community yet or not this booklet provides some real insight into all of the many impacts which prisons are apt to bring with them and provides strategy ideas, as well as responses to some of the most widely used misinformation intended to soften opposition to prison building.
www.calipmp.org/media/docs/2011_pmphdbk1-22.pdf
And finally you can read a copy of an article I've written on prison expansion and prison profiteer lobbying for the same on both sides of the Canada/US border, chock full of information on expansion plans across Canada and resources where you can learn more.
Cross Border Lobbying and the Reality
Behind Conservative Enthusiasm for Bill C10
by sheryl jarvis, July, 2012
by sheryl jarvis, July, 2012
Is Bill C10 really about "Safe Streets and Communities" as its name implies or are there ulterior motives. Many suspect Bill C10 really lays the
groundwork for generating new sources of revenue, a warped vision of economic
repair, by opening our prisons to private markets. This allows corporations here in Canada to
rake in the big bucks which capitalists to the south have been enjoying for
years. Rapacious capitalists have finally
found a way to transform those they consider burdens to the state, into
profit for the rich. The bodies of the poor, those who use drugs,
and the mentally ill are sourced out to third parties for profit through
privatized prisons.
Christian Parenti, author of Lockdown America describes how imprisonment is a windfall to capitalists; “three ways in which incarceration bolsters capitalism: government economic stimulus for stagnant communities the privatization of prisons and prison-related services, and the exploitation of prison labor by private firms.”
Christian Parenti, author of Lockdown America describes how imprisonment is a windfall to capitalists; “three ways in which incarceration bolsters capitalism: government economic stimulus for stagnant communities the privatization of prisons and prison-related services, and the exploitation of prison labor by private firms.”
The mainstream media has only recently begun discussing the
profit motive (i.e.: privatization) behind conservative support of Bill C10. When plans to privatize imprisonment (a function of class war) have been in the works for years, and
visibly on the books since at least November of last year.
Critics opposing the Bill have focused on the
direct impacts that C10 sanctions will likely have on those to be targeted by
the Bill, such as longer prison terms and criminal records. While these issues are important, critical even, they only scratch the service and fail to look at the ideology beneath increased calls for the use of criminalising tactics. Ideology which includes the
isolating effects of blaming only the individual and failing to look at lawbreaking
within the larger context of the surrounding social structures. Structures such as poverty, inequality, violence against women, colonization, and ableism
(think neo-liberal push for lower wages, fewer worker protections, drug war, and the defunding of womens orgs.....and for that matter, everyone else who speaks out), much of which has long been
institutionalized through policy, practice, and belief.
Day of action to support workers on strike at Electro-Motive facility in London, On. Employers threatened to pull the plant out of Canada if workers did not accept a 50% wage cut. Workers refused, Electro left, and the neo-liberal Canadian government which had gifted the company millions of dollars in tax deductions and other forms of corporate welfare did nothing.
Day of action to support workers on strike at Electro-Motive facility in London, On. Employers threatened to pull the plant out of Canada if workers did not accept a 50% wage cut. Workers refused, Electro left, and the neo-liberal Canadian government which had gifted the company millions of dollars in tax deductions and other forms of corporate welfare did nothing.
If public safety and accountability of individuals were the
true motive in these massive policy changes, the conservatives would be going
at this from a completely different direction.
After all expert after expert have pointed to provisions of safe,
affordable housing, and childcare, access to opportunity, jobs, education, and
substance use treatment as being far more likely to increase public safety than
the biased and exclusionary practice of criminalisation has ever been or will
ever be.
Profit and not public safety is more likely the true
conservative motivation behind the crime agenda.
Exploitation of our most vulnerable people by turning individual
bodies into sources of revenue - profit for private hands, through imprisonment
and forced prisoner labour is the most egregious form of bullying practices,
and a terrifying stance for any nation leader to be implementing. The belief systems driving these forms of classist,
and racist policy change are so socially entrenched, that the effects are invisible to all but the
vulnerable people targeted. People
begin to believe that retribution, hate, and exclusion are not only warranted
and deserved, but a natural consequence to lawbreaking or for that matter, any breach of the current "moral" order. Only through decades of struggle has the face
of such deep seated intolerance ever been up rooted, and shown for what it really
is – hatred, fear, and ignorance. Think
of the centuries long struggles of aboriginal, African, and female bodied
peoples. The fact is, that we are
nowhere near close to exposing the truth behind the true causes of community
harm – that which we refer to as crime.
We are simply not ready to talk about it in a wide spread and critical
way. Because of this, prisons are likely
to be a part of the social landscape for a very long time to come.
Private
Prison Profiteers in the USA
Private
interest groups have 3 means for influencing and convincing government to
support their efforts. Lobbying, direct
campaign contributions, and networking. Networking
includes revolving door techniques such as moving private prison owners between
prison ownership and government jobs in corrections.
One journalist had this to
report on the lobbying efforts of private prison profiteers in the US, “For
one thing, they’ve forked over a fair share on lobbying Congress. While netting
$133 million in income between 2006 and 2008, the CCA spent nearly $3 million
lobbying; during that decade, the number of dollars spent in Washington
amounted to around $17.6 million. Corrections Corporation of America officers have been linked to the
American Legislative Exchange Council, or ALEC, which has in turn lobbied for
increased sentencing for inmates convicted of non-violent crimes across the
country and helped pass the controversial immigration law in Arizona.
Corrections Corp. themselves have lobbied for Arizona’s Senate Bill 1070, and
the reasoning is simple: an more stringent immigrant laws means more arrests
and, thus, more jam-packed for-profit prisons.” (thinkprogress.org)
Journalists at the online “404 System
Error”, a relatively new and completely cool independent news source, report a
system which encourages the increase of prison populations through a per head
funding system which benefits players all down the criminal legal system line. “In 2009 reports obtained by
National Public Radio found that the Corrections Corporation of America
conceded in a report that they expected “a significant portion of our revenues” to come from the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency.
According to Bloomberg BusinessWeek, the Immigration and Customs Enforcement
pays around $90 every day for each detainee that their work helps land behind
bars.”
So not only do those working in the criminal
legal field benefit financially through the work they do – criminalising mostly
working class people, but they have designed the system in such a way that it
pays out “bonus’” per arrestee.
US Prison
Profiteers Seek Capitalist Expansion in Canada
2 of the largest privatized prison profiteers in the US, Geo
Group Inc. and Corrections Corporation of America (CCA) have been busy lobbying
our Canadian government around Bill C10, firearms, and other criminal law issues. And more recently US based Management and
Training Corp has joined the tough on crime fray, looking to Canada to replace
the bucks they are currently losing in the states where they have virtually
been pushed including Mississippi, due to multiple court actions suing MTC for
sexual misconduct, failing to maintain safety for prisoners, assault, and even wrongful
death. In fact this track record is
hardly individual to MTC, all of the private prison profiteers mentioned here
have similar histories. These are the
players currently laying the ground work for expansion of this dirtiest form of
capitalist profit onto Canadian soil.
CCA's record of
hiring untrained guards who brutalize prisoners is notorious. In fact these histories are rampant
throughout the prison system period.
However the conditions (poor salaries and training for staff which lead
to constant staffing shortages, which in turn ensures a near constant state of
lockdown. Compounding these issues are the limited access to healthcare,
insufficient food, tampons, and other toiletries for prisoners) at private
institutions are conducive to higher tension and stress levels for both prisoners
and guards, ensuring the number of violent incidents within privately
owned/managed facilities are through the roof, over and above any numbers at
publically run facilities.
Geo reported income of 61 million in 2008, increasing to
over 98 million in 2011. They imprisoned
80,000 people in state, federal, and international prisons, immigration holds,
and mental health facilities in the US, the UK, Australia, and South Africa
last year. And have several expansion
projects in the works this year. If
those impressive records didn’t stir you maybe their human rights record will. Geo has managed to rack up substantial
numbers here too. Charges of negligence, civil rights
violations, abuse, and even death.
Civil
Rights lawyer, Scott Medlock
had this to say, “GEO cuts corners by hiring poorly trained
guards, providing inmates with cut rate medical care, and running their
facility in a grossly unprofessional manner.” (Rosa,
E., 2009) This is perhaps the number one criticism in regards to for
profit prison profiteers generally.
Cutting corners, and risking prisoner health all in the name of the
bottom line.
Canada –
US Lobbying
This idea of cross border lobbying is actually far more
common than many of us might be aware.
Canadian markets lobby the US congress and US markets lobby the Canadian
parliament, often pushing for changes to policy, and law, with profit being a top motive. According to The
Centre for Responsive Politics (2012), Canadian corporations have contributed about 2.5
million to candidates in the congressional
elections so far this year. “Big hitters”
are Microsoft and the Royal Bank of Canada.
US to
Canada Lobbying – Prison Privatization
Conversely, when American capitalists detect the possibility
of profit this side of the border, they lobby our government intensely with the
hopes of influencing policy decisions. A
contradiction of capitalism is its need to seek out and expand into new
markets, to find ever new profits outside of itself. One method for achieving ever greater market
shares is to look to new lands, to convince new people (governments,
corporations, the public, the media) that we need a particular product or
service that we don’t yet have – private, for profit prisons are what’s missing
from the Canadian landscape. Thus an
opportunity for American bread capitalism and corporatists to expand outside of
their own borders, into Canada and elsewhere.
The GEO Group for
instance is a registered
lobbyist with active dealings among the following branches of the Canadian
Federal Government:
- Correctional Service of Canada (CSC)
- Public Safety Canada (PS)
- Public Works and Government Services Canada (PWGSC)
- Public-Private Partnerships Canada, Solicitor General Canada (SGC)
The news of USA based prison profiteers
lobbying here in Canada has remained pretty hushed within the mainstream media
and most reporting has been through online independents.
So
what did consultants employed by Geo have to talk about with the Canadian
government? In fact there were 2
separate consultants, Ronald Bilodeau and Patrick Gagnon hired by Ronald Champion,
Vice President of Geo, from March 2011 – Currently
for similar purposes Notes made by Ronald and Patrick on the Government of
Canada web page state the following, “Assist the client about
the possibilities of public markets for the operation of institutions of
correctional services, Discuss the possibility to establish a public-private
partnership for the operating of correctional institutions in Canada, contracts
to modernize correctional facilities in Canada.” “We are assisting the client regarding procurement
opportunities pertaining to the operation of correctional services institutions”
Prison Privatization in Canada
MTC, sent packing with Mike Harris
Canada has
attempted prison privatization twice.
Currently with a youth facility in New Brunswick, privately managed by U.S. prison firm, Management and Training Corp (MTC), and once previously in
Ontario under the conservative Harris regime of the time. Management and security was provided by MTC for that facility as well. The Ontario facility was a horror to those
imprisoned there, to their families, and it was a dismal failure for the tax
payer who footed the bill for inferior management outcomes, and human rights abuses.
Fasken Marineau posted this comment on their webpage in regards to expectations of the private CNCC
facility at the time, “This public-private
partnership is part of the Government's commitment to transform the Province's correctional system to one
that is more safe, secure, effective, efficient and accountable.”
Unfortunately
the CNCC under Utah based Management & Training Corp. was less safe for
prisoners and staff alike with chronic staff shortages, contributing to an increase in violence, a decrease in security both cause and effect
of increased violence, prisoner healthcare services were decimated,
and recidivism increased.
One
of the claims around privatisation of public services is that private entities
will be more accountable. My
understanding is that when the money is coming out of their own pockets, one is
likely to be more responsible with it.
But the truth is that the upfront operating costs are paid for by
the tax payer via the government. The
question for the prison operator then, is, how much money can I rake back for
my own pockets, not how much must I pay out from my own pockets.
According
to a John Howard Society staffer, “Any decision to continue or even expand privatization
initiatives would be based on the results of the comparison of CNCC, the
privately-operated facility and CECC which would continue to be
publicly-operated.”
On
Sept. 19, 2002 corrections guards at CNCC voted to unionize in response to
terrible working conditions. Staff
number was 350 and they were to receive the same training as those in the
publicly-operated facilities. After unionization
(represented by OPSEU), their salaries and benefits were similar to public
employees. Most staff were new to
corrections, having just been hired by MTC since its opening. (John Howard,
2006)
Specific
Incidents at CNCC:
·
In September 2002, a riot
occurred Around 100 prisoners using a battering ram were prevented from
escaping and a cordon of armed Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) including the
tactical rescue and canine units had to be stationed around the perimeter.
·
The death in August 2003
of former CNCC prisoner Jeffrey Elliot. Mr.
Elliot died of blood poisoning after being forced to wait three weeks to be transferred from the prison to
hospital after being wounded. An incident at CNCC on 4 September
left two prisoners with stab wounds.
·
Dr Martin McNamara of
Midland says a patient was in agony for three weeks, waiting for medical
attention for his broken jaw.
After
having to fight for her son Ryan’s well-being during his eight month
incarceration at CNCC,
Sharon Storring-Skillen formed Families Against Private Prison Abuse, (FAPPA).
Ontario and indeed
Canada have never again pursued the idea of privatization. Until now that is. The current federal conservative government
are determined to steer Canadians back down the dark road to prisons for
profit.
Conservative
Bill C10 Laying the groundwork for Prison Expansion and privatization
John W. Whitehead, author of Jailing Americans for
Profit: The Rise of the Prison Industrial Complex, and published by the Huffington
Post, April10, 2012 had this to say; “Among the laws aimed at increasing the prison
population and growing the profit margins of special interest corporations like
CCA are three-strike laws (mandating sentences of 25 years to life for multiple
felony convictions) and "truth-in-sentencing" legislation (mandating
that those sentenced to prison serve most or all of their time).” th of these – mandatory minimums and so called truth
in sentencing provisions have been enacted in Canada under the conservatives despite
conservative warnings from the US not to take the failed road that they have.
Prison related P3’s US
Giant
Wall St. firms such as Goldman Sachs and Merrill Lynch write between two and
three billion dollars in prison construction bonds every year. Swimming along-
side the big fish of incarceration are schools of for-profit caterers, prison
HMOs, private transport companies, architecture firms and other subcontractors
that feed at the margins of the prison industrial complex.
Prison Related P3’s Canada
As of April 1, Brookfield LePage
Johnson Controls will take over property management services from the B.C.
Building Corp., the real-estate wing of the provincial government. The
contract, awarded last December, covers almost half of the B.C. government's
real estate arm and includes 10 correctional facilities. Brookfield LePage Johnson Controls, values the
deal at $90 million annually. The Crown
corporation expects to realize savings of up to $40 million per year. The new re-build of the Surrey Detention
Centre is expected to be one of the facilities under private building
management.
The
Toronto South Detention Centre, to replace the Don Jail, carries a price tag of
over $1 billion and is being built as a “Public-Private-Partnership” (P3) with
a private company to build, design and operate the 1650 bed facility for 30
years. Retrieved from: http://basicsnews.ca/2011/12/the-mass-incarceration-agenda-in-canada-the-view-from-vancouver/
Prison Labour US
Microsoft,
Starbucks, Victoria's Secret and TWA, Unicor, Dell are all known to use or have
used prisoner labour in the past for penny’s a day and sometimes prisoners are
not paid anything at all. Most of these
are strictly private profiteers, save Unicor which is a government corporation
which profits from prisoner labour. One
particularly disgusting example of the US government using forced prisoner
labour was the cleanup of the BP oil spill in Louisianna. BP was provided tax exemptions for charitably providing work experience to these untrained
prisoners to clean up a dangerous, toxic, waste dump for pennies a day.
Meanwhile, practically the entire fishing economy in the area was put out of
work thanks to the oil contaminated ocean.
Prison Labour Canada
To
my knowledge there is no central database keeping track of the multiple human
misery profiteers in Canada. I know of
two explicit prison labour contractors.
One, Corcan is operated by the federal government with a mandate to
provide prisoners with paid work experience while on day passes and
parole. I have no idea how much
prisoners are paid in that programme.
Though prisoners working on correctional grounds within the few
industries located inside are typically paid a few dollars a day. The federal government has recently cancelled
a special incentive programme intended to provide bonuses to some workers.
Located
on Ontario government property, adjacent to the Maplehurst prison in Milton, ON
is the Cook-Chill Food Preparation
Centre. It’s operated as a P3 using prisoner
labour, and run by private contractor, Eurest
Dining Services
which is owned by Compass Group Canada Ltd. Cook-Chill has the contract to provide 3 meals
a day for prisoners at all 3 super jails in Ontario.
Fasken
Martineau posted the following information about this P3 contract on their web
page:
“The agreement also requires the contractor to provide
skills training opportunities for inmates as part of an industrial work program
during times when meals are prepared for Ontario's correctional system. Qualified
inmates involved in a temporary absence program will also be able to work at
the CCFPC as part of an employment initiative. All inmates involved with the
CCFPC will be low risk and carefully screened. The Ministry expects that its
demands will not fully use the CCFPC's production capacity. Subject to meeting
the Ministry's requirements as its first priority, the contractor will be
permitted to use the CCFPC's excess capacity for the production of third party
sales and the province will receive a share of the revenues.” Retrieved from http://www.fasken.com/ministry-of-correctional-services-of-ontario-enters-public-private-partnership-with-compass-group-canada/
Profiting From Our Misery
In
considering the ideology which allows public responsibilities such as the
operation of prisons to be privatized for profit we must also consider the
larger capitalist system which gave birth to it. Consider the many ways in which poverty is
criminalised for instance. Anti
panhandling laws, welfare fraud, and anti-sex work law. All of these can be considered survival
income – or survival “crime”. And
perhaps none of them would be necessary if the capitalist system wasn’t set up
to intentionally maintain some substantial rate of unemployment, thus keeping
some people in a constant state of desperation and in survival mode, keeping
others afraid to ask for more money at work, or better benefits, lest they be
forced into the criminalised workforce too.
Of course these factors keep wages low, at poverty levels, allowing more
people fewer choices, leading to wide spread desperation, depression, and
trauma which in turn leads people to seek out means for coping, which in turn
can lead to substance use issues, and to a greater use of criminalised survival
strategies, which of course leads to criminalization and imprisonment. And
there we have it class war, providing profits for the owning class at our
expense.
How
do they get away with it? And why do we
let them? I believe that intelligent
propaganda through corporate media is key.
There are many means and methods within the misinformation campaign
strategy. The most successful tactics
are perhaps those which seek to turn people from the same classes against each
other by playing on fear and hate. Turn
friend against friend and neighbour against neighbour. Lies which set the working poor against those
on welfare, judgment against those who engage in survival crime by those who do
not and blaming those who use drugs for all that is wrong in the lives of those
who don’t. This is a huge part of how
they get away with it. How we let them
has much to do with limited access by the poor, to progressive ideas and
challenges of conservative myths and ideology.
Limitations in both time and money keep many people from ever attaining
access to the ideas which would set us free.
References/Resources
Canada to us lobbying
Us to Canada lobbying
http://thinkprogress.org/justice/2011/06/23/251363/cca-geogroup-prison-industry/?mobile=nc
Petition sponsored by
404systemerror
General
Rosa, E., (2009).
Retrieved April 8, 2012 from: http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=15308)
Parenti,
Christian, (1999). Retrieved April 12,
2012 from: http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?id=852
Reports
Prison
Privatization Report International (PPRI)
Report
#64 detailed concerns about CNCC (John
Howard, 2006 appendex)
Friday, July 13, 2012
Supporting Vulnerable Mothers Activism and Support Group Meeting - Toronto
One month ago in Toronto, the group Supporting Vulnerable Mothers was formed and attended our first group meeting. I talked about some of my own experiences as a low income, single parent mom, with a substance use issue and the subsequent and punitive state interventions from which my family is still reeling, 14 years later. We also discussed as a group what we perceive to be problematic with CAS and criminal legal system interventions and heard from other women about current initiatives to support women in the Toronto area.
On July 18, next Wed, we will meet for our second meeting to talk about potential community based solutions. If you are or have been a vulnerable mom, or have worked in any capacity to offer support to women with children who use substances, please join us at the 519 Church St. Community Centre from 6-8pm.
SUPPORTING VULNERABLE MOTHERS
To Think About for Next Week:
Cant wait to see you all and please invite women who need to be there!
sheryl
On July 18, next Wed, we will meet for our second meeting to talk about potential community based solutions. If you are or have been a vulnerable mom, or have worked in any capacity to offer support to women with children who use substances, please join us at the 519 Church St. Community Centre from 6-8pm.
SUPPORTING VULNERABLE MOTHERS
2nd
Meeting
Alternatives
to Children’s Aid Society Interventions
Are you frustrated by current Childrens Aid
Society intervention protocols?
Want to address drug related stigma,
bias, and related state sanctioned violence of moms who use by exploring…..
CREATIVE, RADICAL, COMMUNITY BASED ALTERNATIVES?
Please join women with lived experience and those who support
us in a safe space at: 519 Church St. rm. 106 on Wednesday, July 18
@ 6pm
Check the Facebook group for discussion and updates http://www.facebook.com/groups/supportmoms/
Or contact: j-sheryl@hotmail.com
THE WAR ON DRUGS IS A WAR ON WOMEN AND CHILDREN
To Think About for Next Week:
- Mapping our future path - determining group process including decision making, meeting plans, research, tactics, basis of unity, building community responses
- How to reach out to most impacted communities including single parent moms, women of colour
- How to include media and public ed. components
Cant wait to see you all and please invite women who need to be there!
sheryl
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)