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Saturday
Jan292005
Saturday, January 29, 2005 at 02:55AM
This
would be the right thing to do – if it wasn’t being done in the wrong
place. In Georgia right now, corrections officials are pushing laws
that would allow private industries to build factories on prison
grounds so that inmates can work in them. According to the Atlanta
Journal-Constitution, the inmates would earn wages to help pay the cost
of room and board, as well as court-ordered victim restitution and
child support. On top of that, they would get to keep at least 20
percent of their earnings. Such a program, called the federal Prison
Enhancement Program, is already in place in 39 states, according to the
Journal-Constitution. Supporters say that the program helps prisoners
learn skills and work ethics, and it gives them the chance to save
money to start over once they are released. I don’t doubt that
prisoners learn skills from the program. I also don’t have a problem
with prisoners earning money as they pay their debt to society – and
keeping a little for themselves. All of that seems fair. What isn’t
fair, however, is that fact that now, businesses and governments are
finding ways to get cheap work out of a number of black people while
they are on the inside without feeling obligated to deal with the
joblessness that besets them – or their communities - once they are on
the outside. That troubles me. [more]