Hochul Proposes Bringing Back Private Prison Labor [View all]
Vidal Guzman worked as a mason, a porter, and a food server during his four years of incarceration. At Riverview Correctional Facility, a New York state prison near the Canadian border, he earned 16 cents per hour working in the cafeteria; his paycheck was around $3.50 per week. When he went to the prisons commissary for the first time, he remembered scrounging together money to buy one stamp and two packs of ramen noodles.
Its a very embarrassing moment when youre looking at commissary and youre dividing pennies to see how much you have, Guzman told New York Focus.
As part of her executive budget, Governor Kathy Hochul included a proposal that takes aim at low prison wagesnot by paying them more in their current jobs, where theyre employed by the state, but by passing a constitutional amendment to overturn New Yorks century-old ban on private employment of incarcerated people.
Hochul argues that private employers would pay higher wagesthe same wages that would be offered for comparable work outside prisonand offer more job training. The measure is part of a broad agenda she has proposed, dubbed Jails to Jobs, to reform the states reentry system and help people secure jobs and housing after theyre released from prison or jail.
The proposal has led to something of a fissure in the criminal justice reform movement.
https://www.nysfocus.com/2022/02/23/hochul-proposes-bringing-back-private-prison-labor/