Incarcerated Pennsylvanians now have to pay $150 to read. We should all be outraged.

Authored by washingtonpost.com and submitted by arickg

Incarcerated Pennsylvanians now have to pay $150 to read. We should all be outraged.

Jodi Lincoln is co-chair of Book ’Em, a Pittsburgh-based nonprofit organization that sends free reading material to incarcerated people and prison libraries.

Every year, thousands of people in Pennsylvania prisons write directly to nonprofit organizations such as the one I co-chair with a request for reading material, which we then send to them at no cost. This free access to books has dramatically improved the lives of incarcerated individuals, offering immense emotional and mental relief as well as a key source of rehabilitation.

But as of last month, the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections (DOC) has decided to make such rehabilitation much harder. Going forward, books and publications, including legal primers and prison newsletters, cannot be sent directly to incarcerated Pennsylvanians. Instead, if they want access to a book, they must first come up with $147 to purchase a tablet and then pay a private company for electronic versions of their reading material — but only if it’s available among the 8,500 titles offered to them through this new e-book system.

In case you forgot: Incarcerated people are paid less than $1 per hour, and the criminal-justice system disproportionately locks up low-income individuals. Adding insult to injury, most of the e-books available to them for purchase would be available free from Project Gutenberg. And nonpublic domain books in Pennsylvania’s e-book system are more expensive than on other e-book markets.

This policy, part of a larger trend of censorship in state prisons around the country, should alarm everyone. Not only does it erect a huge financial barrier to books and severely restrict content, it also dehumanizes people in prison.

The changes in Pennsylvania follow an unprecedented lockdown in the state’s correctional facilities during last month’s national prison strike. The Pennsylvania DOC argues that these new policies are necessary to prevent contraband drugs, especially synthetic cannabinoids such as K2 from entering prisons after a string of incidents in August involving staff reportedly being exposed to contraband substances.

But this argument doesn’t hold up. Based on the DOC’s incident report, out of the 60 staff members exposed to unknown substances, only six tested positive for drugs. The DOC has also published examples of contraband drugs they have intercepted, none of which came from free book organizations. It is, of course, important to protect staff and inmates from exposure to drugs, but the DOC is purposefully exaggerating the risk to push their draconian policies. The DOC should instead focus on real security risks and addiction treatment, not further collective punishment.

In addition to the financial barriers, this policy also severely damages an incarcerated person’s ability to fully reenter society. Not only do organizations such as mine provide education material such as GED and SAT study books, textbooks, nonfiction books and business and trade books, but many organizations also send individualized workbooks designed for self-improvement or focused on the needs of minority populations such as LGBTQ inmates. The list of available e-books is missing some of the most requested books, including dictionaries, textbooks, graphic novels and books focused on incarceration issues such as “The New Jim Crow” and “Illegal to Legal.”

By using their time in prison to prepare for reentry into society, incarcerated people have a greater chance at living a productive life and their time in prison is enhanced through reading as a form of self-improvement. Books-to-prison organizations also offer inmates connections with the outside world, as people request books over and over again, often sending personal updates, drawings and sharing their stories. These connections cannot be replicated by e-books or ordering a specific book through the DOC.

Perhaps more alarming is that the head of the Pennsylvania DOC, Secretary John Wetzel, is president of the Association of State Correctional Administrators. If Pennsylvania’s policies remain in place, other states are sure to follow suit. Increasing literacy and education should be an essential part of the correctional apparatus, but by imposing financial barriers to accessing books and restricting content, Pennsylvania is failing to serve the greater good.

Nila Bala: There’s a war on books in prisons. It needs to end.

Ann E. Marimow: In a reversal, Md. prison officials lift limits on access to books for inmates

Ann E. Marimow: Federal prisons abruptly cancel policy that made it harder, costlier for inmates to get books

Michael Gerson: No more pits of despair. Offenders are still humans.

Eugene Robinson: In prison reform, a little of something is better than a lot of nothing

magicblufairy on October 12nd, 2018 at 18:25 UTC »

Maybe let this guy know how you feel.

Mr. John Wetzel Pennsylvania Secretary of Department  of Correction   DOC Central Office Department of Corrections  1920 Technology Parkway   Mechanicsburg, PA 17050 

Central Office Main Phone Line: 717.728.2573  Opens In A New Window Central Office Email: [email protected]  Email the DOC Secretary at [email protected] 

Edit: Thank you kind stranger for the gold. Emailing and calling and otherwise contacting your representatives is so critical. Be loud. Stay loud.

As someone who is not only a former English teacher, but someone who is incredibly vocal about poverty mental illness, homelessness, and the industrial prison complex - which incarcerates far too many people of colour, and for low-level crimes, I am appalled that someone thought this would be a good idea.

I don't even live in the US, and I wrote to this guy!!

It will be pretty embarrassing to know people in other countries think that taking away what is often the only saving grace for people in prison is a really stupid thing to do.

himynameisroe on October 12nd, 2018 at 16:21 UTC »

I read about this a couple weeks ago. I have a friend that is awaiting trial (nonviolent crime, cannot afford bail). I’ve been sending him books and we’ve been writing about them back and forth.

I asked him about this. He said he hadn’t heard about it. That was last Sunday.

Just before I read this, I got a notification that my package had been refused. Prison put me in a voicemail without providing information.

SpacefaringGaloshes on October 12nd, 2018 at 16:15 UTC »

I live in PA. I volunteer with Books thru Bars a non profit that prior to this matched donated books with prisoner requests. One of the most commonly requested books are dictionaries. So they can try and understand their legal paperwork.

This is outrageous.

Editing to add link: http://booksthroughbars.org/takeaction/