Sept. 21, 2011

How Much Time Is Enough?

by Harlan Richards (author's profile)

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HARLAN RICHARDS
September 19, 2011

How Much Time is Enough?

I was in the dayroom the other day sitting at a table with three other guys when someone made an offhand remark about how much time was gathered around one table. I was curious so we added up our time served. Between the four of us, we have served 100 years—the longest being 27 years and the shortest being 22 years. We then added our ages and came up with 200 years—the oldest was 57 and the youngest was 43. Of course, we had to enjoy a moment of gallows humor and comment about all these newcomers around here with only 10 or 15 years served.

But getting back to the century club, all of us have completed all required treatment programs and none of us had a conduct report in decades. We are all older white guys who committed serious crimes when we were young. We no longer pose a threat to anyone yet we are being warehoused in one of the most restrictive prisons in Wisconsin.

A guy made a comment to me awhile back when I was talking about how safe it is in the Wisconsin prison system. In his opinion, the reason it is so safe is that the majority of the guys being warehoused these days clearly don't belong in prison. I had to agree that he made a good point. When I arrived at Stanley in January 2011, one of the first things I noticed was that there are a large number of old white guys here. There are a few older minority prisoners, but nowhere near the number of white guys. Over half of Wisconsin's prison population is made up of minorities. The percentage would be much higher if the old white guys were released. Of course, I can't give you exact numbers because, as a prisoner, I am not allowed to access public records in Wisconsin. All I can report is what I see and give my opinion on it. Perhaps someone out there would like to request the data from the DOC and prove me right—or wrong, whichever the case will be.

All of this warehousing comes at a cost. In the recent 2011-2013 biennial budget, corrections was $2.5 billion. It now comprises 7% of the state budget, compared to 1989 when it was only 2.9% (that was the last year before corrections was spin off from the Dept. of Health and Social Services to become department in its own right). Wisconsin now spends more general revenue funds on corrections than it does higher education.

With all of the talk about jobs and the need to restrain workers, I was surprised to hear on the radio that Wisconsin's university system has had its budget cut by $250 million over the next two years. Wisconsin's technical schools have had their budgets reduced by $72 million which equals a lost of 30% of the state's previous contribution. Gov. Walker claims that these shortfalls can be made up by reducing the wages of teachers and other employees since he took away their collective bargaining rights. The reality is that there is fierce competition for qualified instructors and professors from the private, for-profit schools. Lower wages will mean less-qualified teachers and lower-quality education for students.

It would seem to me that less-qualified workers will have a disadvantage in competing in the job market, thus making it more likely that an unemployed person will turn to crime to make a living. This, of course, will result in greater demand for prison beds to house the next generation of criminals. Hence, Gov. Walker will receive plaudits for his prescience in increasing the corrections budget in anticipation of the growth in prison population his policies will create.

Such is the legacy of right-wing ideologies, Scott Walker.

====
The Musician
My thick, clumsy fingers
Stumble across the notes
Of my keyboard in a manner
Which would make a five-year-old
Beginner look like a concert pianist.
Yet those halting notes I drag
Forth by their roots in an agonizing
Exercise of pure obstinacy
Sound to me like a chorus of angels
Singing God's own song.
It's not the quality of the sound
As it betters my ears
But how it makes me feel when
My fingers caress those keys and
Evoke the haunting melody that
Feeds the craving in my soul.

Harlan Richards

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jeff Posted 12 years, 6 months ago. ✓ Mailed 12 years, 6 months ago   Favorite
Seven percent of the state budget? Egads! That seems so crazy. If people thought about that when they filed their taxes, I wonder if they'd be more interested in seeing how the money is spent.

If you haven't seen it already there are some great conceptual diagrams of the "prison industrial complex" on the web at http://prisonmaps.com/, by the Corrections Documentary Project.

Actually i'm not sure how to include images in a comment. Maybe it's not possible. I'm going to mail the BTB people to find out if that's something they're thinking of adding.

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