Oct. 3, 2011

You've Got To Be Kidding!

by Harlan Richards (author's profile)

Transcription

HARLAN RICHARDS
September 26, 2011

You've Got To Be Kidding!

I had my cell searched the other day. No big deal, I've had hundreds of cell searches over the last 27 years. But for the first time, I had a guard tell me that he had to take my paper clips because they're contraband. I kid you not! All I could think was that Wisconsin is spending $2.5 billion on corrections over the next two years so this guy can keep Wisconsin's citizens safe by confiscating paper clips.

Is he delusional or what? In a previous blog post, I talked about having a large chest of leather-working tools in my cell until 2000 while in a medium security prison. Eleven years later, and now paper clips are a threat to society? Sounds like something you'd see in a Saturday Night Live skit or read in The Onion.

I should point out that I have a scissors, pens, pencils, nail clippers, toothbrush, crochet hook, and all sorts of other items. If I was the officer who did the search, I would feel like a fool trying to tell someone he could have paper clips.

Perhaps he doesn't view prisoners as people deserving of the same consideration he would give to a neighbor or co-worker. Perhaps he is one of the people Albert Bandera did his study on (blog post Aug. 15, 2011). His guard training at the DOC academy may have created in his mind the rationale for his actions. I don't know. I can only speculate and shake my head in disbelief in what I see.

Another unbelievable experience occurred a couple of months ago.

I recently made arrangements to place a direct phone call to a friend in Italy using the prison phone system. This was a rare treat and I willingly agreed to pay the cost of the phone call, knowing that nowadays phone calls to anywhere in the world can be made for pennies per minute. A flyer I obtained from freedomline.com, for instance, states that they can provide direct dialing phone service to anywhere in the world for 31 cents per minute or less. I figured I could talk for 30 minutes and pay about $10 for the call.

What I didn't factor in was how much a client like the DOC would pay a phone company under its contract. I made a 19 minute call and was charged $93.10—about $5 per minute. If I had Internet access, I could have called a Skype for free. Instead, I had to pay the rate AT&T charges the DOC.

In the September 2011 issue of Cruising World, an article quoted the cost of using a satellite phone at 85 cents to $1.25 per minute while in a sailboat anywhere in the world. For that globe trotting sailor, he could make a call to anywhere in the world from anywhere in the world for about one quarter what I was charged to make a direct call via landline. I am paid wages of 26-28 cents per hour for 40 hours per week. That comes out to $21.76 every two weeks. That $93.90 phone bill cost me over 9 weeks of gross wages.

How many millions of dollars is the DOC overpaying AT&T for its phone services?

====

Dawning

With each day's dawning
My anticipation grows
The way a hungry patron
Nibbles breadsticks waiting
As the feast is prepared.
Begetting bad luck are bound
to end soon, releasing me into
A sea of humanity as a
Salmon fry finds its way from
Fresh water to sea.
With each day's ending
I look back sorrowfully
The way an unlucky gambler
Peers into empty wallet,
Wishing things had gone differently.
Yet at the next day's dawning
My anticipation swells anew.

Favorite

Replies Replies feed

We will print and mail your reply by . Guidelines

Other posts by this author

Subscribe

Get notifications when new letters or replies are posted!

Posts by Harlan Richards: RSS email me
Comments on “You've Got To Be Kidding!”: RSS email me
Featured posts: RSS email me
All Between the Bars posts: RSS