A 13-year campaign to cut the cost of prison phone calls has finally reached a political dial tone, as inmates and their families have found allies in high places.
With prisoners paying as much as $17 for a 15-minute long-distance call, the Federal Communications Commission has formally raised the possibility of new regulations. Potentially, these could range from caps on interstate rates to the elimination of per-call charges.
“It’s a justice issue, it’s a civil liberties issues, it’s an issue of trying to keep families as intact as possible,” FCC Commissioner Mignon Clyburn said in an interview Friday. “This is a situation that cries out for attention.”
Urged on by Clyburn, a South Carolina native and Obama administration appointee, the FCC has opened a two-month public comment period as a possible prelude to new rules. While the companies that provide prison phone service caution against imprudent action, inmates already have been writing their personal pleas.
Pennsylvania inmate Cesar Fernandez Jr. likened prison phone fees to a “theft of money from indigent prisoners and their families.” Washington state inmate Edward L. King, confined at the state’s Monroe Correctional Complex, called the fees “an extortion of millions of dollars a year from those who are traditionally the poorest in our state.”…..Inmates’ request for lower phone rates no longer on hold - Wire Politics - The Sacramento Bee
1 comment:
you know, since they get cheaper calls, does that mean we will be offering the electric cigarettes in the canteen? or are they already there??
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