Incarcerated Pennsylvanians Now Have To Pay $150 To Read.
We Should All Be Outraged.
Washington
Post: 10.11.2018 by Jodi Lincoln
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. READ
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