That attitude went on
full display during legislative committee hearing of HB 84 by Republican
state Rep. Kenny
Havard. The bill would clarify existing state law that allows inmates to
work outside of corrections facilities and offices, perhaps the most famous
current application of which has such individuals working in and around the
Governor’s Mansion, something no other state does.
If passed, the bill
would ensure marginally expanded use of the program, run directly by the
Department of Corrections separately from transitional work release programs
that place the incarcerated with private sector employers during the day, met
legal guidelines. It made it out of committee, but not before a few Legislative
Black Caucus members on the panel whined and complained about it.
These Democrats objected to what they called “free labor,” although participants draw a salary of 4 to 70 cents an hour, that took jobs from the population not incarcerated or denied them an opportunity for much higher wages. Not mincing words, state Rep. Ted James stupidly called this “modern day slavery,” and that the state should feel embarrassed doing it. State Rep. Barbara Norton called herself “offended” by the notion inmates would desire such work at such wages, and it was “unfair” to society.
Secretary of Corrections
Jimmy LeBlanc stressed the program design sought primarily to provide job
training, perhaps unknowingly echoing apprentice wage proposals that would pay
below minimum wage for a short period while people learned a job that would reduce
unemployment and teach job skills, as well as to give jailbirds a break from monotonous
prison life. He didn’t mention that this also saved taxpayer dollars, even as
it did put a little of that into cons’ pockets.
LeBlanc also noted that
this program did not take away from work release, available slots of which depend
on other factors; for example, those not close to release dates could not
access work release. They also could receive good time credit instead.
None of this made an
impression on the thick-skulled James or Norton, who seemed to think that this
privilege afforded to people who had made war on society and had a debt to repay
to it that somehow it shortchanged, if not exploited, inmates through their voluntary
participation in the program. Both society and participants benefit from it
with no coercion involved, but these brain surgeons would axe the entire arrangement
by making it cost prohibitive.
In fact, James claimed that
society owed released convicts the monetary resources to make a fresh start
after they got out, as if the characters of the individuals involved had
nothing to do with their criminal activities and that a program to help them
improve that character – including an acknowledgment of their own faults by working
for peanuts to repay society – somehow served as an affront. He and Norton equated
criminal activities that put people in prison as “mistakes” made by those
fundamentally good at heart and intention – having nothing to do with bad character
that needed modification – and so society must bend over backwards to accommodate
these poor souls.
They, plus state Rep. John Bagneris,
voted against it but their side lost overwhelmingly, and its passage seems assured
with backing from Democrat Gov. John Bel Edwards.
But the nature of the opposition to it reminds that the attitudes that have
retarded the state’s modernization and economic development stubbornly remain, dormant
today but, like a retrovirus, could resurface and ravage at any time.
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