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Post by opie on Oct 22, 2011 21:46:24 GMT -5
Wisconsin's law not only took away collective bargaining rights from unions, it also took away the ability to claim certain work as "union only", which Republican Governor Walker and supporters of the bill sold as an opening of the doors to private sector workers. Except one county has decided to allow prison inmates to fill those voids without pay.
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Post by redstone14 on Oct 23, 2011 0:26:25 GMT -5
I don't know too much about this issue but, there is something that I don't understand. Maybe my thought process is a little off so correct me if I'm wrong.
The guest in the video was making much of the fact that prisoners are performing jobs for little or no money and then goes on to say that it costs governments $40,000 per prisoner. If they are doing work, one could say that they are working to pay for that $40,000 a year it costs the state to keep them in prison. That's their rent, food clothing etc. And their pay is tax free I might add.
He also mentioned a list of products that are made by prisoners. He said that one of those products, bullet proof vests, are mostly made by prisoners. I find that hard to believe.
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Post by opie on Oct 24, 2011 14:06:20 GMT -5
He also mentioned a list of products that are made by prisoners. He said that one of those products, bullet proof vests, are mostly made by prisoners. I find that hard to believe. Army Recruits Prisoners to Make Body Armor Building parts for Patriot missile systems was just a warm-up, apparently, for a government-owned company that relies on federal inmates making as little as 23 cents an hour. On Wednesday, the U.S. Army announced that it handed Federal Prison Industries a no-bid, nearly $20 million contract to build body armor. It’s the latest in a decades-long string of military deals for FPI, also known as Unicor. Over the years, the company has supplied parts for F-15 and F-16 fighter jets, the Cobra attack helicopter, and the iconic Patriot interceptor system. (More about that in a second.) But this deal is particularly odd, because FPI’s track record with protective equipment is, to put it generously, uneven. In May of last year, the Army recalled 44,000 FPI-made protective helmets after they failed ballistic testing. FPI then promptly got out of the helmet business. That rather serious blemish on FPI’s record hasn’t stopped the Army from going back to the firm for $19,767,468’s worth of bulletproof “Outer Tactical Vests.” According to the Army’s contract announcement, the gear is supposed to be “for Pakistan” — presumably, for the Pakistani military. (Although a State Department told suppliers Wednesday that it wants 1,000 vests in Pakistan, too.) The vest-making will be done at the federal correctional facility in Yazoo City, Mississippi — one of 70 prisons where inmates make anywhere from $0.23 to $1.15 per hour building everything from clothing to office furniture to solar panels to military electronics. Exactly which military electronics FPI’s nearly 20,000 prisoners build is a matter of some dispute, however. According to FPI’s website, the company “supplies numerous electronic components and services for guided missiles, including the Patriot Advanced Capability (PAC-3) missile.” A spokesman for Lockheed Martin, which assembles the missile, calls that “completely false” and insists in an e-mail to Danger Room that “at no time were parts from Unicor EVER used in the PAC-3.” The spokesman, Craig Vanbebber, instead says that Unicor components are only used in the larger Patriot system, like the ignition and control units which ensure that the missiles are actually launched into the sky. That larger system is put together by a separate defense contractor, Raytheon. The missiles themselves are free of prison labor, Vanbebber asserts. But Eric Piepert, who sells FPI’s electronics to the government, insists that the company is very much involved in missile-making. “We’re not making anything up,” he tells Danger Room. “We make wiring harnesses for the military, this being one of them — the Patriot missile.” The protective clothing business appears to be an equally integral part of FPI’s inmate-reliant business. The company website advertises five different models of body armor, on sale from $170 to $325 each. www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/03/prisoners-body-armor/
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