For more information about the bowl-a-thon and for information and donation forms, please see http://pagestoprisoners.org/node/68
Thanks,
Geoff Hing
The Midwest Pages to Prisoners Project
From an article in the Indiana Daily Student:
There are 272 people living in the Monroe County jail, which is only meant to hold 200 people. About 70 people sleep on the floor each night.
With this many people filling the jail, Monroe County could face a federal lawsuit because of its lack of compliance with state and federal laws that state all inmates must have their own beds. The sheriff’s department and others want to build a new jail while some in the community think that there are better options....
Mark Stoops, who is also running for county commissioner, believes that a new jail is not the best option.
“The current jail is not in good shape, but when it’s broken down, we can’t afford a new jail,” Stoops said. “If we build a new jail of the capacity of 450, we will fill it fairly quickly. We will have to pay for food and medical expenses and we can’t afford the people we have now.”
Stoops thinks the solution is to work on keeping the jail population down. Besides having a lot of probation violators in jail, people who can’t pay their $500 cash bond must also stay in jail, Stoops said.
“It seems (it) would be better to use the money for a new jail instead to keep the jail population down,” Stoops said. “Use that money for an intensive treatment center to turn people around or for kids and juvenile offenders so when they get older they can hopefully turn their lives around.”
Criminal Justice Candidate Forum
Saturday, April 5
1:30-3:30pm
Monroe County Public Library Room 1B
If you're looking for something to do before the Bowl-A-Thon, Citizens for Effective Justice has organized a candidate forum featuring a variety of candidates for local government positions discussing their positions on criminal justice issues. This should be an informative event, especially since new jail construction and conditions in the current jail seem to be hot topics of conversation around Bloomington.
The Rock N' Roll Prom is the Midwest Pages to Prisoners Project's biggest fundraiser every year. Not only is it a fun and festive event that involves cover bands and wild fashion, it also helps provide the funding for postage to send free books to people in prisons and jails throughout the Midwest and to purchase the books that we send.
You can help us out by attending the prom, but also by helping to promote it.
Download a printable flyer to hang around Bloomington.
Display a banner on your blog, MySpace, or Facebook page. Just oppy and paste this code to your profile or theme:
<p><a href="http://www.boxcarbooks.org/"><img src="http://blogs.terrorware.com/geoff/files/2008/03/prom-webscaled.jpg" style="border: 0pt none ;" /></a></p>
The Sentencing Project has published a guide to the 2008 Presidential Candidates' Platforms on Criminal Justice. This guide provides information on a range of key criminal justice issues, including sentencing policy, reentry, felony disenfranchisement, and the death penalty.
Who: You,our valued volunteer
What:Bowling to raise money for Pages to Prisoners
Where: Indiana Memorial Union Bowling Alley – The Back Alley
When: Saturday April 5, 2008 3pm POSTPONED (but start collecting right away)
Why:
Unfortunately,money makes the world go round and also decides whether
packages get sent,dictionaries and packing supplies get purchased, etc
Hello Pages Volunteers and Supporters,
It's
time for one of our big annual fundraisers, the Bowl-A-Thon! For those
of you who are not familiar with the concept from past years, it's
pretty simple - volunteers and supporters get friends, coworkers,
family members and anyone in their social network to sponsor them to
bowl a few games with the proceeds going to Pages. People often
sponsor someone per point, so the better you bowl, the more money you
raise to purchase books or send packages for Pages! Of course, people
can make a flat rate donation as well.
Here are 3 documents for you to use:
A few important things to remember:
Please make sure all your pledges (money and sheet) are mailed to or dropped off at Boxcar Books, or turned in to Abbey, Anita, or Geoff
The
fundraiser is coming soon, but try to get as many donations as
possible. Remember, every little bit helps. If you only raise $15,
that's still 5 packages out the door!
If you have any questions, write mwpp@pagestoprisoners.org or call Geoff at 812.856.1188.
Take care,
The Midwest Pages to Prisoners Project
I have a question. Would you know how we could get a library cart or book shelf of some kind for the jail? It would have to be on rollers so the cart/shelf could be rolled to the different cell blocks.
They do have one but it is aproximately 2 ft. wide and 3 ft. tall. It has a back on it so the books won't fall out when it is being rolled.
I have been able to get an approval for a church to donate some books, although still not many, it is better than nothing. However, with the cart the jail has being so small they have no room for the books. I am afraid they will quit accepting any donations and use the "space" thing as an excuse. They have done away with the "library" before, and I hate to see that happen again.
I have looked online and found the library carts are way to expensive for me to buy. (I'm laid off and go to school full time now). I have called the library here in Tipton to see if they had any that they were not using, but they didn't. I have contacted a person who works P.T. at the community corrections and ask if it were possible to get some sort of grant to pay for one. She said she talked to her boss and that it wasn't.
I have asked a few other people to keep an eye out for something like this, but no one has been able to find anything. I thought maybe you would have an idea on maybe who I could contact to get a grant, a donation or find away to get the jail another library cart/shelf.
Thanks so much.
Tami Mohler
A new report released last week by the Pew Center for States reported that more than 1 in 100 american adults is incarcerated. From a New York Times article about the report:
Nationwide, the prison population grew by 25,000 last year, bringing
it to almost 1.6 million. Another 723,000 people are in local jails.
The number of American adults is about 230 million, meaning that one in
every 99.1 adults is behind bars.
Incarceration rates are even
higher for some groups. One in 36 Hispanic adults is behind bars, based
on Justice Department figures for 2006. One in 15 black adults is, too,
as is one in nine black men between the ages of 20 and 34.
The
report, from the Pew Center on the States, also found that only one in
355 white women between the ages of 35 and 39 are behind bars but that
one in 100 black women are.
Susan Uhran, director of the Pew Center on the States is quoted as saying, "we aren’t really getting the return in public safety from this level of incarceration."
Some interesting statistics about prison spending from the report were listed in the article:
Paul Cassell, a law professor at the University of Utah is also quoted in the article and links the higher incarceration rates to lower violent crime rates in the last 20 years. He says, "one out of every 100 adults is behind bars because one out of every 100 adults has committed a serious criminal offense.”
I find this analysis troubling because, even if there is a direct link between violent crime rates and incarceration rates, the idea that 1 out of every 100 U.S. adults has "comitted a serious criminal offense" does not ring as a shining endorsement for the success of incarceration. I find it deeply unsatisfying that we live in a culture where so many can be considered serious criminals. The pervasiveness of incarceration suggests that the cause of incarceration is not isolated acts of criminal intent, but the culture itself, in the way it chooses to criminalize certain actions and looks to incarceration as a solution instead of looking at apparent social needs that have been linked to crime.
Link to New York Times article.
March 4's edition of Free Speech Radio news also included coverage of the Pew report.
Link to Free Speech Radio News report.
Here’s a look at the proposal:Link to article.
The county’s criminal justice continuum would be split into two “campuses.” The first, described as a justice campus, would be located at the downtown block that’s currently home to the Justice Building and the Curry and Fiscus buildings. That campus would house courts, probation and other related activities, plus create space for future growth.
The second campus, dubbed the corrections campus, would be constructed at the former Thomson/RCA site and would house juvenile facilities offering care to youthful offenders, a new jail and sheriff’s department. In 2002, the county purchased the 85-acre site, which is located west of South Rogers Street, behind the IMI stone company and south of the old Thomson Consumer Electronics property.
A proposed timeline for the development process said it’s likely to take between two and five years and would first construct a juvenile treatment and secure detention facility on the Thomson/RCA property, then build a new jail and sheriff’s office on that property, and finally renovate the then-vacant jail and sheriff’s office at the Justice Building to create more space for courts, probation and other needed functions.


The Columbus Dispatch : Governor wants prisons re-evaluated:
Of the 16,994 short-term inmates admitted to Ohio's prison system in 2006, nine were released after a single day.
Another 32 stayed a week, 236 were out in 30 days, and 2,180, or 12.8 percent of all those sentenced to a year or less, were back on the street in three months.
Yet each prisoner cost the state several hundred dollars to process into the system and $69.40 for each day behind bars.
Gov. Ted Strickland, who is facing the first big financial crunch of his short time in office, shakes his head at the revolving door on Ohio prisons.
...
In an interview with The Dispatch, Strickland said he hopes to ease prison crowding and save state taxpayer dollars at the same time, perhaps by diverting short-term prisoners to community lockups (some of which are funded by the state at lower rates) or other alternatives.
...
Strickland, a former state-prison psychologist, said he has ruled out building new prisons or reopening closed ones, even though the prison population recently topped 50,000 for the first time.
at
118 S. Rogers
Suite #2
Bloomington, IN 47404
Please read our volunteering page for more information.
The Midwest Pages to Prisoners Project
c/o Boxcar Books and Community Center, Inc.
118 S. Rogers
Suite 2
Bloomington, IN 47404
1.866.598.1543 (toll-free)
mwpp [at] pagestoprisoners.org
There are many other groups that work towards the same goals as the Midwest Pages to Prisoners Project. Read more.