WEEK IN REVIEW

2013-01-14 09:54:36
Jan 14, 2013

FCC says cost of prison phone calls too high


Place caption field value here
Category: week in review
Posted by: Hudson

By Candace Bagwell

Black America Web

 

Experiencing life while a loved one is imprisoned can strain your emotions and relationships, but it shouldn't strain your pocketbook.

 

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) found that the cost of phone calls from incarcerated friends and family members is at an all-time high, and they are committed to changing that. In a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, the FCC brought the issue to light, finding that most inmate calls are nearly 15 times more expensive than regular phone calls.

 

The problem initially came to the agency's attention after Martha Wright complained about her $200 a month phone bill in 2003. The Washington D.C. woman talked to her grandson who is in prison for 15-minutes on a weekly basis and became fed up with the costs.

 

Several civil rights groups joined together to back Wright's complaints by filing a civil-action lawsuit on her behalf. However, a judge dismissed the case and referred Wright to the FCC.

 

FCC Commissioner Mignon L. Clyburn says that since then, "tens of thousands of consumers" have "written, emailed, and yes, phoned the commission, pleading for relief on interstate long distance rates from correctional facilities."

 

Although unfamiliar to most phone users, Global Tel*Link and Securus Technologies Inc. are the two companies responsible for the majority of prison phone calls.

 

Steven Renderos, a national organizer for the Center for Media Justice says that the companies attribute their high rates to "the security features their technology has" including monitoring calls and blocking phone numbers.

 

However he believes that the technology alone is not enough to add up to $15 for a 15-minute call.

 

The Center for Media Justice reports that the rates for prison phone calls vary from state to state.

 

"For example, in Alabama the commission rate is 61.5 percent, and this translates to families having to pay 89 cents a minute on top of a $3.95 connection fee every time a family member receives a call," Rederos explained.

 

"Eight states have banned these commissions-California, South Carolina, Nebraska, New Mexico, New York, Rhode Island, Michigan and Missouri-and in those states you see some of the lowest rates for phone calls. For example Missouri charges 10 cents a minute for a long-distance phone call with a $1 connection fee. The average commission rate in states that haven't banned these commissions is 43 percent."

 

The FCC suggests that a "monopoly" is created when correctional institutions partner with ICS providers in an exclusive contract rather than offering traditional payphone services. In their notice, the agency also added that while most people can choose among multiple calling services, inmates are limited to phones operated by the contracted provider of the facility.

 

Clyburn suggests that the public should rally behind the FCC's action to lower rates for inmate calls in an effort to strengthen our community.

 

"Maintaining contact with family and friends during incarceration not only helps the inmate, but it is beneficial to our society as a whole. There are well over two million children with at least one parent behind bars and regardless of their circumstances, both children and parents gain from regular contact with one another. Studies also show that those released are less likely to reoffend if they are able to maintain relationships with their loved ones while they are in prison."

 

The FCC will receive responses about their proposal from the public for two months.

Bookmark and Share
COMMENTS (0) ADD A COMMENT
Comment Title:
Your Name:
Your Email Address:
Notify me of new comments to this page:
Your Rating:
Additional Comments:

+ Top Story

UK Foreign Secretary William Hague will announce the £20m ($31 million U.S. dollars) compensation package in the House of Commons and thereafter express "sincere regret" to the more than 5000 victims who have been fighting for reparation from the UK government.

The next time a flight attendant reminds you there’s no smoking or you witness a teenager getting carded at a liquor store, think of Frank Lautenberg. The liberal Democratic senator from New Jersey left his mark on the everyday lives of millions of Americans...

 

A building that was being torn down on 22nd and Market Streets, collapsed with a thunderous boom Wednesday, raining bricks on a neighboring thrift store, killing six people and injuring at least 14 others in an accident that witnesses said was bound to happen.

Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell’s decision to eliminate a two-year waiting period for nonviolent felons to regain their voting and other civil rights largely was met with praise from local officials and candidates Wednesday. McDonnell’s office announced that nonviolent felons who maintain a clean record...

Both the House and Senate have passed bills that would reduce funding of the Supplementary Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), formerly called food stamps, but the extent of the cuts will not become known until negotiators from both chambers agree to a compromise measure.

Emergency crews searched the broken remnants of an Oklahoma City suburb Tuesday for survivors of a massive tornado that flattened homes and demolished an elementary school. At least 24 people were killed, including at least nine children, and those numbers were expected to climb.

 In a brutal daylight attack which raised fears that terrorism had returned to London, two men with butcher knives hacked another man to death near a military barracks Wednesday before police wounded them in a shootout.

Malcolm Shabazz, grandson of political activist Malcolm X, died in Mexico City after a violent dispute in a bar, Mexican authorities said Friday. He was 28. City prosecutors are investigating the attack that sent Shabazz to a nearby hospital where he died Thursday of blunt-force trauma injuries.

custom ad spot: 460x76

The Philadelphia Sunday SUN
6661-63 Germantown Ave., | Philadelphia, PA 19119 | Phone (215) 848-7864 | Fax (215) 848-7893 | Managing Editor Teresa A. Emerson taesun@philasun.com
Advertising Exec. Tera Moyett sundaysunads@yahoo.com | Designed by defined clarity