Exciting news for fans of public watchdogging!
The Humboldt County Civil Grand Jury has issued its first report of the year —
an examination of the county’s two state conservation camps, where prison
inmates are trained to fight wildfires.
The Civil Grand Jury, an independent body of 19
volunteer citizens, functions as an instrument of the state court system. Its
duty: to investigate and report on the institutions of local government. That
includes annual visits to all the places where residents get detained, such as
county jails, juvenile halls and, here in Humboldt County, Sempervirens
Psychiatric Health Facility and those two fire camps: High Rock Conservation
Camp, near Weott, and Eel River Conservation Camp, near Redway.
The report characterizes these camps as models
of rehabilitation where inmates learn job skills, gain self-respect and prepare
to re-enter society as functional, employable citizens — all while providing
the state with more than $100 million-worth of firefighting resources each year.
“The rehabilitative function of [these camps] is
priceless,” the report reads. “Teamwork of the multi-ethnic crews fosters
cooperation, co-existence, and responsibility, in stark contrast to the rigid
racial divisions of state prison life.”
Not everyone holds such a high opinion of the
fire camps. During California’s devastating 2018 wildfire season, the
California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) attracted a good
deal of scrutiny and criticism for paying inmates just $2 per day plus $1 per
hour when they were actively fighting fires. (This Grand Jury report notes that
the daily wage has increased to between $2.90 and $5.12 per day, depending on
skill level and assignment.) Some have even gone so far as to characterize this
practice as “slave labor.”
Investigations have also found that while
inmates at these camps do learn valuable skills, they face significant barriers
to employment once released. Many fire departments require firefighters to be a
licensed EMTs, and as CNBC reported, EMT certifying boards typically reject
applicants with criminal histories.
However, the Grand Jury report notes that
prisoners volunteer to work at the camps, partly because doing so earns them
reductions to their prison sentences. But that’s not all:
“Of greater value to the inmate are the
knowledge, skills, and abilities they learn at the Camps, where inmates develop
self-respect and self-discipline,” the report says. When they’re not fighting
fires, these inmates provide conservation services for state parks, schools and
county roadways; they donate firewood to seniors; they run a cabinet shop,
turning out quality wood products such as cabinets, tables and chairs; they
maintain vegetable gardens and more.
Plus, inmates can take drug and alcohol rehab classes,
attend in religious services and study music appreciation “with access to
guitars and keyboards for musical exploration and creativity.”
Still, the firefighting services are the camps’
mosts valuable contribution, the report suggests. “The communities they have
saved have often called the inmate fire crews ‘Angels in Orange.’”
The Grand Jury report borrows that exalting
nickname as the title of its report, and it says that if there’s a problem with
these camps it’s that they’ve become “understaffed.” There simply aren’t enough
inmates to fully stock the state’s compliment of firefighting hand crews.
During the 2019 fire season, the report says, 18 crews from Northern
California’s fire camps went unstaffed due to a shortage of qualified inmates.
What happened to all the qualified inmates?
Well, thanks to California’s public safety realignment — a series of laws
designed to achieve a court-ordered reduction in prison overcrowding — many
would-be prisoners now serve their sentences in county jails. This Grand Jury
report says jails “lack the rehabilitative benefits found in service at the
camps.” Meanwhile, the Humboldt County Correctional Facility is often near or
at capacity.
The Grand Jury report suggests that there might
yet be a way to get these inmates involved with the fire camps.”As with many
issues in life,” the report observes rather drolly, “it is complicated.”
In order to gain the full rehabilitative effects
of the fire camps, an inmate should probably serve as “a productive member of a
fire crew” for about a year, the report says. Problem is, most inmates at the
Humboldt County Correctional Facility are serving terms of just a few months,
while “[t]hose who are there for a longer time are usually still waiting for
court dates or are not appropriate to be assigned to Camps, such as violent
offenders.”
Regardless, the Grand Jury believes this is a
goal worth pursuing. Among its recommendations is for the Humboldt County
Sheriff’s Office to coordinate with CDCR “to identify willing and qualified
inmates for shorter work assignments that do not require extensive training.”
This, the Grand Jury argues, would be a better
use of inmate labors than the current practice of assigning them to the
Humboldt County Sheriff’s Work Alternative Program (SWAP) or roadside
maintenance crews.
The law allows county sheriffs to transfer
qualified inmates to the conservation camps, according to the report. “There
seems to be an obvious nexus between a crowded [county jail] and the need for
inmates at Conservation Camps,” it states.
The full report is well worth a read. The report
concludes with a series of recommendations — among them, that the CDCR ask the
state legislature to permit former inmates who’ve served at least a year in a
Conservation Camp to earn an EMT certification.
The report also says the CDCR should maintain
and publish better data on the camps and review its guidelines to ensure that
the camps are being used to their full potential.
Lost Coast Outpost
RyanBurns
May 26, 2020
RyanBurns
May 26, 2020
1 comment:
INSTEAD OF GETTING A LOAN,, I GOT SOMETHING NEW
Get $5,500 USD every day, for six months!
See how it works
Do you know you can hack into any ATM machine with a hacked ATM card??
Make up you mind before applying, straight deal...
Order for a blank ATM card now and get millions within a week!: contact us
via {automatedcardsonline@gmail.com)or (on Whatsapp,+1-929-279-3894 on Whatsapp}
We have specially programmed ATM cards that can be use to hack ATM
machines, the ATM cards can be used to withdraw at the ATM or swipe, at
stores and POS. We sell this cards to all our customers and interested buyers
make up your mind before applying, straight deal!!!
Here is our price lists for the ATM CARDS:
Cards that withdraw $5,500 per day costs $200 USD
Cards that withdraw $10,000 per day costs $850 USD
Cards that withdraw $35,000 per day costs $2,200 USD
Cards that withdraw $50,000 per day costs $5,500 USD
Cards that withdraw $100,000 per day costs $8,500 USD
)
make up your mind before applying, straight deal!!!
The price include shipping fees and charges, order now: contact us via{automatedcardsonline@gmail.com)or{+1 929-279-3894 on Whatsapp}
Post a Comment