Future Work is also slave-like work in the USA.

John Graversgaard
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[Moderator: a concrete example of neo-slavery in the US...]

http://www.accessatlanta.com/ajc/

Atlanta Journal-Constitution

06-19-1999, Page A1

Prisoners 'hired,' so ex-welfare clients fired;
Free convict labor means trash sorters are recycled out of a job.

By Rhonda Cook, Staff

To save money, a struggling South Georgia recycling plant fired workers
hired off welfare to sort trash for $5.25 an hour. They were replaced with
free convict labor, bypassing a Georgia law that prohibits prisoners'
taking the place of paid employees. 

Lt. Gov. Mark Taylor acted as an intermediary between the Georgia
Department of Corrections and the Crisp County Solid Waste Management
Authority. 

Now 36 inmates from the women's prison in Pulaski County work at the plant
eight hours a day, five days a week, sorting recyclables from garbage
trucked in from dozens of nearby towns and counties. 

Taylor said he did not know the inmates would be taking jobs away from
Georgians coming off government assistance. 

"I find it very disturbing that, at a time when the state and the nation
are focused on putting welfare recipients to work, that a political
subdivision would lay them off and put prison people in place," said state
Rep. Georganna Sinkfield (D-Atlanta), chairman of the House Children and
Youth Committee. 

Georgia law allows prisoners to work only for state, county or local
governments, which would include an authority like the one that owns the
recycling facility at Cordele. The plant is operated by a private company. 

Generally, when a government operation is privatized, the workers are
employees of the company that has the contract. In this case, plant
workers' wages are paid directly by the authority but are employed by the
Environmental Technologies Group, a private, profitmaking business. 

Asked if the authority paid workers directly in order to get around the
legal prohibition against inmates working for the private sector, Chip
Wells, board chairman of the Crisp County Solid Waste Management
Authority, said, "I believe so." 

The recycling center opened a year ago. In December the financially
strapped facility laid off 50 sorters, including 35 who had taken the jobs
to get off welfare, because the "waste stream" what not what had been
predicted. The Department of Human Resources said 10 of the 35 are back on
welfare. 

"My heart goes out to them," Wells said. "We hired those people and then
we laid them off. But there are still a tremendous number of people we
employ. A lot of people fail to realize what we are still doing for the
workforce here." 

The plan to use convict labor from Pulaski State Prison near Hawkinsville
was hatched in February when authority representatives met in Atlanta with
the lieutenant governor, Sen. Rooney Bowen (D-Cordele) and prison
officials. 

"It was just another constituent request and I just passed it on to the
Department of Corrections," Taylor said. 

The authority reimburses the corrections department about $122,000 a year
for the guards' salaries and the expense of transporting the inmates. The
prisoners are not paid. 

"I think those inmates cost about $30,000 a year to house so you certainly
can't say they're working for free," Wells said. 

He said the combination of inmate labor and a paid workforce of 130 to 160
ensures salaried employees will keep their jobs. The free inmate labor
helps put the facility "a little bit closer to being profitable. Once this
facility breaks even . . . I would expect we will not be keeping those
inmates," Wells said. 

Department of Corrections attorney Bill Amideo said the agency was told
"the layoffs have nothing to do with four months later acquiring inmate
labor. . .. . These are merely work details, like the guys that mow the
lawn at the Humane Society or clean up beside the highway." 

Environmental Technologies Group of Atlanta is paid a minimum of $93,600
to run the facility. 

"They really are exploiting the inmates as cheap labor until they get back
on their feet," said Tim Mellen of the Prison and Jail Project, an
advocate for the rights of the poor and of inmates. "The aspect (that)
makes it even worse is here are people . . . who needed jobs and their
jobs were taken away. What they're doing is wrong." 

Taylor said he didn't know that the inmates took jobs once held by paid
workers, especially people that had just come off welfare rolls, where
they received an average monthly check of $240 plus food stamps and
Medicaid. "I did not know the connection between the two," he said. 

"It's real important that those prisoners work, but there's nothing more
important than welfare reform," the lieutenant governor said. 

Wells said the private company has complete control over who is hired,
fired or promoted at the $54 million integrated waste processing center. 

"If we can make this authority profitable, Crisp County will enjoy free
garbage disposal," Wells said. "We have made a great deal of progress. We
are much closer to operating at a break-even point." 


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Copyright (c) 1999 Cox Interactive Media


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