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Will Your Job Be Reshored to a Federal Prisoner?
Minyanville ^ | 03/15/2013 | Justin Rohrlich

Posted on 03/15/2013 7:52:57 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

Twelve million Americans are currently unemployed, according to the most recent Department of Labor statistics. Forty percent of the unemployed have been so for at least six months, and the average job seeker spends 36.9 weeks out of work.

The good news for the jobless? US industry is now in the throes of a “reshoring” trend:

“Next year we’re going to bring some production to the US,” Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) CEO Tim Cook told Bloomberg Businessweek in December. “This doesn’t mean that Apple will do it ourselves, but we’ll be working with people and we’ll be investing our money.”

The bad news? The Bureau of Prisons is angling to have as many reshored jobs as possible filled by federal prisoners.

Between 2000 and 2011, wages in Asia have nearly doubled, according to the International Labour Organization. The Chinese government is planning to increase the minimum wage by 13% annually until 2015. Labor unrest, formerly unheard of in Asia, has become more frequent, with companies routinely raising workers’ pay after strikes. At the same time, wages paid to federal inmates working in prison factories across the United States have remained flat, ranging from $0.23 to $1.15 an hour.

Federal Prison Industries -- also known by the trade name UNICOR -- is a self-sustaining, self-funding company within the US Bureau of Prisons. It is owned wholly by the US government and was created by an act of Congress in 1934 to function as a rehabilitative tool to teach real-world work skills to federal inmates. These inmates were historically limited to producing goods for government use, such as furniture, uniforms, even, believe it or not, components for Patriot missiles.

However, as Bob Sloan, a prison industries consultant and Executive Director of the Voters Legislative Transparency Project, explains to me, Congress amended the 2011 Continuing Appropriations Act “to allow private companies access to the labor of federal prisoners and UNICOR facilities” under what's known as the Prison Industries Enhancement Certification Program, or PIECP.

“Additionally, the FPI board of directors authorized a ‘repatriation’ program where US companies can bring jobs back to the US making products no longer manufactured in the US,” Sloan tells me. “Prisoners will be paid standard prison wages.”

Indeed, FPI/UNICOR’s 2012 annual report states that the board of directors “has approved 14 pilot programs for repatriated products.” It also details “substantial losses” incurred and asserts that “inmate employment levels have dropped precipitously.” To be sure, not every job being reshored will be filled by an inmate. But according to the report, “FPI anticipates these pilot projects will assist in further reducing its losses," which would logically induce the Bureau of Prisons to funnel as much business as possible to its 109 existing UNICOR factories, which currently employ just over 21,000 inmates.

Though prison authorities welcome the opportunity to close their budget gaps through its industries, companies on the outside with which they will compete will be negatively impacted.

States have been partnering with private industry to manufacture goods in prison since the PIECP program was created by Congress in 1979. Prisoners in state prisons have packaged products for Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), Starbucks (NASDAQ:SBUX), and Costco (NASDAQ:COST) subcontractors, and helped build a Wisconsin Wal-Mart (NYSE:WMT) distribution center. The goal is to keep as much of the population as busy as possible; as prison staff like to say, idle inmates are dangerous inmates.

“While there is a need for training of our incarcerated members of society, that training should not come at the expense of workers on the outside who have committed no criminal act and lose their jobs to prisoners,” says Bob Sloan.

And why would that well-trained, experienced free-world worker lose out to a prisoner? When a business owner takes advantage of incentives that include facility leases for as little as $1 a year, tax subsidies or exemptions such as Nevada’s Modified Business Tax, and a host of methods to avoid paying inmates even the minimum rates guaranteed by law, it is difficult for those paying a living wage, benefits, vacation pay, and so forth to compete. If Apple were so inclined, inmates working under the banner of UNICOR's Electronics Business Group seem to be able to do many of the same things as Foxconn employees -- and their products will be "Made in the USA."

Further, critics charge that prison labor not only drives down wages on the outside, its use can also counteract the skills training inmates receive while incarcerated -- if production in one's new area of expertise moves behind bars, where will an inmate look for work after he is released?

As for the inmates themselves, most are not immediately concerned with their effect on the outside labor market.

To quote one, "F--k society, they locked me up."

Bob Sloan and I have filed a Freedom of Information Act request in an attempt to identify the 14 industries set for repatriation. Stay tuned.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Society
KEYWORDS: federalprisoner; jobs; outsourcing; reshoring

1 posted on 03/15/2013 7:52:57 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

SeekAndFind ~: “Additionally, the FPI board of directors authorized a ‘repatriation’ program where US companies can bring jobs back to the US making products no longer manufactured in the US,” Sloan tells me. “Prisoners will be paid standard prison wages.”

Tell me how American industry can compete with an inmate workforce being paid at $.08 per hour ?
We are beginning to emulate China, ..what’s next child labor ? /sarc

Oh ,.. I get it !
We’ll make inmate labor a union workforce , and collect dues !!
Contributions will go right into the DNC ..
Brilliant !!


2 posted on 03/15/2013 8:19:09 AM PDT by Tilted Irish Kilt (“Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction.” - Ronald Reagan)
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To: SeekAndFind; Travis McGee; cripplecreek

Unicor helps keep order in federal prisons which with ever increasing jail time mandatories is not easy

It also gives prisoners a little canteen money which is less cost for the state plus state earns from canteen...probably over one million per year in a big joint

And a little money prisoners can even send home for kids birthdays..quinces and bar mitzvahs

Caveat is it is indeed unfair competition with private sector


3 posted on 03/15/2013 8:26:55 AM PDT by wardaddy (wanna know how my kin felt during Reconstruction in Mississippi, you fixin to find out firsthand)
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To: Tilted Irish Kilt

Over 47% of federal prisoners are locked up for ‘drug offenses’.


4 posted on 03/15/2013 8:28:38 AM PDT by Gunslingr3
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To: SeekAndFind

Cool...and when we need more laborers, we simply enforce one of the millions of “hidden” laws on those who are qualified for the particular position and “instant state slave labor”. Isn’t socialist tyranny a wonderful thing?!?


5 posted on 03/15/2013 8:29:26 AM PDT by Caipirabob (Communists... Socialists... Democrats...Traitors... Who can tell the difference?)
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To: wardaddy

Remember the prisoner labor in GWTW.


6 posted on 03/15/2013 8:29:29 AM PDT by Black Agnes
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To: Tilted Irish Kilt

Unicor pays more than 8 cents an hour

Veteran workers as supervisor make 250-300 bucks a month

Average joe prisoner maybe a buck an hour

If you have no family it beats being PM compound or CMS which pay around maybe 5 bucks a week or so


7 posted on 03/15/2013 8:30:53 AM PDT by wardaddy (wanna know how my kin felt during Reconstruction in Mississippi, you fixin to find out firsthand)
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To: Tilted Irish Kilt

Unicor pays more than 8 cents an hour

Veteran workers as supervisor make 250-300 bucks a month

Average joe prisoner maybe a buck an hour

If you have no family it beats being PM compound or CMS which pay around maybe 5 bucks a week or so


8 posted on 03/15/2013 8:31:30 AM PDT by wardaddy (wanna know how my kin felt during Reconstruction in Mississippi, you fixin to find out firsthand)
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To: SeekAndFind
They'll just make YOU a Federal Prisoner and order you to continue to do your job from the inside.

For historical examples, see the writings of Alexander Solzhenitsyn...

9 posted on 03/15/2013 8:32:15 AM PDT by Mr. Jeeves (CTRL-GALT-DELETE)
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To: wardaddy

Personally I’d rather see the state and federal prisons return to supporting themselves through farming. They can also take on a lot of the state and federal grunt work like clearing brush along highways, forestry work, cutting grass, cleaning up parks etc.


10 posted on 03/15/2013 8:39:48 AM PDT by cripplecreek (REMEMBER THE RIVER RAISIN!)
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To: SeekAndFind

This will all go so much easier for our erstwhile rulers when 90% of what remains of the population after the slaughter is safely barracked up in the state-run manufactories and collective farms.


11 posted on 03/15/2013 8:40:32 AM PDT by Noumenon (One individual with courage, determination and a rifle can change the course of history.)
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To: Gunslingr3
then pehaps UNICOR should be working on a partnership with pharmaceutical companies rather than apple!

CC

12 posted on 03/15/2013 8:56:44 AM PDT by Celtic Conservative (Hey liberals, what part of "unalienable" don't you understand?)
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To: SeekAndFind

Bad idea all around. The same concept was employed in the creation of concentration camps and gulags, and we all know how that ended up.


13 posted on 03/15/2013 10:23:40 AM PDT by factoryrat (We are the producers, the creators. Grow it, mine it, build it.)
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To: factoryrat

And equal opportunity and temptation for corruption as the warden in Shawshank Redemption. It is the same scenario.


14 posted on 03/15/2013 2:34:14 PM PDT by Sequoyah101
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To: Sequoyah101

This is going on in Alabama now. Two sewing plants have already been closed and work moved to prisons. Talk is another one is to be closed. All were making military
uniforms. Newspaper article said cost was higher for prison labor uniforms, something about $25 or $26 in plants to
$29 or $30 for prison made, do not remember exact figures.


15 posted on 03/15/2013 5:00:16 PM PDT by TweetEBird007
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