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HRDC letter in support of CA Assembly Bill 1876 March 2014

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Human Rights Defense Center
DEDICATED TO PROTECTING HUMAN RIGHTS

March 18, 2014
Via Fax Transmission 1.916.319.2120
Assembly Member Bill Quirk
Capitol Office
Sacramento, CA
RE: Assembly Bill 1876
Dear Assembly Member Quirk,
I am contacting you in my capacity as Executive Director of the Human Rights
Defense Center (HRDC) and Editor for Prison Legal News (PLN), a nationallydistributed monthly publication that reports on criminal justice and corrrections-related
issues, in reference to Assembly Bill 1876.
Thank you for introducing Assembly Bill 1876 which would prohibit a county jail
from accepting a "commission" or other form of payment or kickback from a telephone
company as an incentive to enter into a contract for the provision of inmate phone
services at the jail. Please feel free to consult with us as this legislation wends its way
through the system. Additionally, HRDC staff are available to testify before any
hearings on this matter.
In 2011, HRDC co-founded the Campaign for Prison Phone Justice, a joint
project with Media Action Grassroots Network (MAG-Net) and Working Narratives. The
Campaign’s initial focus was on the national issue of reducing interstate (long distance)
prison phone rates through the Federal Communications Commission.
PLN has reported for decades on prison and jail phone services, including
litigation, legislation and reform efforts, and our experience and expertise in this area
leads us to make the following remarks in support of Assembly Bill 1876 on behalf of
HRDC and the Campaign for Prison Phone Justice:

______________________________________________________________________________
P.O. Box 1151
Lake Worth, FL 33460
Phone: 561.360.2523 Fax: 866.735.7136
pwright@prisonlegalnews.org

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1. Lack of Competition
Upon entering into contracts with correctional agencies, jail phone service
providers enjoy a complete monopoly on telephone services within the jurisdiction
controlled by the contract. This legalized monopoly, with a resultant lack of competition,
is in effect during the term of the contract. And while such contracts may be rebid, the
company that currently holds the contract has a significant advantage in terms of
winning the rebid and maintaining its monopoly, as competitors must factor in start-up
and equipment costs.
In a free market economy, competition acts to lower prices to the benefit of
consumers. In the jail phone service market, however, competition exists only when a
contract is initially bid, and perhaps during rebids. Even this level of competition makes
a mockery of free market economics, however, as the lowest cost for providing jail
phone services is rarely taken into account as a contract requirement.
This lack of consumer-friendly competition is due to the industry-standard
practice of providing "commissions" to the contracting county agencies, which is the
polite term for contractually-agreed kickbacks. Jail phone service providers typically
agree to pay a specified percentage of their revenues to the contracting agency as a
type of profit-sharing agreement – with such commissions ranging up to 70% of billed
phone revenues. These collusive arrangements, which result in millions of dollars in
commissions, create a vested interest by the contracting agency to maximize the rates
charged to consumers in order to increase the resulting shared profits; or, at least, not
to actively seek lower rates that would decrease their kickback.
These commissions are passed on to consumers in the form of higher phone
rates. Notably, the consumers who actually pay the inflated rates – primarily the family
members and friends of prisoners, not the prisoners themselves – have no say in the
contracting process or the selection of the phone service provider.
While phone rates available to the general public have dropped dramatically in
recent years, with phone companies routinely touting long distance rates of $.10 per
minute or less, competition in the jail phone service industry has, to quote one writer,
"worked in precisely the opposite direction, with companies offering the highest bids (in
terms of rates and commissions) routinely awarded contracts, the costs of which are
passed on to the (literally) captive market." (Steven J. Jackson, "Ex-Communication:
Competition and Collusion in the U.S. Prison Telephone Industry").
Eight states, recognizing the problems inherent in commission-based phone
service contracts, have banned commissions in their Departments of Corrections –
including California, New Mexico, Michigan and New York.

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2. Impact on Families of Prisoners
Price gouging is an ugly phrase, but as indicated above, that is exactly what
prisoners' family members and friends experience when they accept collect calls from
their imprisoned loved ones or open prepaid jail phone accounts.
Phone calls are a vital resource for maintaining parental, spousal and familial
relationships over years of incarceration, yet prisoners' families are subject to very high
rates charged by jail phone service providers and the agencies they contract with. The
AB 1876 Fact Sheet details some of these rates: $12.75 for a 15-minute intrastate call
in Alameda County, with 70.5 percent of the gross revenue generated from the calls
collected by the Alameda County Sheriff’s Department ($1,629,046 in commissions
in fiscal year 2012-2013); $15.44 for a 15-minute intrastate phone call in Tulare County
with a 55 percent commission on gross revenue received by the Tulare County Sheriff’s
Department ($361,436 collected in fiscal year 2011-2012, with the commission rate
increasing to 72 percent in 2013); and $13.35 for a 15-minute intrastate phone call in
Los Angeles County.
Of note, a new contract was negotiated in 2011 that increased the commission
percentage in Los Angeles County from 52 to 67.5 percent, with a Committed Annual
Guarantee of $15 million for the Sheriff’s Department. In fiscal year 2010-11, the
Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department received $25.4 million in phone commissions.
This results in socioeconomic-based disparity, as families who can afford to pay inflated
phone rates for calls from their incarcerated loved ones are able to do so, while
impoverished families cannot.
Such grossly inflated rates are not justified except as a means of monopolistic
price gouging; if the contractual kickbacks were excluded, jail phone service providers
could charge about half the current rates and still remain profitable. This is fact, not
theory. The eight states that have banned commissions have some of the lowest prison
phone rates in the nation, including New York's prison system, which charges less than
$.05 per minute for inmate phone calls. The jail phone service industry's argument that
technical expenses and equipment costs justify high phone rates does not explain why
such rates vary widely from one jurisdiction to another.
There have been many reported cases of families having to cut off telephone
contact with their imprisoned loved ones due to outrageous phone bills – bills that
exceed $700 per month for some families.
The inflated rates charged by jail phone service companies should not be borne
on the backs of prisoners' families, who are overwhelmingly the ones who must pay
such exorbitant costs and the least able, financially, to make such payments. Families
of prisoners, whose only "crime" is having a loved one in prison, should not be punished
for that familial relationship by having to pay exorbitant phone rates. As stated by
Madeleine Severin, there is "something fundamentally unjust about families of prisoners

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being charged outrageous prices solely because they accept collect calls from people in
prison." ("Is There a Winning Argument Against Excessive Rates for Collect Calls from
Prisoners?" 25 Cardozo L. Rev. 1469 (2004)).
3. Impact on Reducing Recidivism Rates
Research has indicated that of the 2.2 million men and women held in our
nation's prisons and jails, almost 70% perform at the two lowest levels of reading (more
than triple the rate in the general population). For these prisoners, writing letters is not a
viable substitute for communicating with family members and maintaining family and
parental relationships. Further, many prisoners are housed far across the state from
their families, who are unable to travel for in-person visitation.
Such prisoners who cannot adequately read or write, or who are unable to
receive visits, must rely on jail phone services. And when the cost of such phone
services is excessively high the ability to make such calls is diminished or even
extinguished, with family contact and relationships suffering as a result. This impacts
more than just prisoners and their loved ones.
Numerous studies have shown that practices and programs which "facilitate and
strengthen family connections during incarceration" can "reduce the strain of parental
separation, reduce recidivism rates, and increase the likelihood of successful re-entry"
of prisoners after they are released. (Re-Entry Policy Council Report, 2005).
An article published in August 2012 in Corrections Today, a publication of the
American Correctional Association, titled “The Role of Family and Pro-Social
Relationships in Reducing Recidivism,” noted that “Family can be a critical component
in assisting individuals transitioning from incarceration because family members provide
both social control and social support, which inhibit criminal activity.... In contrast, those
without positive supportive relationships are more likely to engage in criminal behavior.”
Further, a Vera Institute study, published in October 2012, found that
“Incarcerated men and women who maintain contact with supportive family members
are more likely to succeed after their release.... Research on people returning from
prison shows that family members can be valuable sources of support during
incarceration and after release. For example, prison inmates who had more contact
with their families and who reported positive relationships overall are less likely to be
re-incarcerated.”
Another Vera Institute report, published in 2011, stated: “Research shows that
incarcerated people who maintain supportive relationships with family members have
better outcomes – such as stable housing and employment – when they return to the
community.

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For many prisoners, phone calls to their families and children are the primary
means of maintaining family ties and parental relationships during their incarceration,
and prisoners who have close contact with their family members have better postrelease outcomes and lower recidivism rates.
Notably, many jail prisoners are pretrial detainees who are awaiting trial and
have not yet been convicted. To the extent that strong family support and relationships
during incarceration result in lower recidivism rates (e.g., less crime), this issue affects
our communities. And to the extent that jail phone calls are a primary means to maintain
strong family relationships during incarceration, the affordability of such phone calls is
also an issue that affects our communities.
4. Abuses and Lack of Accountability.
There is little oversight over jail phone service providers, other than through the
contracting county agencies. The commissions paid to such agencies cited above result
in a natural incentive to maintain a hands-off approach in terms of investigating abuses
by jail phone service providers, as such investigations or scrutiny may jeopardize the
lucrative kickbacks that the contracting agencies receive.
While state public utility regulatory agencies may have the authority to investigate
and make rules related to jail phone services, in practice this is rarely done. Jail phone
services are not a significant issue for state regulatory agencies; also, jail phone service
providers employ attorneys and lobbyists to protect their business interests, while there
is no similar representation for consumers – primarily prisoners' family members – who
are most affected by exorbitant jail phone rates. When state public utility regulatory
agencies have intervened, however, they frequently uncover gross abuses by phone
service providers.
The prison phone service industry has been repeatedly sanctioned for
overcharging and fraudulent practices. In California, for example, on May 4, 2001, the
California Public Utility Commission ordered MCI to refund $522,458 in overcharges on
collect calls made by California prisoners between June 1996 and July 1999.
Due to the lack of effective regulation and oversight of the jail phone service
industry, abuses and overcharges are difficult to detect, with the result that consumers
are defrauded, overcharged and price-gouged with little or no recourse.
5. Absence of Other Regulatory Means
With rare exceptions, state and federal courts have failed to provide relief related
to prison phone services, commission kickbacks, high rates charged to prisoners'
families, etc. Generally, such issues do not raise constitutional claims on the federal
level and are often dismissed under the filed rate or primary jurisdiction doctrines.

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Some state Departments of Corrections have voluntarily reduced prison phone
rates. As I am sure you are aware, in 2006 then-Governor Schwarzenegger signed SB
81, requiring the phasing out of commissions paid to the state by the prison phone
service provider for the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.
Eliminating the commissions has reduced the cost of making calls from state
prisons without endangering safety or security, and if the state can take such action to
protect consumers who receive phone calls from prisoners – mainly prisoners' family
members – then there is no reason why counties can not do so, too.
The Federal Communications Commission voted to cap the cost of interstate
(long distance) prison phone rates last year, and the FCC's order partially went into
effect on February 11, 2014. However, the rate cap and other reforms implemented by
the FCC do not apply to intrastate (in-state) calls, which remain high – even higher than
long distance calls – in many jurisdictions. The vast majority of calls made by jail
detainees are intrastate and local, which are not subject to the FCC's rate cap.
Thus, Assembly Bill 1876 is needed to address the costs of intrastate and local
calls made by prisoners held in county jails, as those rates remain unregulated and in
many cases are still unreasonably high due to the commission payments that county
agencies receive from jail phone service providers.
Conclusion
The Human Rights Defense Center and Campaign for Prison Phone Justice
support Assembly Bill 1876, and encourage you to consider the above comments when
reaching a decision on whether you will support this important legislation.
Assembly Bill 1876 is necessary because free market forces have consistently
failed to provide reasonable, competitive phone rates for the captive market that
consists of prisoners and their families, to the detriment of consumers and society as a
whole. Further, it is fundamentally unfair for prisoners' family members to shoulder the
burden of higher jail phone rates due to commission kickbacks paid to county agencies
and sheriffs' offices.
Please feel free to contact me should you require any additional information.

Sincerely,

Paul Wright
Executive Director, HRDC

 

 

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