Part Time Prisoner
Campaign Against Prison Slavery | 03.02.2004 11:04
According to the UK Hardware store 'Wilkinson's', their use of compulsory prison labour is, "helping to rehabilitate prisoners and increase their employability". This is of course a thin smokescreen for ruthless opportunism since it's hard to imagine how packing small items for Wilko's is going to rehabilitate prisoners, who prior to the intervention of these greedy private companies, had far greater access to education and were able to learn proper trade skills. Companies like Wilkinson's merely see this slave labour force as something to exploit in order to increase their profits, and all subsidised by the taxpayer. UK Home Secretary David Blunkett is now moving to get prisoners to pay for their own incarceration by introducing so-called part-time prisons, so no doubt they're going to also be required to do part-time jobs.
Mixed screws - a new Home Office race relations policy?
He's had experience working for Wilko's in prison
As prisoners already do work for Wilkinson's (being paid the princely sum of £1.20 per day) we thought the firm might be interested in employing a part-time prisoner in one of their stores. Suitably dressed, Insecurity Guard Mark Barnsley and Part-Time Prisoner Wolfie went to Hull Wilkos to find out. Entering the store handcuffed together the pair first tested just how little £1.20 will buy you in Wilkinson's. A pack of toilet rolls, the sort of item prisoners are increasingly having to pay for themselves, proved too dear, but Guard Barnsley was very interested by the bags of 'mixed screws' at 2 for £1.20 Just the type of thing prisoners are forced to pack for Wilkos. Our prisoner was less impressed as of course he's none too fond of screws. Moving on, they decided it was time to try and see what Wilko's attitude to employing part-time prisoners would be, none too forthcoming of course, with nothing actually available. We strongly suspect they'd be no keener to employ the ex-prisoners who've previously slaved for them inside, not least since unlike in prison they'd have to pay them minimum wage. The Hull store did present one opportunity though, in the form of a photo booth, which Guard Barnsley thought might be a good place to take Wolfie's new ID photo. To Wilko's evident lack of amusement the pair's visit was in any event discreetly filmed and recorded, not discreetly enough it seems because Wilkinson's own Security started pulling their hair out and triggered an alert, which brought security guards running from all corners of the precinct in which their Hull store is located. They only arrived in time however to see prisoner Wolfie being liberated, and departing with his former guard, chuckling all the way to the pub.
Campaign Against Prison Slavery
Homepage:
http://www.mydadsstripclub.com/wilkoprisoner.htm
Comments
Hide the following 8 comments
Screening of Part-Time Prisoner
03.02.2004 13:01
8pm 19th February 2004
Bernards Watch film-night at The Courtyard, Friar Lane, Derby.
Ange Taggart
Homepage: http://www.mydadsstripclub.com
More support...
04.02.2004 15:10
However, I doubt if the people running this campaign will support this suggestion as in the past they have suggested that violence doesn't count if it takes place after someone has been to the pub, and that prisons are full of 'good, honest working-class prisoners' (except for sex offenders who, of course, conforming to true prison stereotype, are the scum of the earth).
No doubt when they are not campaigning against Wilko, they're out trying to rid the world of paediatricians.
http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/rds/pdfs2/prismay03.pdf
Paul Edwards
Reactionary Rubbish
04.02.2004 18:28
Irrespective of the rights and wrongs of imprisonment though, it is hard to imagine how society in any way benefits from reducing prison education budgets, and from tax-payers subsidising the profits of companies like Wilkinson’s. The Nazi’s may have justified slave labour, but no decent society (or person) can.
The evident untruthfulness of Paul Edward’s other comments cannot shore up the sheer fatuousness of his argument.
Mark Barnsley
Check link...
04.02.2004 19:44
Paul Edwards
Packing items for Wilkinsons does not rehabilitate
05.02.2004 00:18
Jean Thompson
Cardiff
PRISON: ‘The expensive failure of the revolving door’ by Eric McGraw (reprinted from ‘Inside Time’)
If we only had a 50/50 chance of coming out of hospital better than we went in it is very likely that there would be a national outcry and Michael Howard would be immediately committing the Conservatives to closing the place. Yet there is no such demand to close our prisons, only to build more – despite their appalling record of failure highlighted in a new Report by the All Party Parliamentary Penal Affairs Group.
Not 50 per cent but 60 per cent of all prisoners and 74 per cent of young adults under 21 are reconvicted within two years of leaving prison – a fact of prison life described as an ‘expensive failure’ by the Parliamentary Group. The Report paints a gloomy picture of a soaring prison population in England and Wales leading to severe overcrowding, with prisons often limited to simply warehousing people and local prisons becoming like transit camps.
The UK has the highest imprisonment rate in Europe and prison numbers have soared by more than 14,000 since Labour came to power and David Blunkett – and Jack Straw before him – moved to introduce longer sentences for repeat, violent, and sex offenders. Yet more than half of all those sent to jail are sentenced to six months or less. A combination of short sentences and high reconviction rates has turned the prison system, according to the report, into ‘the expensive failure of the revolving door’.
Prison is without doubt expensive because it costs £38,750 to keep someone in prison for a year – a sum of money that would be enough to re-train or educate to an advanced level not one but a dozen people in some style.
Governments have usually responded to acute prison overcrowding by building more prisons. Since 1995, some 15,200 additional prison places have been provided at a staggering cost of more than £2 Billion or £131,579 a place. Building new prisons has not, however proved to be a solution to prison overcrowding, for in the last ten years, thirteen new prisons have opened and of these, nine were overcrowded last year.
On top of these incredible numbers add at least £11 Billion a year – the cost to the nation for the re-offending by ex-prisoners. Ex-prisoners are responsible for about one in five of all recorded crimes say the Government. Imagine the headline: ‘Former hospital patients responsible for one in five of all known illnesses’!
Juliet Lyon, Director of the Prison Reform Trust, told the Parliamentary Group that ‘Prison should be reserved for serious and violent offenders’. Although the Government is, in theory, committed to such a policy, there is little evidence of it in practice – in fact rather the opposite, she said.
The Report identifies chronic overcrowding as a blight on the whole prison system, which is failing the public, prisoners, and those who work in our prisons. Simply arguing for progress here and there is what it must have been like trying to re-arrange the deckchairs on the Titanic.
What you could buy for £11bn
Houses – 93,200
Hospitals – 62
Schools – 693
The increase in the number of prisoners in England and Wales in the last 10 years
1993 – 44,566
2003 – 73,987 (up 66%)
The increase in the number of women in prison in the last 10 years
1993 – 1,560
2003 – 4,509 (up 189%)
People sent to prison for 4 years and over in the last 10 years
1993 – 12,325
2003 – 25,557 (up 107%)
The number of prisoners serving 12 months or less
1993 – 22,000
2003 – 49,000 (up 123%)
The number of life sentenced prisoners in recent years in England and Wales
1993 – 4,000
2003 – 5,427 (up 36%)
Projected prison population at the end of the decade
2003 – 73,967
End of decade 100,000 (up 35%)
Jean Thompson
Check my original comment...
05.02.2004 09:53
Paul Edwards
Boycott Wilkinsons
05.02.2004 10:14
Tony
Wilkinsons Hardware Store - using forced prison labour
05.02.2004 13:54
leif russell