|
Post by dgriffin on Feb 24, 2008 10:39:37 GMT -5
See complete article at: tinyurl.com/6onahInmates vs Outsourcing - USA Today -2004 article (does anyone have later information on prison commercial labor?) ONTARIO, Ore. — David Day has a bounce in his step and a glint in his eye unexpected in someone who makes nearly 400 telemarketing calls a day for less than $200 a month. That's because he has a coveted job where few exist: behind bars. Day, 43, is one of 85 inmates who arrange business meetings from a call center at the Snake River Correctional Institution, a state penitentiary in this onion- and potato-producing town not far from the Idaho line. "I'm grateful for the opportunity. Many of us end up here because we didn't have jobs and lacked communications skills," he says on a recent morning, ponytail cascading down his state-issued denims. About a dozen states — Oregon, Arizona, California and Iowa, among others — have call centers in state and federal prisons, underscoring a push to employ inmates in telemarketing jobs that might otherwise go to low-wage countries such as India and the Philippines. Arizona prisoners make business calls, as do inmates in Oklahoma. At least 2,000 inmates nationwide work in call centers, and that number is rising as companies seek cheap labor without incurring the wrath of politicians and unions. At the same time, prison populations are ballooning, offering U.S. companies another way to slash costs. (Overall, at the time this article was written, about 80,000 prisoners in the U.S. performed work for commercial enterprises. 36 states had passed laws allowing it.)
|
|
|
Post by frankcor on Feb 24, 2008 11:21:42 GMT -5
I know that Day guy. He calls me about once a week. Yesterday he called for the NY Firefighters Association, last week it was the Children of State Police Killed in the Line of Duty. He's actually one of the more honest ones.
Yesterday, our conversation went something like this:
Me: So, let's just say I gave you $100. How much of that would actually go to the firefighters?
David Day: Uh ... let me see ... (shuffling papers) ... uh, $14.
Me: That's great. The LDFD chief lives down the street from me. I'm going to run down and drop him off a check. Talk to you next week.
|
|
|
Post by dgriffin on Feb 24, 2008 12:51:43 GMT -5
To tell the truth, I'm surprised they get that much. The scam outfits ... I think of them as such, no matter who the callers are ... simply borrow the name of the organization, promising a small amount. The organiztion, such as a fire department, doesn't have to do anything, so they'll often say OK. Until they begin to get calls from the local citizens who report that the 'caller from the Fire Deprtment" couldn't tell them the name of the road the firehouse is on.
|
|