I'm not sure who is running the phone system at our local clink, or who exactly is profiting from it. The phones seem to list the company as "Charge-A-Call," but who knows who the hell this is.
Here's the financial rundown: aside from those made to a number associated with a prepaid plan, the calls are collect and cost $10 flat to a land-line, which gets you fifteen minutes, and $15 flat to a cell phone, which gets you ten minutes. An outsider can purchase a type of phone card that lessens the per-call price, but comes with a hefty service fee, minimum (and non-refundable) initial payment of $50, and god only knows what the "connection fees" and per minute fees are.
Mind you (for those who may wish to dismiss the consumer rights of inmates), these costs are incurred by family and friends, NOT the inmates.
Now, unfortunately, I've been a visitor to this facility a couple of times. I would estimate that, in a given week, 60 pre-sentence, bondable inmates are lodged. Each makes a likely average of three calls before being bonded out. At a minimum, and this is only including the "holding cell" inmates, the phone system is raking in $1800 per week.
With an average "sentenced" population of 400 persons, assuming that each makes one call per week, the system is raking in, at a minimum, $4,000 per week.
So we're talking an easy six grand per week, roughly $300,000 per year (and probably much more) from nothing more than phone calls, in a county with a population of about 40,000.
NOW, for the icing on the cake, you can add in the profits from the commisssary program. I wouldn't even know what the total is, but I do know that a pack of Ramen Noodles, which costs about 15 cents at the grocery store, runs for about a dollar in the commissary. So somebody is making an enormous profit from that as well. And again, these funds are not coming from the inmates themselves, but from their loved ones on the outside.
The moral question of whether or not we care about an inmate's expenses are irrelevant. This is purely a consumer issue. I would say, with a fair degree of certainty, that the process of gaining the telephone or commissary contract to a local jail or prison is highly competitive across the country, because the potential profits are enormous.
Given these factors, and if enough investigation was put into the matter, I am sure you would find an unbelievable degree of collusion and corruption across the board. The problem is that nobody really cares because, after all, we're dealing with criminals (or suspected criminals).
But in reality we are not dealing with criminals. We are dealing with their loved ones on the outside. And consumer rights should definitely be enforced. How to go about doing so? I don't know. You're dealing with a rather unsympathetic cause. Nonetheless, people are definitely being ripped off by this system.
Best regards to all, especially those who are suffering due to this injustice.