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Groups to FCC: Hang Up on High Prison Phone Rates

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Thursday, November 15, 2012   

WASHINGTON - Phone calls from prison to home can cost up to 24 times the price a normal call. After over ten years of trying to get the government - specifically the Federal Communications Commission - to do something about it, advocates are stepping up the pressure.

Petitions with more than 40,000 signatures urge action on the issue, and a rally is planned today at the FCC offices featuring families of prisoners, along with prison chaplains and advocates.

One such advocate is Keith DiBlasio, a former inmate who formed a conservative prison-rights organization called AdvoCare. He assails the high rates that result from phone-company contracts that involve commissions being paid to the local or state governments.

"I come from a fiscally conservative background, so I look at this as being an unlawful, unauthorized tax."

In some states, he says, the rates can range from a $7 local call to a 15-minute long-distance call for more than $30. He says that works a hardship on many families who are in the worst position to bear it, with a loved one locked up.

DiBlasio says studies show maintaining strong family ties plays a key role in keeping recidivism down.

"When we're talking about keeping people connected and getting them on the right path to come out better than how they went in, that's an important issue of keeping families connected with the re-entry."

Amalia Deloney, associate director of the Center for Media Justice, says advocates have been working for a dozen years on behalf of Martha Wright, a grandmother of a former prison inmate, who is petitioning the FCC to reform prison phone costs. She says they're getting closer to closure.

"We definitely are gaining traction - in terms of attention, but also strategy - and closing all the loopholes. It's pretty clear that everybody is saying the same thing: The time is now. It's time for the FCC to act."

The Center for Media Justice says more than 2.7 million children in the United States have a parent in prison, and phone calls are important in providing comfort and a sense of normalcy.

The rally at FCC headquarters, 445 12th St. S.W., will begin at 11:15 a.m.


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