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NYC Makes Calls From Jail Free, 1st Major US City To Do So


New York is now providing free phone calls from jails, making it the first major U.S. city to eliminate fees for inmate calls, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Wednesday.

The Democratic mayor said the city has fully implemented the law passed by the City Council last August.

“For too long have people in custody faced barriers to basic aspects of everyday life,” de Blasio said. “With free phone calls, we’re eliminating one of those barriers and ensuring that people in custody have the opportunity to remain connected to their lawyers, families and support networks that are so crucial to re-entry into one’s community.”

Inmates were previously charged 50 cents for the first minute of a phone call and 5 cents per additional minute. The majority of people in the city’s jails are awaiting trial and have not been convicted of a crime.

Under the new rules, inmates can make free calls totaling 21 minutes every three hours to anywhere in the United States. The city Department of Correction is installing additional phone lines to handle the expected increased volume of calls.

The correction officers’ union voiced concerns about the new policy in the past, saying that free phone calls could aid gangs that operate from inside the jails. Elias Husamudeen, president of the Correction Officers Benevolent Association, said Wednesday that the union’s main concern is ensuring that no criminal activity is taking place in the jails.

“Our gang intelligence is at the front lines of this area and nobody does it better than them,” he said.

Lawmakers in Connecticut are considering a bill to provide free calling for inmates in the state’s prison system. Connecticut would be to first state to make prison calls free if the measure goes into effect, according to Wanda Bertram, a spokeswoman for the Massachusetts-based Prison Policy Initiative, which studies the issue of inmate phone calls.

She said New York is the first major U.S. city to make jail phone calls free.

(AP)



5 Responses

  1. Most people in a city jail are there for very minor offenses, but usually only because they don’t have the resources to post bail. They aren’t even convicted criminals. They are “innocent until proven guilty”. They’ve been forced to quit their jobs, and obviously have no assets; if they did, they would not be in jail while awaiting trial. There is no reason why they should be denied access to telephone, or even full internet asset, while awaiting trial.

  2. Phone calls are dirt cheap these days, costing (even retail) at less than half a cent per minute domestically.

  3. Mark your calendars, folks. May 2, 2019: Akuperma said something factually correct and reasonable, and with a nice touch of rachmunas.

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