"Canadians have not given up the fight to save the prison farms," says Dianne Dowling, a member of the Save Our Prison Farms campaign and president of National Farmers Union Local 316. "We are peaceful, and will not disrupt any traffic except animal transports, but we will not let one cow or chicken leave our prison farm," Dowling said. "The prison farms provide a cost-effective training and rehabilitative program that works, helps inmates feed themselves, and makes our communities safer."
Save our prison farms
Photo courtesy of Flickr and Eduardo Amorim
Melanie Redman
Melanie Redman is a Social Mission Collaborator with more than 10 years of direct experience in strategic, leadership and advisory roles across the social mission sector in the U.S. and Canada. She calls many places home - most recently Toronto, Buenos Aires and Seattle - but was sprouted from the Ozark Mountains of Southern Missouri. Learn more about her work at www.melanieredman.com or on LinkedIn.Responses to “Save our prison farms”
3meanwhile more on prisons - this is from the US:
http://www.slashfood.com/2010/07/28/inmates-eating-better-than-school-kids-that-s-criminal/
Now as it's pointed out the prisons staff their kitchens with prisoners making like .29 cents an hour while the average school cafeteria worker gets $9 which factors greatly into being able to spent more on food and have more man hours to put into preparing real food vs. dinosaur shaped "chicken" nuggets.
ReplyOh so do I and I wasn't clear - I think the article was meant to stir up trouble and make people angry about the state of school lunches - which they should be - just not at the expense of another group (no matter what they might have done to wind up where they are - they are still in the end a human being).
The article did miss out on a huge point as to WHY prisons can do it on less (which is shoddy reporting) and it only came out in the comments from some level headed souls who pointed out prisons basically have free labour at their disposal (.29 cents an hour!).
It would be interesting to see if something like a prison farm could supply the prison AND local schools with low cost milk and produce but can you imagine the comments there - people are already so terrified, precious and litigious "I don't want my kids drinking milk from a PRISON farm" dear lord no - just give them more dyed pink 'strawberry milk" and a another carton of dino nuggets......
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You know, as an avid humanist, I think ALL people have the right to healthy, good food. I actually don't like the comparison at all - even though they're just trying to make the point that our children deserve healthy, good food. In the process, they're further dehumanizing people in prison, which I'm not so into.
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