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| "Keeping
the Faith in prison " |
| The
Richmond Times Dispatch |
| Monday,
Nov 19, 2007 |
| By
Frank Green TIMES-DISPATCH STAFF
WRITER |
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In
the commissary storeroom at the James River Correctional
Facility in Goochland County, inmates Vashon Wilkins
(foreground) and Everett Williams gather items ordered
by other prisoners.
Photo By: P. KEVIN MORLEY/TIMES-DISPATCH |
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Dalvert
Gilchrist stuffed two tote sacks with bags of chips, ramen noodles
and other goodies purchased from the prison commissary this month.
Stepping back from a pickup window, the James River Correctional
Center inmate said he spends $20 to $30 a week there, but this
order was larger than most. "I don't eat all that in a week,"
he said, laughing. Income from commissary sales of food, cigarettes
and even television sets to the state's 30,000 prison inmates
goes to a fund for their welfare. Traditionally, it has paid for
cable-television fees, library books, recreation equipment and
the like. |
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Unknown
to Gilchrist, legislators in 2002 amended the state budget and
directed that $100,000 from the commissary fund be used to pay
for faith-based services. In just five years, that amount has
ballooned to $600,000, and the inmate commissary fund has quietly
become the largest source of income for the Chaplain Service of
the Churches of Virginia Inc., a Protestant prison-chaplain organization.
While the chaplain service has become dependent on the infusion,
it threatens to deplete the commissary fund. Since 2002 the group
has won the Department of Corrections' faith-based services contract.
Next year, it is asking for $825,000, nearly a third of the fund's
annual income of $2.7 million.
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Jean
Auldridge, director of the inmate-advocacy group Citizens United
for Rehabilitation of Errants, supports the work of the chaplain
service but was taken aback by the amount it is receiving from
the inmate fund. "I would never have dreamed $600,000,"
she said. Auldridge said the commissary prices have long been
a topic of complaint from inmates, who can only make small amounts
of money from prison jobs to pay for extras from the commissary.
Families can send money to their prison accounts. Gilchrist is
not concerned about how the fund is used and said the prices at
the commissary -- 36 cents for a can of soda, $3.99 for a pack
of Newports -- are reasonable. But the Virginia Department of
Corrections does not believe paying for faith-based services from
the commissary fund is a suitable, long-term strategy.
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Since
2002, when the payments to the chaplains began, more money has
been spent by the commissary fund each year than has been taken
in. As a result, the fund's ending balance has dropped from $5.6
million in 2002 to $3.9 million this year. In a 2005 report requested
by legislators, the department cautioned that "at the current
rate of contributions to chaplain services and other expenditures,
the commissary fund will be significantly depleted in a number
of years."
Ted C. Link, controller of the Department of Corrections, said
this month that for now the payments are not a problem. But as
the fund balance drops, other uses for the money will have to
be cut or prices increased. Prisons with commissaries are charged
for faith-based services based on the number of inmates they hold.
"The people who manage the commissary funds at the individual
institutions will say, 'This is killing us,'" Link said.
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The
2005 report said an increase in prices or a reduction in other
fund uses could lead to inmate unrest. It suggested using some
of the profit from inmate telephone use -- money now sent to the
state general fund as if it were tax revenue -- as an alternative.
But instead of cutting or eliminating the amount from the commissary
fund that goes to faith-based services, the General Assembly increased
it to $600,000. State Del. M. Kirkland Cox, R-Colonial Heights,
who has helped the chaplain service with budget requests for commissary
funds, said legislators "are used to voting [for] that, and
that's just been the best way for us to do it." "We've
never, to be frank . . . really debated it," he said. If
the cost is larger than the fund can handle, "maybe we can
be creative and look at other things." "I would scramble
. . . and try and find other ways to do it" if necessary,
he said of providing the chaplain service. "I don't think
there's a more important thing that goes on in prisons" than
faith-based programs, Cox said. |
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In
Virginia, in addition to performing services and other functions
of their own religious denominations, chaplains with the chaplain
service perform the administrative job of trying to make sure
the religious needs of all inmates are met. For 82 years, until
2002, the chaplain service had provided those services to state
prisons at no cost to the state. The group was funded by various
Protestant denominations and other private groups including Media
General, the parent company of the Richmond Times-Dispatch. However,
the income from churches and private sources has not kept up with
prison growth in recent years. According to the chaplain service,
the group now gets more money from the commissary fund than churches.
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In
addition to the $600,000 from the commissary fund, it hopes to
take in $426,900 from churches and $321,000 from other sources
this year. Among other things, the money is used to pay for the
$42,000 annual salaries for 14 full-time chaplains. There are
also 24 part-time chaplains, some of whom the chaplain service
wants to make full-time. "Everything in the last 12 years
has just skyrocketed -- the number of prisoners, the number of
prisons," said Cecil E. McFarland, president of the chaplain
service.
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When
McFarland took his job in 1995, the chaplain service budget was
$410,000 and there were four full-time chaplains. "That was
before they built nine new prisons and the chaplain salaries were
a lot less," he said. "The commissary fund has been
an invaluable asset for us, and I think it's appropriate to use
that money because it's designed for the use of the inmates,"
McFarland added. If the fund money is lost, he said, "we're
going to be right back where we were for 82 years. We're going
to have to depend upon the churches, services are going to be
cut and chaplain positions eliminated."
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| Click
link to view other articles about Chaplain Service |
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"Tight
Budget Forces Chaplains to Regroup" The
Richmond Times Dispatch |
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"Virginia's
prison population forecast to rise"
The Richmond
Times Dispatch |
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"Second
Chances at Life"
Christianity Today |
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"Chaplains
On Call for Death - And Life" The
Richmond Times Dispatch |
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"The
Chaplain Service Remembers Those in Prison"
The Richmond
Times Dispatch |
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