Religions > Atheism > Colorado Farmers Turn to Prisoners to Do Work of Illegal Immigrants
| Topic: |
Religions > Atheism |
| User: |
"Wilson" |
| Date: |
15 Jul 2007 09:34:19 PM |
| Object: |
Colorado Farmers Turn to Prisoners to Do Work of Illegal Immigrants |
I guess that's one solution to the " what do we do with all these inmates? "
problem, but it doesn't address anything about the illegal immigration
problem
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0%2C2933%2C289270%2C00.html
Colorado Farmers Turn to Prisoners to Do Work of Illegal Immigrants
AVONDALE, Colo. -
For generations, farmers in southern Colorado have depended on immigrant
labor to work their fields.
But the new immigration laws in Colorado are some of the toughest in the
nation, and now illegal immigrants are hesitant to come to the Centennial
State.
Farmers say only half the normal number of migrant workers appeared this
year, going instead to states like New Mexico and Arizona, where the laws
are not so strict.
But the soil in Colorado still has to be tilled, and the seeds have to be
planted, and somebody has to be in the fields to harvest the crops so that
the onions, peppers and melons don't rot in the ground.
So the state came up with a plan to replace the illegal immigrants with
workers from a different kind of home: inmates from Colorado's overcrowded
prison system.
"It's not a cure for our immigration problem, but it's something that we can
turn to and maybe get us through these times until legislation gets these
laws in order.." Said Joe Pisciotta, an onion farmer who now has women from
a local prison working in his fields.
"I've got to get my crops out. That's my livelihood and I've got to think
about that first."
At first the farmers were concerned that the prisoners wouldn't work as hard
as the illegal immigrants they are replacing. They also had concerns about
having the prisoners around their families.
But only low-risk prisoners are allowed to work in the fields; sex offenders
and inmates sentenced to life without parole are not permitted to
participate in the program. And the prisoners are constantly supervised by a
prison guard.
The farmers pay the Department of Corrections $9.60 per hour per inmate,
most of which goes toward paying for the guards, transportation and lunch.
The inmates themselves earn $4 a day, which is nearly seven times the 60
cents a day they can earn in prison. And the money they earn will be waiting
for them once they've finished serving their sentences.
The work proved so hard, many of the women dropped out quickly. But most of
those who have toughed it out say it's well worth it.
"It's one of the hardest things I've ever had to do in my life, said Kaedra,
a drug offender who is working in Pisciotta's onion field.
"One of the cabbage fields . they were just little tiny plants and now
they're big huge cabbage, and now we're getting ready to harvest them.
And...we're actually pretty excited about it...and I wasn't expecting to
feel that way."
As for the pay, Kaedra said: "I make $4 a day. For us, that's a lot."
Though some farmers were skeptical at first that the inmates could do the
work, everyone now seems to be satisfied with the program. Twice the number
of farms have asked the prison to provide workers this fall for the harvest.
.
|
|
| User: "ike milligan" |
|
| Title: Re: Colorado Farmers Turn to Prisoners to Do Work of Illegal Immigrants |
15 Jul 2007 11:07:32 PM |
|
|
"Wilson" <wilson@universal.com> wrote in message
news:469ad9ab$0$6471$9a6e19ea@unlimited.newshosting.com...
I guess that's one solution to the " what do we do with all these inmates?
" problem, but it doesn't address anything about the illegal immigration
problem
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0%2C2933%2C289270%2C00.html
Colorado Farmers Turn to Prisoners to Do Work of Illegal Immigrants
AVONDALE, Colo. -
For generations, farmers in southern Colorado have depended on immigrant
labor to work their fields.
But the new immigration laws in Colorado are some of the toughest in the
nation, and now illegal immigrants are hesitant to come to the Centennial
State.
Farmers say only half the normal number of migrant workers appeared this
year, going instead to states like New Mexico and Arizona, where the laws
are not so strict.
But the soil in Colorado still has to be tilled, and the seeds have to be
planted, and somebody has to be in the fields to harvest the crops so that
the onions, peppers and melons don't rot in the ground.
So the state came up with a plan to replace the illegal immigrants with
workers from a different kind of home: inmates from Colorado's overcrowded
prison system.
"It's not a cure for our immigration problem, but it's something that we
can turn to and maybe get us through these times until legislation gets
these laws in order.." Said Joe Pisciotta, an onion farmer who now has
women from a local prison working in his fields.
"I've got to get my crops out. That's my livelihood and I've got to think
about that first."
At first the farmers were concerned that the prisoners wouldn't work as
hard as the illegal immigrants they are replacing. They also had concerns
about having the prisoners around their families.
But only low-risk prisoners are allowed to work in the fields; sex
offenders and inmates sentenced to life without parole are not permitted
to participate in the program. And the prisoners are constantly supervised
by a prison guard.
The farmers pay the Department of Corrections $9.60 per hour per inmate,
most of which goes toward paying for the guards, transportation and lunch.
The inmates themselves earn $4 a day, which is nearly seven times the 60
cents a day they can earn in prison. And the money they earn will be
waiting for them once they've finished serving their sentences.
The work proved so hard, many of the women dropped out quickly. But most
of those who have toughed it out say it's well worth it.
"It's one of the hardest things I've ever had to do in my life, said
Kaedra, a drug offender who is working in Pisciotta's onion field.
"One of the cabbage fields . they were just little tiny plants and now
they're big huge cabbage, and now we're getting ready to harvest them.
And...we're actually pretty excited about it...and I wasn't expecting to
feel that way."
As for the pay, Kaedra said: "I make $4 a day. For us, that's a lot."
Though some farmers were skeptical at first that the inmates could do the
work, everyone now seems to be satisfied with the program. Twice the
number of farms have asked the prison to provide workers this fall for the
harvest.
And when they get out, the inmates can save up enough for a down payment on
a home and enough left over to play the stock market and retire!
.
|
|
|
| User: "Sean C" |
|
| Title: Re: Colorado Farmers Turn to Prisoners to Do Work of Illegal Immigrants |
16 Jul 2007 03:24:08 AM |
|
|
In article <8aCmi.8091$Od7.1281@newsread1.news.pas.earthlink.net>, ike
milligan <accordiondoc@mindspring.com> wrote:
And when they get out, the inmates can save up enough for a down payment on
a home and enough left over to play the stock market and retire!
Who says the American dream is dead? Why, a little hard work and you
too could earn 7 times what the typical inmate earns!
--Sean C
.
|
|
|
|
|
| User: "" |
|
| Title: Re: Colorado Farmers Turn to Prisoners to Do Work of Illegal Immigrants |
15 Jul 2007 10:46:10 PM |
|
|
On Sun, 15 Jul 2007 22:34:19 -0400, "Wilson" <wilson@universal.com>
wrote:
I guess that's one solution to the " what do we do with all these inmates? "
problem, but it doesn't address anything about the illegal immigration
problem
Oh my.
I thought Hannity, Limbaugh and their zombies solved that problem for
us.
Which of course was no damned solution at all.
atheist@home#1554
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0%2C2933%2C289270%2C00.html
Colorado Farmers Turn to Prisoners to Do Work of Illegal Immigrants
AVONDALE, Colo. -
For generations, farmers in southern Colorado have depended on immigrant
labor to work their fields.
But the new immigration laws in Colorado are some of the toughest in the
nation, and now illegal immigrants are hesitant to come to the Centennial
State.
Farmers say only half the normal number of migrant workers appeared this
year, going instead to states like New Mexico and Arizona, where the laws
are not so strict.
But the soil in Colorado still has to be tilled, and the seeds have to be
planted, and somebody has to be in the fields to harvest the crops so that
the onions, peppers and melons don't rot in the ground.
So the state came up with a plan to replace the illegal immigrants with
workers from a different kind of home: inmates from Colorado's overcrowded
prison system.
"It's not a cure for our immigration problem, but it's something that we can
turn to and maybe get us through these times until legislation gets these
laws in order.." Said Joe Pisciotta, an onion farmer who now has women from
a local prison working in his fields.
"I've got to get my crops out. That's my livelihood and I've got to think
about that first."
At first the farmers were concerned that the prisoners wouldn't work as hard
as the illegal immigrants they are replacing. They also had concerns about
having the prisoners around their families.
But only low-risk prisoners are allowed to work in the fields; sex offenders
and inmates sentenced to life without parole are not permitted to
participate in the program. And the prisoners are constantly supervised by a
prison guard.
The farmers pay the Department of Corrections $9.60 per hour per inmate,
most of which goes toward paying for the guards, transportation and lunch.
The inmates themselves earn $4 a day, which is nearly seven times the 60
cents a day they can earn in prison. And the money they earn will be waiting
for them once they've finished serving their sentences.
The work proved so hard, many of the women dropped out quickly. But most of
those who have toughed it out say it's well worth it.
"It's one of the hardest things I've ever had to do in my life, said Kaedra,
a drug offender who is working in Pisciotta's onion field.
"One of the cabbage fields . they were just little tiny plants and now
they're big huge cabbage, and now we're getting ready to harvest them.
And...we're actually pretty excited about it...and I wasn't expecting to
feel that way."
As for the pay, Kaedra said: "I make $4 a day. For us, that's a lot."
Though some farmers were skeptical at first that the inmates could do the
work, everyone now seems to be satisfied with the program. Twice the number
of farms have asked the prison to provide workers this fall for the harvest.
.
|
|
|
|

|
Related Articles |
|
|