New Exposé Tracks ALEC-Private Prison Industry Effort to Replace Unionized Workers with Prison Labor
Many of the toughest sentencing laws responsible for the explosion of
the U.S. prison population were drafted by the American Legislative
Exchange Council, which helps corporations write model legislation. Now a
new exposé reveals ALEC has paved the way for
states and corporations to replace unionized workers with prison labor.
We speak with Mike Elk, contributing labor reporter at The Nation
magazine. He says ALEC and private prison
companies "put a mass amount of people in jail, and then they created a
situation where they could exploit that." Elk notes that in 2005 more
than 14 million pounds of beef infected with rat feces processed by
inmates were not recalled, in order to avoid drawing attention to how
many products are made by prison labor. [includes rush transcript]
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
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