Now Is The Time To Fundamentally Transform America; and Aging Prisoners And Prisoner Release During Pandemic

Now Is The Time To Fundamentally Transform America

Doug Henwood wrote in a Jacobin magazine article last week that . . . things could get very ugly. But it is also an opportunity to emerge from this crisis a better country.

In his article Henwood articulates a vision, a vision of solidarity and mutual care. He believes that millions of lives depend on that.

Guest – Doug Henwood, his fields of expertise are politics, economics, and finance. He is the publisher of The Left Business Observer. Henwood has written four books. His articles have appeared in The Nation. the Los Angeles Times, and the Guardian. He hosts the radio show Behind the News each week on the Pacifica station KPFA in Berkeley.

—-

Aging Prisoners And Prisoner Release During Pandemic

Last week, New York City jails were among the country’s most infected by the virus so far, with at least 38 people testing positive at Rikers Island. Another inmate, became the first in the country to test positive in a federal jail.

In a letter to New Yorks criminal justice leaders, Board of Correction interim chairperson Jacqueline Sherman described a jail system in crisis. She said that 12 Department of Correction employees, 5 Correctional Health Services employees, and 21 people in custody at Rikers and city jails had tested positive for the coronavirus.

And at least another 58 were being monitored in the prisons contagious disease and quarantine units, she said. Across the nation, several large county and municipal jurisdictions have freed thousands of low-risk inmates from jails, including seniors and those in poor health.

New Jersey plans to release as many as a thousand people from county jails, including inmates jailed for probation violations and those sentenced for low-level offenses. Mayor Bill de Blasio said last week that New York City may release more than 200 inmates. Los Angeles County and Ohios Cuyahoga County also have released prisoners.

Prisoner advocacy groups in more than a half-dozen states, including Texas, New York, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Indiana and Michigan, continue to urge governors to release state prisoners, especially elderly inmates, through compassionate release or medical furlough.

Guest – Victor Pate, the New York statewide organizer for the Halt Solitary campaign. That stands for humane alternative to long-term isolated confinement.


Share This Episode