Pubdate: Sun, 14 Aug 2005 Source: Anchorage Daily News (AK) Copyright: 2005 The Anchorage Daily News Contact: http://www.adn.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/18 Author: Sarana Schell, Anchorage Daily News Cited: Alaska Correctional Industries http://www.alaskaci.com Cited: The National Correctional Industries Association, a nonprofit professional association http://www.nationalcia.org Cited: Federal Prison Industries http://www.unicor.gov Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) PRISON PRODUCTION SEEKS MORE VISIBILITY Like Any Business, Inmate Industries Must Make A Profit Alaska Correctional Industries has had a low profile up until now, but the business is looking to grow and turn a profit: The state has said it will quit subsidizing the enterprise. Everywhere, Cathy Kochendorfer sees things she could make better, cheaper and in Alaska instead of China via the Lower 48. Gym and school towels, hospital linens, promotional totes for the weekend market in downtown Anchorage. "Why are we not making this stuff?" Kochendorfer bemoaned. "It drives me insane!" Maybe because Alaska's prison industry is nearly invisible. If you've ridden state ferries or been to Juneau's hospital or in a state agency, without knowing you've likely seen the work supervised by Kochendorfer and other shop managers in Alaska prisons. Barricaded behind prison doors, Kochendorfer teaches Eagle River inmates to inspect stitches on detailed white ferry uniforms. Juneau inmates at Alaska Sterile Laundry wash sheets for hospital patients. Seward inmates turn planks of A1 oak-veneer plywood into bookcases. One of few signs is a tag on thick blue fleece blankets for Alaska ferries, stitched with a picture of a ship, "alaska marine highway" and "ALASKA CORRECTIONAL INDUSTRIES." ACI has had a low profile because its mission was to give inmates skills through meaningful work, which helped prisons run smoothly and prisoners find jobs in the outside world. Now ACI is looking for a whole lot more visibility. The state said it will quit paying Kochendorfer and its other employees who run ACI, an independent arm of the Department of Corrections. ACI will have to meet its own payroll. ACI is nearly breaking even, said Corrections Commissioner Marc Antrim, after he closed three old or heavily subsidized shops, leaving sewing, laundry and furniture. To make ACI profitable, Antrim is looking for private partners to open ventures in the three shuttered buildings, using cheap rent and cheaper labor as a lure. Ventures with private companies can seek customers beyond the state agencies, nonprofits and wholesalers allowed to ACI's in-house shops. Besides giving prisoners real-world experience, the private partnership jobs pay inmates more, with a cut for ACI. "I really want this to be successful," Antrim said. 'I DON'T HAVE TO MAKE METH' The buzz and whine of table saws, planers and routers filled ACI's two-story, several-thousand-square-foot furniture shop at Seward's Spring Creek Correction Center in late July. Nearly 30 men were cranking out 75 chairs for the state Division of Oil and Gas. One set of metal doors clangs shut before another set grinds open in Spring Creek. "Prison is a negative experience," shop manager Greg Houck said. "It's supposed to be." To balance that, Houck aims to keep, or create, work habits and a sense of self-esteem. Inmates run power tools, maintain a tool shop, order materials and use computer programs to draft plans and price quotes for customers. Many people who apply for a position have no work history and skills to match. "I was amazed to the point of jaw-dropping how many guys don't know how to use a tape measure," said middle-aged Houck. He said he spent seven years in the military and six running a machine shop in Seward, and expects inmates to learn every day. "That's one of the things we're about, is teaching people they don't have to be an idiot," Houck said. "They don't have to thump people on the head." Some employees discover hard work isn't so bad, to their amazement. " 'The only job I had was selling dope,' " Houck said he's heard. " 'I never knew I could do anything like this,' " and " 'I don't have to make meth for a living.' " They are the exceptions, he said. "For every one of those, I get 10 trying to sleep under the table," Houck said, pulling open a file drawer packed with files of inmates he's fired. Not for mistakes like cutting a board, or even lots of boards, too short, he said. Safety and work ethic are the measuring points. And working with others. "Some guys don't take constructive criticism very well," Houck observed, and likely won't last in a job. In the shop, they have to talk. "If they make a desk together and I say, 'Hey, this desk looks like crap,' " Houck said, they share responsibility. "I don't want to say 'team,' " Houck said. "It's more like a professional courtesy situation." BEYOND LICENSE PLATES Seward reflects the new, streamlined ACI. Kenai also made high-quality furniture that graces state office buildings across Alaska, but not as efficiently, Antrim said. "The Department of Corrections budget has subsidized each piece of that furniture, sometimes to the tune of hundreds of dollars," Antrim said. "It just needed to stop. We need to bring the whole system into a more modern practice." A new, more business-like accounting system is on the way to replace what amounted to a checking account, a Corrections finance officer said. America has experimented with inmate labor since prisons appeared in the late 1700s, according to the U.S. prison system. Alone in their cells, inmates made shoes or polished marble. In the early 1800s, prison factories made barrels, harnesses, clothing and furniture. Goods were sold on the open market. Some prisons leased convict workers. After the Civil War, the practice expanded to partially replace slaves. Unions and manufacturers complained, and New York limited prison sales to the state government. Federal rules against leasing convicts led to the first federal prisons, built with inmate help. Boat-building, shoe-making, sewing and farming followed. Federal Prison Industries was formed in 1934. It was to pay for itself, and had labor and industry leaders as board members. Efforts to keep inmates busy without offending business and labor continue, with varying degrees of success. In recent decades, federal and state prisons have partnered with private companies to make and sell everything from prescription eyewear to electronics recycling to call-center services. Federal Prison Industries, known as Unicor, sells fence systems with the slogan "No One Knows More About Security." Texas inmates make air-conditioner parts and Texas flag-patterned boot bags. "Texas, of course, is the ultimate," Antrim said. To avoid stepping on toes, Texas checks with chambers of commerce and its state labor department before starting ventures. Alaska also aims to be sensitive. "We don't want to be taking jobs away from people," Antrim said. But he said he's convinced there are monotonous, labor-intensive jobs that companies couldn't afford to do in Alaska unless they had really cheap labor. The jobs still give prisoners a wage and work habits, and leveraging those privileges helps keep prisons more stable, said Antrim, who said he started his career as a prison guard. 'FREE WORLD' WORK Typically, inmates apply and interview for prison industry jobs. Out of nearly 3,400 Alaska prisoners, ACI employs 80 inmates in its Eagle River sewing shop, Seward wood shop and Juneau laundry. Unlike other Southeast laundries, ACI is big enough to quickly handle most of the state ferry system's laundry and store it in the winter, said port steward Mike Wilson. Wilson said ACI charges half the rate private companies do. Inmates make $1.40 at ACI, or less than $1 an hour in a prison job, cooking, cleaning or doing other maintenance, Antrim said. A second laundry business in Juneau, Alaska Sterile Laundry, is the state's only joint venture with a private company, Alaska Laundry & Drycleaners. Alaska Laundry owner Neil MacKinnon employs five inmates, starting at $7.15 an hour. About 80 percent of their minimum-wage paychecks goes to room and board in the prison, victims' funds, child support and ACI, but prisoners still end up with more. MacKinnon started working with Juneau's Lemon Creek Correctional Center to do medical laundry some 15 years ago and has grown accustomed to the quirks of prison labor, such as one worker being authorized to do a job but not another. "It's a good business deal because it works out for everyone," said MacKinnon. "Free world" work better helps prisoners get and hold a job after their release, prison officials said, and gives them more money to get an apartment and pay other expenses. A Texas study of more than 1,000 former prisoners who had worked for a "free world" company in the past 11 years found 88 percent were currently working, compared with 62 percent of other released prisoners. More than 76 percent stayed out of prison; most who were back in had failed a drug test or other parole condition, and had not committed a new crime. NORDSTROM, NOT KMART Cathy Kochendorfer's favorite mantras are "Family's most important, and work is how you feed your family," and "We're doing Nordstrom quality, not Kmart quality." After a long private-sector career, the sewing-shop manager at Hiland Mountain Correctional Center in Eagle River delights in training her employees on work ethic as well machinery and production tricks. A white-haired woman who wears glasses and a smile, even while dealing with a repeatedly leaky roof, she seems to spin off new product ideas like a trailing magnetic field. She employs 45 people, up from five when she started six years ago, and sales are more than $500,000, up from $15,000, but she still doesn't quite break even, so she constantly hounds customers to order new products. Like the blue fleece blankets ACI now makes for the ferry system. "They're gorgeous," said satisfied customer Wilson of the Alaska Marine Highway System. Standard blankets are too wide or too long for ferry bunks, but Kochendorfer's are custom-made. "Her blankets fit much better," Mike Wilson said. "I'd buy more if I could afford 'em." Besides regular work like making prison uniforms and the Alaska ferry work, she picks up smaller contracts like sewing dog booties for the Iditarod that help keep workers busy. Her employees make the pace worthwhile, Kochendorfer said. Like Maggie Fairbanks. "You guys work me to death," Kochendorfer teased Fairbanks, 24, Heather Simas, 31, and Judy Lopez, 43, as they visited with Kochendorfer and a reporter. Hazy July afternoon sunshine filtered into Kochendorfer's office, doors at each end open to separate men's and women's shops. "The feeling is mutual," Fairbanks retorted, to laughs. But Simas and Lopez said as first-timers in prison, working for Kochendorfer keeps them sane. "Work is all I pretty much know," Lopez said. Fairbanks said her ACI job is the first of her life. "I've been here probably 50 times. The guards call me 'Misdemeanor Maggie,' " Fairbanks said. Her dark eyes and oval face laugh, then slide down and sideways, like she's tired, then snap back again to smile. "I've been fired twice, but I'm a good worker so they bring me back." Besides applying for ACI this time in, Fairbanks said she took GED classes. She has a daughter now and is putting stepping-stones in place for when she gets out soon. Kochendorfer has done what she can to instill the quality-as-professional-courtesy concept. As an inspector, Fairbanks sometimes had to reject work by her friends. "I felt like I was a nitpick," she said, "but it reflects on all of us." Satisfied customer Wilson of the Alaska Marine Highway System appreciates the professionalism Kochendorfer brings. He started buying uniforms from her about six years ago. The long, button-up white shirt with epaulettes and pocket details is worn by stewards who make beds, clean toilets and generally tidy the ships. "She found better fabric and she tailored it for a better fit and a better price," Wilson said. Kochendorfer said her own career spanned years sewing women's clothing, backpacks, hot air balloons and more before starting a line of quilted women's accessories she sold to Nordstrom and others. She pulls on that knowledge and volume discounts to find savings. She orders chef-coat fabric for the ferry and for an Alaska kitchen-wear wholesale client at the same time. The $17.50 she charges Wilson for the steward shirt reflects a 20 percent mark-up, Kochendorfer said, though that's shrinking with rising fuel and fabric costs. She's looking at raising her prices. There's always some extra cost, she said, like the $1,500 heat-transfer machine she bought to put designs and text on bags for a state children's health campaign. Delighted to be a part of the effort, she suggested handles too short to fit over a child's head as an added safety feature. Now she wants to put the heat-transfer machine to more use. "I want to do the T-shirts, I want to do polar fleece, made in Alaska," Kochendorfer said. Did she mention the shop is certified to use the Made in Alaska logo? "I keep trying to find people that have ideas that want to go into business," Kochendorfer said. "It's really hard to find people like that. All I want to do is the manufacturing." FOR MORE: Alaska Correctional Industries http://www.alaskaci.com The National Correctional Industries Association, a nonprofit professional association http://www.nationalcia.org Federal Prison Industries http://www.unicor.gov - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin