Pubdate: Tue, 1 Jul 2008
Source: Boston Review (MA)
Issue: July/August
Copyright: 2008 Boston Review
Contact:  http://bostonreview.net/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4824
Authors: Mary Fainsod Katzenstein and Mary Lyndon Shanley
Related: Articles from the same issue 
http://www.mapinc.org/source/Boston+Review

NO FURTHER HARM

WHAT WE OWE TO INCARCERATED FATHERS

More than 1.5 million children currently have a parent in prison; for 
94 percent of these children, that parent is the father. In 1999 an 
estimated half of men incarcerated in federal prisons and 55 percent 
in state prisons had children under age eighteen. Sixty-two percent 
reported monthly contact with their children by letter, phone, or 
visit; a majority, however, have never been visited by their children 
since entering prison.

There are strong temptations to overlook or dismiss the parental 
interests of incarcerated fathers: they are often not married to the 
mothers of their children, they cannot financially support their 
children, and their criminal activity makes them bad role models. 
Moreover, children grow and develop rapidly, and extended lack of 
contact may foreclose the possibility of resuming a prior 
relationship after prison. Maintaining one's role as a father in 
prison, thus, is deeply vexed.

Vexed, but not impossible. The fact that people imprisoned for crimes 
are by definition not ideal fathers does not mean that they are not 
fathers. Even when they are in prison they can have significant 
responsibilities, as nurturers and as emotionally important figures 
in their children's lives. And fulfilling those responsibilities may 
have considerable consequences for their own successful return to 
ordinary life.

Public policy has a large role to play in making this happen. 
Policies on the assessment of child support obligations can promote 
or undermine the roles of economic provider, just as policies on 
parent-child contact (letters, phone calls, and visitation) make an 
essential difference to the role of psychological caregiver. The 
first reflects traditional notions of father as breadwinner, while 
the second suggests traditionally female forms of care-giving, such 
as attentive presence and emotional support and affirmation. More 
supportive policies of both kinds during incarceration help to foster 
rehabilitation and reintegration into the community, and are also 
requirements of justice.

To be sure, paternal involvement is not the only important value. 
Both parents have responsibilities of economic and emotional support. 
And men's parenting from prison must not undercut the authority or 
wellbeing of the mother (or other adult) providing daily care. 
Responsible fatherhood involves willing two-way cooperation; it is 
collaborative parenting. And because children's wellbeing is affected 
so directly by the wellbeing of their caregiver, good policy should 
not challenge but rather support the custodial parent-usually the 
mother-and her relationship with her children.

***

States often impose financial obligations on fathers in prison. 
According to some estimates, 20-25 percent of all incarcerated men 
are under child support orders. In 2005 these incarcerated fathers 
accounted for 16-18 percent of the $107 billion in child support 
arrears nationally. Many fathers who enter prison are poor to begin 
with and have not proved themselves able to support their children 
even before prison. Several studies-from Massachusetts, Colorado, and 
elsewhere-find that, on average, inmates with child-support orders 
owe about $10,000 at the time of incarceration. And since 
incarcerated fathers as a group earn well under the minimum 
wage-about $50 a month-few are able to contribute more than a 
symbolic sum to child support.

To some extent, the imposition on incarcerated men who have limited 
opportunity to earn income is an example of the neo-liberal impulse 
to privatize responsibility for the welfare of citizens, including 
children. But while government should be more generous in supporting 
children and caregivers, child-support obligations should not be 
abolished; child support payments are financially consequential for 
all poor families, constituting about a quarter to a third of the 
income received by families below the poverty line. And child support 
acknowledges and reinforces one aspect of paternal responsibility. 
What is not acceptable, however, are current state policies imposing 
child support obligations that incarcerated men cannot fulfill.

Yet many states have policies that impose child-support orders on 
incarcerated men while setting wages that make it impossible for them 
to meet their obligations. In states that do not suspend or modify 
the accumulation of child-support debts, fathers leave prison with 
anywhere from a 60 percent to a 200 percent increase in child-support 
arrears. This accumulated debt is not the result of indifferent work 
habits (showing up for work in prison is mandatory) or refusal to pay 
support (prison accounts are often garnished); it is simply the 
result of the disparity between state-set "awards" and state-set 
wages. Under these policies, the men can only fail.

The state's role in turning fathers into failed breadwinners is 
obscured by the general rationale for state policies that prohibit 
adjustment of child-support obligations while fathers are in prison. 
Roughly half of the states consider incarceration to be volitional-an 
act by an individual offender who knew or should have known the 
consequences of his chosen behavior-and treat incarceration as a 
period of "voluntary unemployment." Of these states, about twenty-one 
take a "no-justification" approach: incarceration is not a good 
reason for eliminating or modifying child-support orders, and 
child-support obligations are burdens the prisoner should have anticipated.

Some states that reject the no-justification model use a 
"modification" approach that encourages prisoners to contact the 
courts and seek some temporary reduction of their child-support levy 
on the pragmatic but untested grounds that if less is required, more 
will be paid. Other states have asserted a clearer "principled" 
position: Oregon, the only state whose Constitution requires all 
inmates to work, exempts inmate accounts from garnishment up to the 
sum of $2000 on the argument that a "person returning to the 
community without any funds leads them to revert to criminal activity."

Policies that treat incarceration as voluntary unemployment are, 
then, neither universal nor immutable, and there is significant 
variation in case law in the different states about whether the 
commission of an offense leading to incarceration constitutes 
voluntary unemployment. The 1998 Alaska case of Bendixen v. Bendixen 
gives the flavor of this disagreement. In that year the Alaskan 
Supreme Court overruled a Superior Court judgment that had likened 
incarceration to voluntary unemployment because "crimes are willful 
conduct, just as voluntary unemployment is willful conduct." The 
Supreme Court observed that serving jail time is "seldom a goal of 
criminal misconduct" and that, absent such intent, child-support 
obligations of an incarcerated individual should be based on ability 
to pay. They require the father to pay only the minimum support 
obligation of $50 a month-no inconsequential sum given that the 
better paid industry jobs in Alaska Corrections at the time paid 
about fifty cents an hour. Although child support policies continue 
to vary by state, Senators Evan Bayh and Barack Obama have 
cosponsored and introduced legislation in Congress, that would 
prohibit states from considering any part of a period of 
incarceration as voluntary unemployment that would disqualify the 
parent from obtaining a review and adjustment of a child support obligation.

Such legislation would bring us closer to European social policy. The 
German Civil Code bases child-support requirements even for 
incarcerated parents on a person's ability to pay. Provided there is 
no immediate connection between the felony and the desire to avoid 
support obligation, the operative assumption is generally that 
incarcerated individuals will not be in an economic position to pay 
child-support payments. In Sweden a prisoner acquires child-support 
debt while in prison but is considered unable to pay while 
incarcerated. After release, a plan to pay support is then set based 
on whatever sum an ex-offender can afford-a sum that may take a 
lifetime to pay.

As these examples demonstrate, American states are not passive 
bystanders in a process of "fatherhood decertification" of men in 
prison. By piling on penalties-by requiring imprisoned fathers to 
accumulate child-support arrears impossible to cover with prison 
wages-the state undermines the fulfillment of obligations after 
release. In some instances men who are in arrears in child support 
break off contact with their families because they do not want to be 
harassed about payment and because they want their children to be 
eligible for Temporary Assistance to Needy Families benefits. 
Allowing individuals to emerge from prison with $16,000-$18,000 or 
more in debt, the state in effect encourages newly released prisoners 
to seek illegal employment, renew criminal activity, or "tax" family 
members who feel pressured into making loans to the former inmates.

Levying excessive child support also undermines men's social 
citizenship and in a few instances nullifies their right to vote. 
Current law in Tennessee allows individuals convicted of felonies 
(exempting certain crimes) to register to vote upon release, but 
individuals who continue to owe money for child support payments are 
disenfranchised. Such payment-dependent voting eligibility looks 
little different from debtors' prison or the Constitutionally 
proscribed poll tax of an earlier era.

Although Tennessee's constitutionally-inscribed requirement is now 
unusual among the fifty states, it is not the only state in which 
child-support obligations can affect voting rights. Nine states 
condition the restoration of voting rights on an applicant's full 
payment of at least some of the court-ordered costs associated with 
conviction. In Florida the "clemency" rules on rights restoration say 
that the "Executive Clemency Board will consider, but not be limited 
to, the following factors when determining whether to grant clemency: 
(1) The nature of the offense, (2) Whether the applicant has any 
history of mental instability, drug or alcohol abuse . . . (5) 
Whether the applicant is delinquent on any outstanding debts or child 
support payments . . ." (emphasis added). When a state predicates 
voting eligibility for those convicted of felonies on the full 
payment of child support, citizenship quite literally carries a price.

In short, state policies that impose arduous child-support 
obligations during incarceration increase the likelihood that a 
failed father will exit the prison gate.

***

Like policies that impose unrealistically high child-support 
payments, prison practices that hinder incarcerated fathers' ability 
to maintain contact with their children undermine a man's status as 
father and citizen. As with adjusting child support, fostering the 
parent-child relationship is both expedient and just. Maintaining 
family ties improves behavior while men are incarcerated, helps 
prevent recidivism, and lowers the chances of a prisoner's children 
engaging in criminal activity. The capacity to participate in family 
life should be a right guaranteed the citizen. As long as prison 
order and security are not compromised and the custodial parent's 
ability to care for the children is undiminished, prisoners and their 
children should be entitled to a sustained relationship.

Yet some policies-those regulating phone, letter, and email 
communication, and those governing visitation-impose unnecessarily 
high hurdles to maintaining contact with children while incarcerated.

Letters, phone calls, and visits are the backbone of relationships 
across prison walls. Snail mail has some obvious advantages. Letters 
are less expensive than phone calls, and writers can reflect on what 
they want to say and how to say it. Both child and father can also 
keep and reread a letter, maintaining a sense of contact beyond the 
length of a phone conversation. But letters require that both sender 
and recipient read and write easily, and children may be embarrassed 
by the stamped advisory on the envelope indicating that the letter 
has been sent from a correctional facility. Email and other forms of 
Internet communication are almost universally barred because of 
monitoring difficulties.

A phone call might seem the simplest and most direct way to stay in 
touch, but policy in some states stands in the way of this otherwise 
ordinary form of parent-child contact. Some states limit the number 
of calls a prisoner can make: a Texas regulation allows offenders who 
demonstrate good behavior no more than a five-minute phone call every 
three months. But the major impediment to frequent phone contact is 
the cost. Many states award an exclusive contract to one service 
provider, and in exchange for the contract those companies regularly 
return a substantial part of their profits to the state as 
commission. Service is often limited to outgoing collect calls. Not 
surprisingly, rates are exorbitant. In recent years, in one state, 
the cost of a fifteen minute collect call to another part of the 
state was $17; in another, the rate for an interstate collect call 
was $0.89 per minute plus a $3.95 connection fee totaling $17.20 for 
a fifteen minute call. C. F. Hairston, a University of Illinois 
professor whose pioneering research on the impact of incarceration 
and reentry on families has inspired much of the work in the field 
for a decade, found in 1999 that a thirty minute state-to-state 
collect call placed from prison on the weekend cost $15; from outside 
prison, $5; and dialed direct from a residence, $1.50. Such fee 
structures are patently unfair.

The phone companies contend that the additional security measures 
required by serving the prison drive up their costs. There are 
legitimate security concerns involving telephone contact between 
those in prison and those on the outside: inmates have arranged drug 
deals, robbery, gang activity, assault, and even murder from behind 
bars. Unlimited and unmonitored phone access would both increase the 
risk to corrections personnel and in many cases impede efforts at 
rehabilitation. Technology, however, has lowered the cost of 
monitoring calls. Until recently security involved operators 
listening in on telephone conversations as they occurred. Today the 
kinds of technological advances that have brought caller-ID, 
three-way calling, and call-forwarding to the general public allow 
prison phone systems to automatically monitor and record all calls 
without operator assistance. Computer interfaces also enable 
authorities to analyze conversations later.

Regardless of the rationale, the effect of high rates for collect 
phone calls is devastating for prisoners' families. Maintaining 
regular phone contact between parent and child can put severe stress 
on the finances of the caregiver. Family members may refuse to accept 
collect calls, or block all such calls. Fathers may not be able to 
congratulate a child on a birthday, holiday, or significant 
achievement, much less keep abreast of the mundane but essential 
events in a child's life.

High phone costs are not, however, an immutable characteristic of 
American prisons. Nebraska charges $1 for a fifteen-minute collect 
local call and $3.75 for a fifteen-minute collect out-of-state call; 
Washington, D.C., charges a flat rate of $3 for fifteen minutes local 
or long distance; and West Virginia, New Hampshire, Missouri, New 
York, North Dakota and Wisconsin also have low rates. States can 
decline to charge commissions, as New York has recently done, and 
allow prisoners to place outgoing calls using debit phone cards 
rather than forcing them to rely exclusively on collect calls.

***

In addition to phone contact, child advocates say that visitation is 
integral to maintaining, and in some cases improving, a parent-child 
relationship. The obstacles to visitation between incarcerated 
parents and their children are, however, truly daunting and exact a 
high toll in money, time, and dignity. Correctional institutions are 
often located at a considerable distance from the child's home; a 
visit can entail the expense of bus tickets, an overnight stay in a 
motel, and food on the road and from vending machines in the 
visitation room. The trip to the prison may also mean the loss of one 
or two days' wages. The cost of visiting a parent incarcerated in 
another state can be prohibitive.

Even for children able and eager to see an incarcerated parent, 
visitation can be a frightening experience. In her 1999 memoir The 
Prisoner's Wife, Asha Bandele describes the procedures for passing 
through security as "ceremonies of belittlement" for women, and 
pat-downs and scanning with a wand can be upsetting or humiliating to 
a child. Most prisons have no separate waiting rooms for children, 
and visits usually take place in crowded rooms or through Plexiglas 
or wire barriers. One study of juvenile prisons in Northern 
California shows that initial excitement often gives way to 
awkwardness or disappointment for incarcerated fathers and their 
visiting children because of the lack of opportunity for casual 
interactions. Eating together is one shared activity they enjoyed, 
but it is allowed for less than half an hour. Strikingly, in most of 
the facilities there were no toys or games, making it hard for 
fathers to interact with their children. Simply improving the 
visitation area and providing games, toys, or structured activities, 
as has been done in Sing Sing in New York State, would go a long way 
to fostering bonds between father and child.

In Overton v. Bazzetta (2003), the Supreme Court unanimously upheld a 
Michigan regulation that limited visitation in prisons. The 
regulation bars prisoners who have twice committed drug infractions 
from receiving family visits, including non-contact visits from 
behind a reinforced window. The regulation also precludes visits for 
all inmates by a minor unless the minor is the child, stepchild, or 
grandchild of the prisoner and accompanied by a guardian or adult 
member of the prisoner's immediate family. Children of a prisoner 
whose parental rights have been terminated are not allowed to visit, 
regardless of the custodial parent's views about the desirability of 
visitation.

The Court said that since a prisoner could write letters or use the 
phone, neither the regulation denying visitation to a prisoner found 
guilty of two violations of disciplinary rules due to substance 
abuse, nor the regulation that a minor child of the prisoner be 
accompanied by an immediate family member, severed communication 
between parent and child. The ruling gave insufficient weight to the 
claims of both prisoners and their families, especially the children, 
who are most likely to suffer from not seeing their fathers. The 
Michigan regulation punishes family members just as surely as prisoners.

The goals that the regulations were intended to serve-reduction of 
the overall number of visitors and reduction of smuggling of 
contraband-could have been met by more careful screening of adults, 
by restrictions on the number of visits or the number of visitors 
allowed each prisoner each month, or by restricted non-contact 
visits. The ACLU points out that "a decree that one shall never again 
see one's family and friends . . . entails the total destruction of 
the individual's very personhood." If a choice must be made 
concerning who may visit, minor children seeking to visit a parent 
should receive high priority. The destruction of a relationship is 
hardly incidental to either father or child, but affects personality, 
identity, and personhood.

Improved conditions for visitation are not unrealistic. The Osborne 
Association, a long-established service organization that supports 
prisoners and their families, has organized both parenting classes 
and a Children's Center at Sing Sing. Nell Bernstein describes the 
Children's Center in All Alone in the World: Children of the 
Incarcerated (2005):

Within the Children's Center-a small, Plexiglas-enclosed enclave off 
to the side of the larger visiting room-all this [environment 
frightening to a child] evaporates. Inside the center, fathers can 
hug and hold their children, read books to them, play computer games 
with them, or help them weave key chains out of colored string. 
Security dictates the transparent walls-correctional officers must be 
able to see in-but their effect is the opposite of the Plexiglas that 
separates parent and child in a traditional window visit . . . the 
expanse of the visiting room disappears, creating a sense of shelter 
and privacy, a glass-enclosed island in an ocean in a bottle.

In addition, some prisons use technology to foster parent-child 
interaction even without physical visitation. Florida, Illinois, 
Iowa, Mississippi, New Hampshire, and Oregon have programs that 
promote literacy for prisoners and their children by allowing parents 
to create an audio or video recording of themselves reading a book, 
and both tape and book are then sent to the child. The parent can, in 
effect, read aloud to the child, a positive and nurturing activity.

Elizabeth Gaynes, Executive Director of the Osborne Association, has 
argued against "relieving" incarcerated fathers from parental 
responsibilities. Writing of the incarcerated father of her own 
children, she said, "I expected him to participate in raising his 
children, and he did. We entered into a covenant, as important to us 
as marriage vows, about how we would raise our children." The value 
(both symbolic and real) of such a covenant is inestimable. Yet the 
state, in addition to parents, must commit itself to making parental 
responsibility to children possible. A three-way covenant would need 
to ask what obligations the state/correctional facility also bears in 
maintaining, or at least imposing no further harm upon, the paternal bond.

***

Families are crucial to civil society. They foster personal wellbeing 
and help people develop the moral capacities necessary for 
self-governance and public deliberation. Throughout U.S. history, the 
ability to form and maintain a family has been a mark of dignity, 
what NYU Law Professor Peggy Cooper Davis has called "a badge and 
incident of democratic freedom." One of the marks of full membership 
in civil society is recognition of and respect for one's status as a 
family member.

Fatherhood is not only an important dimension of an individual's 
sense of identity, but is also related to his social and civic status 
in complex ways. Recognition of and respect for family relationships 
is due all U.S. citizens and care must be taken that state action not 
weaken family ties. At the same time, "good parenting" must not be a 
prerequisite for exercising the vote, just as voting is not a 
prerequisite for exercising the right to custody of or visitation 
with one's child. It is of both practical and theoretical interest 
that we recognize the importance of family to incarcerated men. 
According to a John Jay College of Criminal Justice study, by 
disrupting family connections, prisons in fact contribute to the 
increased criminality among youth. Researchers at Harvard University 
and the University of Maryland have also shown that marriage reduces 
incidence of crime over the course of one's life.

One of the impediments to maintaining incarcerated fathers' 
relationships with their children has been the tendency-in law, 
political culture, and political theory-to depict individuals as 
isolated persons, rather than as having identities formed through 
relationships. But family relationships are not "add-ons" or 
incidental to a person's identity; they are in part constitutive of 
that identity. As a result, the state must respect the right of 
people to form relationships even when they are incarcerated, as the 
Supreme Court did when it upheld a prisoner's right to marry in 
Turner v. Safley (1987). But it cannot stop there. It should also 
avoid unnecessary disruption of relationships.

The federal Department of Health and Human Services' "responsible 
fatherhood" initiatives fund a growing number of parenting programs 
in prisons. These programs are helpful when they encourage 
incarcerated fathers to consider how they can support the 
child-rearing efforts of the child's mother or guardian, and not when 
they draw on traditional tropes of masculinity and male authority for 
legitimacy. Family reunion programs, which combine conjugal and 
family visitation, exist in six of the fifty states. The surge of 
interest in reentry has fostered a renewed focus on job/training 
programs in prison that could have great import for fathers in 
prison. These are valuable initiatives, but they are still few in number.

***

Whatever the reasons for limited support of prison programs for 
fathers, prison security is not one of them. The wide variation in 
state systems' approaches to child support or prison visitation/phone 
rules implies that "penological interests" (the typical judicial 
invocation in striking down prisoner-rights claims) is not the 
driving imperative preventing more expansive fatherhood policies.

The stakes in these more expansive policies are large and extend to 
basic issues of justice. Suspending, or at least modifying, 
child-support obligations for fathers who cannot meet assigned awards 
on state-set wages earned in prison, abrogating any child-support 
"poll tax" on voting eligibility, and facilitating communication 
between fathers and their children concern both the prisoners who 
seek to move beyond a sense of failed fatherhood and the children who 
bear the collateral damage of measures that distance them from their 
fathers. Recognizing that intimate and caring relationships are 
essential to human wellbeing, the Supreme Court has determined that 
prisoners must have the right to marry. Law and public policy need to 
extend these relational interests to the maintenance of ties between 
parents and children.

When remediable conditions of incarceration make it unnecessarily 
difficult or impossible for an inmate and his family to maintain 
ties, this is not simply a private wrong and a personal misfortune. 
It is also an unjustifiable diminution of the inmate's civic status. 
Contemporary citizenship entails the right of both adults and 
children to form and maintain relationships that are central to the 
development and expression of autonomy and to the dignity and mutual 
respect that citizens owe one another. The recognition and 
encouragement of fatherhood behind bars is a vital step in 
maintaining and fostering the interrelated-indeed, 
inseparable-commitments of both intimate and civic life.
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake