Pubdate: May 6-12 1999 Source: Weekly Planet (FL) Copyright: Weekly Planet Inc. 1999 Contact: 1310 E 9th Avenue Tampa, FL 33605 Fax: (813) 248-9999 Website: http://www.weeklyplanet.com Author: Susan Eastman, staff writer CHAIN GANG INDUSTRY They work for 25 cents to 55 cents an hour, show up at the job every day, and chances are they aren't going to strike. No need to exploit labor in Third World countries. Right in our backyard, the state's 66,000 prisoners are a workforce without the problems that often plague private industry. "We are suggesting that companies taking a look at offshore labor look at us first," said Pat Foote, communications' director for the non-profit Prison Rehabilitation Industries and Diversified Enterprises, Inc. (PRIDE),that runs industries inside state prisons. "We kind of have a Third World inside our prisons." In 1998, state prison inmates working for PRIDE generated over $81 million in sales, making it one of Florida's top 200 businesses. From its St. Petersburg headquarters, PRIDE has managed 51 industries, including the production of modular office furnishings, cushy executive office chairs, inmate uniforms, citrus and dairy products, mattresses, decals and shoes. Of the $81 million earned from inmate labor in 1998, $300,000 was spent on victim compensation, $2.4 million was spent on inmate support programs, $1.2 million went to the state to help pay the cost of caring for inmates and $1.9 million was spent to pay the inmates for the labor. Profits from the company are channeled into expansion of the program, Foote said, which includes training and job placement after leaving prison. While products produced by PRIDE are available only to government entities and non-profit companies, products made by prisoners are also being marketed to the general consumer through contracts with private industry. Inmates are paid at least minimum wage for their labor when working for private industry, Foote said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea