American prison labor means longer unemployment lines
Two southeast companies that make U.S. military
uniforms are shedding hundreds of jobs, as the government looks to
federal inmates for the fatigues.
American Power Source makes military clothing in
Fayette, Ala., but its government contract expires in October. Federal
Prison Industries – which also operates under the name UNICOR will snag
the work, and leave the task to inmates. FPI has the first right of
refusal for U.S. Government contracts, under a 1930 federal law.
American Apparel, the Selma, Ala., based military
clothing manufacturer closed one of its plants and continues to
downsize others due to the loss of some of its contracts to FPI.
According retired Air Force colonel and spokesman Kurt Wilson, the
company laid off 255 employees and cut the hours of 190 employees this
year alone. So private workers end up losing their jobs to prisoners.
"The way the law is – Federal Prison Industries
gets first dibs and contracts up to a certain percentage before they
have to compete against us," Wilson, the executive vice president of
business development and government affairs, said. "The army combat
uniform, for instance, is an item that they take off the top. As a
result American tax payers pay more for it – but the bottom line is each
soldier is paying more for their uniform."
American Apparel charges $29.44 per uniform, but the FPI uniform costs $34.18 – a 15 percent difference.
FPI has been around since the 1930s. It provides
training, education and employment for inmates in federal custody. With
more than 13,000 inmates, FPI operates in about 80 factories across
the United States. The company is not allowed to sell its goods to the
private sector -- and the law requires federal agencies to buy its
products, even if they are not the cheapest.
"It has been going on for some time," Wilson said.
"Unfortunately what comes to bear now is, as demand for uniforms
begins to decrease, budgets decrease and the problem gets bigger for
us. Therefore we have to lay people off."
FPI officials were unavailable for an interview,
but the company does offer a number of statistics which dispute the
criticism.
"It is important to note that FPI produces only 7
percent of the textile garments purchased by DLA. The other 93 percent
are produced by other entities," Julie Rozier, an FPI spokeswoman
said in a statement to Fox News.
"FPI's percentage has remained fairly consistent
over the past decade, with slight declines. FPI is a program that
directly protects society by reducing crime and preparing inmates for
successful release back into society to become law-abiding citizens;
FPI does not receive a congressional appropriation for its operations,"
the statement said.
Inmates working for UNICOR or FPI are 24 percent
less likely to reoffend and 14 percent more likely to be employed
long-term upon release, according to the government company's website.
More than 40 percent of Unicor's supplies were purchased from small
businesses in 2011.
The battle between the two has caught the attention of lawmakers in Washington.
Representative Bill Huizenga, R-Mich., is
sponsoring a bill which would reign in the ability to take work from
private companies.
"We all have seen those terrible statistics,
forty-plus months of 8.1 percent unemployment. We know the actions the
government has taken it doesn't look like this is going to get better
any time soon," Huizenga said. "Here we are having a prison population
coming in and taking jobs away from the private sector - why in the
world we think this is OK. I can guarantee you if this were a Chinese
product with Chinese prisoners making that - we would be outraged."
Huizenga went on to say the outrage amongst his constituents is palpable.
"It's just this outside entity called UNICOR or
Federal Prison Industries coming in and saying sorry - that work is now
ours. We are going to having prisoners doing this," he said. "Of
course they are outraged, of course they are frustrated. They are
angry, they're hurt frankly that their own federal government would
come in and do this to them at a time when their watching their friends
and neighbors struggle with $4 gasoline and they're trying to keep
their mortgage in check."
MyFox
What a great idea..
MyFox
What a great idea..
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