Demanding Broad Reforms, Thousands of Inmate Workers on Strike at Alabama Prisons
Saying that even a lawsuit filed by the U.S. Department of Justice in 2020 did not solve the “humanitarian crisis” that has gone on for years in Alabama’s prison system, thousands of inmate workers are refusing to work this week to demand broad criminal justice reforms and changes to the state’s prison conditions.
The work stoppage began Monday after about three months of planning and organizing by inmates, with help from groups including Alabama Prison Advocacy and Incarcerated Families United.
Organizers circulated a “message from the inside” saying the roughly 25,000 incarcerated people in the state are “in the midst of a humanitarian crisis due to Eighth Amendment violations.” ”
This crisis has occurred as a result of antiquated sentencing laws that led to overcrowding, numerous deaths, [and] severe physical injury, as well as mental anguish to incarcerated individuals,” said the inmates.
Both Sides of the Wall, an advocacy group run by Diyawn Caldwell, whose husband is incarcerated in Alabama, estimated that 80% of the state’s inmates would take part in the strike, disrupting the prison system as guards and other officials take over cooking, trash collection, and other jobs done by inmates.
Overcrowding is a serious problem when it comes to Alabama’s prisons; a 2019 report by the DOJ found the facilities at 182% capacity. The state’s Republican leaders plan to build two more prisons, but Caldwell told The New York Times that the state “can’t build themselves out of the crisis that’s going on in the prison system.”
Along with the overcrowding and chronic understaffing, inmates face the use of solitary confinement as a “protection” measure, “a high level of violence” including rape, a failure by officials to separate sexually violent offenders from vulnerable inmates, and a lack of “safe and sanitary” living conditions which have reportedly included open sewage, mold, and toxic fumes in kitchen areas.
In addition to major reforms within the state’s prisons, organizers are demanding:
- The repeal of the state’s Habitual Felony Offender Act, which the ACLU has said “unjustly incarcerates too many people for far too long” and has contributed to overcrowding;
- The creation of a statewide conviction integrity unit to identify inmates experiencing wrongful conviction;
- The adoption of mandatory parole criteria to guarantee that the authorities release all those who are eligible for parole from prison; and
- The elimination of life sentences without parole.
On Monday, supporters of the strike assembled outside the Alabama Department of Corrections to give voice to the inmates’ demands and protest the state’s plan to add more prisons to the dangerous and dysfunctional system.