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January 11, 2023

Prison Journalism Project taking a deep dive into "The Graying of America’s Prisons"

The Prison Journalism Project, which aspires to bring "transparency to the world of mass incarceration from the inside and training incarcerated writers to be journalists," this week is debuting a new "special project on America’s graying prison system."  This introductory article is fully titled "The Graying of America’s Prisons: In a first-of-its-kind project, PJP contributors chronicle the now ubiquitous experience of growing old behind bars."  This article starts, and sets the tone for the special project, in this way (links from the original):

Prison makes an awful elderly care facility, yet more prisons are rapidly becoming just that.

Thanks in large part to longer prison sentences and decreasing rates of parole, the number of incarcerated people 55 and older has climbed from 48,000 to 160,000 over the last two decades. 

In 2019, this age cohort made up 63% of state prison deaths for the first time since figures were tracked, according to the most recent data available. 

That’s why Prison Journalism Project is debuting a special project on America’s graying prison system.  Over the coming weeks, we’ll publish stories every Tuesday and Thursday from incarcerated writers that chronicle different facets of growing old behind bars. We will collect the stories below as they appear on the website.  Eric Finley brings us the first essay in the series, in which he explains the explosion of older people inside the Florida Department of Corrections. 

In the weeks to come, writers Mithrellas Curtis and Chanell Burnette will share stories on the legal battle for adequate senior health care inside their Virginia prison.

January 11, 2023 at 06:05 PM | Permalink

Comments

Legislators and conservative pundits failed to consider the effects of lengthy prison sentences when legislatures passed "hard-on-crime" bills in the 90s. We now have a growing population of incarcerated geriatrics that require greater medical care which costs taxpayers millions of dollars. State legislatures must pass laws reducing criminal penalties for non-violent and violent crimes. A life sentence should only be reserved for murder and LWOP only for a particularly gruesome murder.

Posted by: Anon | Jan 12, 2023 10:47:43 PM

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