Author: mopress

  • 22 Contradictions and Questions on CCA Management of Hutto

    The Texas Department of Famliy and Protective Services (DFPS) has exempted the Corrections Corporation of America from regulations pertaining to children inside the The T. Don Hutto prison for immigrant families in Taylor, Texas. In the following analysis, Sarah Boone looks at public records of the decision as shared in pdf format by San Antonio Current reporter Dave Maass.–gm

    OVERVIEW OF HUTTO/TDFPS INTERACTION

    By Sarah Boone

    Thanks to two pdf files shared by San Antonio Current reporter Dave Maass [pdf1, pdf2] we have records of the following written exchanges between the T Don Hutto Family Residential Center Management of Corrections Corporation of America (CCA), The Williamson County Judge, and Texas Department of Family Protective Services (TDFPS) regarding whether or not Hutto should be exempt from TDFPS licensing:

    • 4/17/2006 Letter to Williamson County Judge, with materials from handbook given to detainees and an outline of proposed changes to better accommodate detainees.
    • 5/22/2006 Letter to TDFPS requesting exemption, including copy of contract between Williamson County and CCA, modified on 5/1/2006.
    • 6/14/2006 Letter from TDFPS stating that Hutto did not fall under that agency’s licensing for day care facilities.
    • 3/28/2007 Follow up letter from Hutto stating that changes had been made and again requesting exemption.
    • 4/13/2007 Letter from TDFPS stating that Hutto still was exempt from TDFPS supervision.

    In the 4/17/2006 letter, CCA management outlined the programs they were providing for ‘residents.’ In more than ten pages of information, the majority of which came from the ‘handbook’ that is given to detainees prior to their arrival at Hutto, I found numerous statements that contradict information gleaned through detainee’s conversations with their attorneys during and after incarceration.

    1. Detainees will not need any money while at Hutto.

    2. Phone calls should be limited to 15 minutes or less.

    Detainees state that they must purchase a CCA telephone calling card for $20 in order to make calls.

    3. Library materials appropriate for native languages, to
    the greatest possible extent will be available.

    This also has been repudiated by detainees, since ‘which’ nationalities, languages and
    dialects are subject to constant change.

    4. CCA envisions a tremendous array of indoor and outdoor activities
    for juveniles and adults, including informal intramural competitions,
    etc., incorporating the traditions of their countries.

    A blatant lie. A map of the facility was in the packet. It showed no recreation room or designation of outdoor play or recreation area.

    5. Information regarding free legal services is provided to all families.

    Again, repudiated by detainees.

    6. CCA is examining potential software-based-aids …..to assist
    children with language and academic skills.

    These aids were not available for nearly one year.

    7. CCA will furnish living skills instructions to both adults and
    children.

    Repudiated by detainees.

    8. Volunteer Services – TDHRC will reach out to area volunteers
    to facilitate religious, recovery and cultural programs.

    If no ‘outsiders’ are allowed ‘inside,’ how was this possible?

    9. CCA’s experience has prepared it to interface with practitioners
    of diverse faiths and traditions.

    If this is true, why did Guards refuse to allow daily prayers by Muslims?

    10. Programs: CCA will provide a broad array of programs due to
    its familiarity with the needs of migrants and immigrants including
    experience in operation of extensively programmed facilities.

    CCA’s familiarity is with PRISONS, (that’s what an extensively programmed
    facility is.) The ‘residents’ at Hutto are not convicted felons.

    11. Hutto stated it intended to provide education for all children age 5
    and over ‘who intend to enroll in school.’ English as a second-language
    will be taught to all, along with arts, science, social studies and math.

    Initially the ‘school day’ was supposedly 4.5 hours, during which time 11-year-olds
    who spoke English fluently and whose entire education had been in the US schools,
    were being taught one plus one equals two.

    12. Adults were to be taught English in a format that was not dependent on
    bilingual familiarity or instructor’s familiarity with the detainees’
    native language.

    This did not occur.

    13. The proposed changes included changes that should have been made prior
    to housing children and women at Hutto:

    • Changing the facility from a ‘secure’ to ‘non-secure’ facility
    • Providing stuffed toys and craft items for children
    • Screening shower areas and having covers for cell doors
    • Playground equipment
    • Removal of razor wire
    • Safety items, such as ladders, to access top bunks
    • Additional portable classroom space
    • Attorney-Client and family visits in accordance with pp 32 & 33 and Exhibit 1 of the Flores v. Reno settlement

    We know that many of the above (along with other proposed changes) were not carried out until just prior to the ACLU/press tour in February, 2007.

    14. A major proposed change was to provide palatable and nutritious meals,
    age specific to children’s needs. A dining room was to be provided for
    meals and special dietary needs by children and adults were to be addressed.

    There is proof that many children were still loosing weight as late as February, 2007 and a personal conversation with a prior detainee revealed that there had been no real improvement in the meals since this letter was written.

    15. The staff was to be trained in all applicable aspects of detainees’ rights under Flores vs. Reno as well as the rights and responsibilities of juveniles and understanding of children/youth lifestyle and culture.. Additionally, the staff was instructed that the parents were to be the primary disciplinarians and staff intervention was allowed unless ICE was first contacted – – unless ICE could not be reached. Only minimum force was to be used against children.

    Children were being punished in the same manner as prisoners, by lowering of cell (room) temperature and threatened or real separation from their mothers. Additionally, the staff was instructed that the parents were to be the primary disciplinarians and staff intervention was allowed unless ICE was first contacted – – unless ICE could not be reached. Only minimum force was to be used against children. Note: we finally now see employees in ‘friendly’ polo shirts and khakis rather than ‘police’ uniforms.

    16. The government is to provide juvenile case workers.

    How is it possible for CCA to promise child case workers on one hand and to secure exemption from DFPS regulations on the other?

    17. All employees will undergo the same background investigation as all other CCA
    Employees.

    Are there any additional safeguards for the children, i.e., no history of family violence?

    18. ICE and the provider understand that due to the ‘urgency’ of making these changes that there was no time for research to see if Hutto is subject to regulation by any
    loc
    al, state, or federal agency.

    This should have been determined before the lease was ever signed with CCA.

    19. The ‘revised’ contract with Williamson County shows a MONTHLY payment
    Of $2,801,643 for up to 512 detainees, or $5471.96 (if at full capacity) plus
    A per diem of an additional $79 per person if there are more than 512.

    ICE is paying $124,732 for medical expenses for up to 512, and $8.01 per
    Day for each detainee in excess of 512. Yet, prenatal care has been minimal; mothers-to-be report that they are handcuffed and blindfolded for trips to the Round Rock hospital and then are cuffed to the examining table while there.

    20. On an “Exemption Determination” Form submitted to TDFPS, it was stated that school Hours were to be from 8:30-11:30 and 2 – 4:30, with instruction for Pre-K through grade 12. The staff is to escort the children from their room (cell) to the classrooms. While in the classrooms the CCA Staff, including officers, teacher’s aids, coordinators and program facilitators will supervise the children.

    How many children are in a class? Are the children grouped by age, nationality, or what/how? What consideration is given to their knowledge of English – – has CCA taken into
    account that many have been in the US long enough to be fluent in English?

    21. NOTE: we are now told that the school day is 7 hours in compliance with State of Texas regulations.

    Why was it not set at 7 hours initially and how/why could TDFPS ‘approve’
    a shorter school day for these children under the ‘no child left behind’ regulations
    as well as under State of Texas regulations?

    22. On June 14, 2006, TDFPS ‘approved’ the plan basically due to a parent always being present at the facility. On March 28, 2007, Hutto again asked for exemption based on the changes that they had made in the past year that include:

    • Admitting that some families are detained for more than 90 days
    • The school day has been increased to 7 hours, with 5 core subjects and
      two enrichment subjects (not described)
    • The Pre-K program has been eliminated and children under age 5 remain
      with their moms during the day
    • The only time children under age 4 are separated from their parents is
      in a medical emergency or when the parent must meet with an attorney
    • Children now eat lunch with their peers, however following lunch, parents are
      allowed into the cafeteria to visit with their children.

    It is appalling that the TDFPS cannot/will not/has not stepped in to demand that it be allowed to have at least one full-time employee ‘on-site’ to protect the rights of these children. Obviously the hundreds of thousands of dollars with which CCA and the other for-profit prisons have lined our office-holders’ pockets have bought silence.

    SHAME ON THE STATE OF TEXAS!

    Appendix: Texas Gives Chidren to CCA

    Letter from DFPS

    In a letter dated April 13, a representative from the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (DFPS) waives regulation of children held by the Corrections Corporation of America (CCA).

  • Ramsey Muniz and Cinco de Mayo

    Email from Irma Muniz

    Dear Friends:

    Citizens of Mexico fought the French, who had occupied their land, and drove them away by force. These citizens consisted of approximately 5000 Mestizo and Zapotec Indians who were at a disadvantage, as they lacked adequate resources for battle. In spite of their limitations, however, their perseverance defeated the French against all odds.

    On Cinco de Mayo — May 5, 1862, General Ignacio Zaragoza defeated the French in Puebla, Mexico and this came to be known as the “Batalla de Puebla.” The French were eventually expelled in 1867.

    On Cinco de Mayo people throughout the world acknowledge the spirit and
    courage of those who sacrifice with moral conviction. They remember the
    spirit of those who move forward and defend the highest ideals for the
    sake of humanity.

    Feliz Cinco de Mayo

    Legally Ramsey Muniz is completely innocent — and morally too.

    www.freereamsey.com

  • VAWA Federal Program Protects Against Domestic Abuse

    Activist Discusses the Violence Against Women Act

    By Nick Braune
    Mid-Valley Town Crier
    by permission

    One of the people at this week’s May Day labor vigil at McAllen’s Archer Park was Sister Moira Kenny. She seldom misses a labor rights rally, a peace march or an anti-capital punishment vigil. She is a member of the Sisters of Mercy and is a respected Valley activist.

    Because Sister Moira also has an interesting job, I asked her if she could spend a little time explaining her work to me, and she obliged. She is a legal manager/paralegal for the South Texas Civil Rights Project and has worked there for sixteen years.

    Nick Braune: I have seen your office behind the Farmworker Hall on Cesar Chavez Road in Alamo, and there does always seem to be an energetic group there. Could you tell my readers a little about the type of work you do?

    Sister Moira Kenny: Yes, and we are an energetic group, and busy. As our name implies, our focus is on civil rights.

    The Rio Grande Valley has so many problems that can combine to cause discrimination and civil rights abuses. There’s a long list of such problems: excruciating poverty, abysmal health care, severe lack of public services, inadequate educational opportunities, official oppression, a history of exploitation, unfair terms and conditions of employment, denial of the dignity of the farm worker, and the iron grip of powerlessness affecting the heavily Mexican-American population.

    We currently have a broad caseload including some First Amendment freedom of speech issues and some cases on behalf of persons with disabilities not given access to public facilities or access to sign language interpreters by health care providers. We also deal with colonia and property rights issues, employment discrimination matters, the border wall issue, and protection of women from domestic violence.

    Nick: In connection with the domestic violence issue, I was checking on the Texas Civil Rights Project website, and I noticed a reference to women sometimes being afraid to come forward about VAWA issues (Violence Against Women Act) because they fear deportation. Is that a frequent problem?

    Sr. Moira: There are many undocumented women in the Rio Grande Valley who suffer from physical, sexual and/or psychological abuse by their Legal Permanent Resident or U.S. citizen spouses. And yes, these women suffer doubly — from the abuse itself and the fear of deportation. Undocumented wives who marry legal residents hope that their husbands will petition for them; but when the abuse begins, that hope is shattered. Abusive spouses threaten to call Immigration if the wife would dare report the abuse to the police. (The saying is: “You report me, I deport you.”)

    Abused women have a remedy under the VAWA: The Self-Petition Project lets undocumented women petition for themselves and escape their abusive situations by enabling them to obtain working papers and to begin the process of obtaining legal resident status.
    1The women are freed from the nightmare of abuse and the threat of deportation, and they are empowered to live free and independent lives. They also can seek work outside their home and become financially capable of caring for themselves and their children without being dependent on their abusive spouses or the social service agencies.

    Nick: Is there someone you have interviewed whose story you could share a little with our readers.

    Sr. Moira: Elvira is one of our many success stories. Her story of abuse is pretty typical of so many of our clients, in that her husband, Jose (not his real name) would become extremely abusive when drunk. She stayed in the relationship for the sake of the children. Elvira had two children from a previous marriage, and Jose was quite abusive to them also. Often he threatened to kill Elvira. Once out of this relationship through our VAWA program, Elvira prospered, developing her own catering business. She also is a teacher’s aide and has become a Permanent Resident.

    Another client, Margarita, is our best example of the change that can take place in these women. When we first met her, Margarita could not look at us; her eyes and head were always downcast. But over the next three years she started to blossom. For some unknown reason, Immigration took longer with her case than any other. (We think they lost her file!) But over that time, she never lost hope. Her smile has become the most rewarding thanks we could ever get.

    Like Margarita, many of our clients who have been approved through the VAWA program have jobs with local school districts, as home health care providers, or food service providers.

    Nick: Sister Moira, thank you for this interview and for your work. I can see that your office is bringing legal help and hope to many people.

  • CounterPunch Readers on 'Salamat Riad': Mostly Thanks

    I began working with Riad Hamad, in 2004 and have been to oPt 5 times since June 2005.

    The last time I spoke to Riad on the phone was a few days after the federal agents had descended upon him.

    He told me that not only did they cart off more than forty boxes of papers, files, computers, CDs, his daughters childhood diaries, but also an ounce and a half of catnip.

    I told him he sounds like the next Dr. Sami-Al Arian. He made no reply then, but i can imagine he had already decided he would not be locked away or PCWF shut down.

    Riad had the best sense of humor of any activist I have ever known and he was a better Christian than many I have known who claim to be one. Riad did The Beatitudes; he blessed: did good unto the least among us; the poor and oppressed children of Palestine.

    I personally met with some of the Bethlehem children PCWF served and also Husam Jubran; PCWF’s ‘boots on the ground’ coordinator.

    I didn’t meet any terrorists in all my days in the refugee camps and travels through the West Bank. All I met were human beings suffering from injustice and a military occupation we American tax payers support with 3.2 Billion annually.

    thanks for your Counterpunch article.


    Thanks a lot for your article about Riad Hamad printed on Counterpunch today.

    It looks like Riad death is going to go pretty much unnoticed and will be only lightly investigated.

    Thanks for reminding everyone what kind of a man he was and in what kind of a world he (we) lived (live) in.

    Best regards and many thanks.


    that was a beautiful essay. thank you.


    as a good friend and close colleague of Riad Hamad’s and his work over the years, this article is totally shallow, misinformed, exploitative and doesn’t get to any of the core issues that Riad was dealing with — whether he committed suicide or not. I was happy to see someone take on the issue, but your article is very sub-par.


    Excellent piece. Thanks for doing it.