
No Cost Prison Phone Calls
Status: Loss
This common-sense bill will remove the unjust cost barrier to phone calls for incarcerated people and their families.
UPDATE July 31, 2022: The 2022 MA legislative session ended without moving this bill forward. GLAD will continue to advocate for legislation and policy that will enable incarcerated people to more affordably communicate with their families.
An Act Relative to Inmate Telephone Call Rates will foster continued relationships between and among incarcerated people and their family members. The current system unfairly and unethically transfers to incarcerated people, but also their family members, the responsibility for generating additional sources of revenue for the state through the mechanism of high phone rates. It does this at the same time as it disincentivizes incarcerated people from maintaining family support systems on which they rely to endure incarceration and upon which they will need to depend for post-release support.
Given the disproportionate impact of the criminal system and incarceration on people of color and low income individuals, these punitive mechanisms to raise revenue are exploiting some of the most marginalized and vulnerable members of the community. An incarcerated individual’s family should not be penalized and punished during already stressful and destabilizing periods as a means of raising revenue for the criminal system. Massachusetts should join Connecticut, which recently became the first state to enact similar legislation, at the forefront of efforts to reduce the systemic harm exacted on the families of incarcerated individuals through exorbitant billing practices.
Salem News Editorial: End charges for inmate phone calls
Boston Globe Editorial: Charging for prison phone calls burdens families
Related Content
-
Moe v. Trump
Read MoreTrump’s executive order put Maria Moe at imminent risk of being moved to a men’s facility and having her necessary medical withdrawn.
-
Removing Barriers to PrEP in Massachusetts
Read MorePrEP provides our best opportunity to end the HIV epidemic.
-
GLAD and ACLU Urge Massachusetts Schools to Reject Calls for Book Bans
Read MoreThe vast majority of book bans that are taking hold across the country specifically aim to remove books that are by and about LGBTQ people, communities of color, and other marginalized groups.