FL prisoners announce Operation PUSH starting Jan 15

FL prisoners announce Operation PUSH starting Jan 15 aimed at crippling the prison system with non-cooperation in the spirit of Martin Luther King Jr

See update here

The following message is from a group of prisoners who are spread throughout the Florida Department of Corrections (DOC). It was sent anonymously and compiled from a series of correspondences received on November 26 and 27 by both the Gainesville chapter of the Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee (IWOC) and the national Campaign to Fight Toxic Prisons.

We have been able to verify the authenticity of this message which was also posted on SPARC (Supporting Prisoners and Real Change), a social media page for Florida prisoners and their families.

According to their statement, these prisoners plan to initiate a work stoppage or “laydown” beginning Monday, January 15th, coinciding with MLK Day, in nonviolent protest of conditions in FL prisons. They are calling it Operation PUSH.

Their primary demands are clear and concise: end prison slavery, stop price gouging, and fully return parole. They believe these issues have directly created the overcrowding that is responsible for the deplorable conditions in Florida prisons.

Their statement also raises other major issues that need to be grappled with, including the death penalty, voting rights and environmental health conditions.

From the communication we have received, these prisoners claim to represent thousands in at least eight facilities already. And say they are prepared to “stay down indefinitely” until someone addresses their concerns. 

The following text is their message regarding Operation PUSH in its entirety:

FL Prisoners Call for Operation PUSH to Improve the Lives of Incarcerated People and the Communities We Come From

Sending out an S.O.S. to all parties concerned!

We are currently forming a network agency within D.O.C. We are asking all prisoners within the Department of Corrections to take a stand by laying down starting January 15, 2018, until the injustice we see facing prisoners within the Florida system is resolved.

We are calling on all organized groups as well as religious systems to come together on the same page. We will be taking a stand for:

1. Payment for our labor, rather than the current slave arrangement
2. Ending outrageous canteen prices
3. Reintroducing parole incentives to lifers and those with Buck Rogers dates

Along with these primary demands, we are also expressing our support for the following goals:

• Stop the overcrowding and acts of brutality committed by officers throughout FDOC which have resulted in the highest death rates in prison history.
• Expose the environmental conditions we face, like extreme temperatures, mold, contaminated water, and being placed next to toxic sites such as landfills, military bases and phosphate mines (including a proposed mine which would surround the Reception and Medical Center prison in Lake Butler).
• Honor the moratorium on state executions, as a court-ordered the state to do, without the legal loophole now being used to kill prisoners on death row.
• Restore voting rights as a basic human right to all, not a privilege, regardless of criminal convictions.

Operation PUSH

Every Institution must prepare to lay down for at least one month or longer: No prisoners will go to their job assignments.

Our goal is to make the Governor realize that it will cost the state of Florida millions of dollars daily to contract outside companies to come and cook, clean, and handle the maintenance. This will cause a total BREAK DOWN.

In order to become very effective we must use everything we have to show that we mean business. This is our chance to establish UNITY and SOLIDARITY. This is the strategy of Operation PUSH! A voice locked up is not a voice unheard!

Slave labor

We are encouraging prisoners throughout the DOC to band together in an effort to demand payment for work performances.

One of the main reasons why we’re demanding payment as opposed to gain time is because the DOC is bent on taking something we’ve earned away and using it against us to restructure new release dates.

Another reason is that $50 and a bus ticket to parts unknown is not working for us, especially if we have conditions that require us to pay out of pocket cost.

The system knows that the odds are heavily stacked against us when we reenter into mainstream society, so they make it look like they’re helping us by giving us $50, but the reality is it’s not enough to do anything with!

With even a modest amount of payment we will be able to save up something to survive outside with; for those with lengthy sentences, they would be able to support themselves inside.

At any event, once we win establishment of payment, this would be the one thing the system won’t be able to take away from us.
While this will be the strongest “Push,” our next concern will be on price-gouging us with items we buy out of canteen.

Price Gouging

We can no longer allow the state to take advantage of our families’ hard earned money by over-charging us, they’re taking food out our mouths!

All prisoners and their family members are getting pimped with these outrageous canteen prices. We want regular market value.

Take for example: one case of soup on the street cost $4.00. It costs us $17.00 on the inside. This is highway robbery without a gun. It’s not just us that they’re taking from. It’s our families who struggle to make ends meet and send us money—they are the real victims that the state of Florida is taking advantage of. We got to put a stop to this!

Parole

The federal government has given every state in the country a choice as to how they wish to use incentives to reward their prisoners. Florida decided to offer gain time as an incentive, however, those who have life sentences and Buck Rogers dates don’t have any incentives.

We are now demanding that the State of Florida bring back parole and come up with a payment for prisoners work performances, as the law required.

Let us demonstrate why these two issues are so important. Take for example someone who has done a ten year bid. In the process he loses all family support and money stops, the letters stop. He finds himself supporting himself the best way he can. In short, the system robbed him of ten years of labor.

He has nothing to show for it so now even if he does his ten year bid with no probation or parole, he’s still a convicted felon, and finding a job is very difficult.

These are the things we’re protesting, and we are currently trying to mentally prepare Florida inmates throughout the DOC for January 15.

WE HAVE TO STRIKE BACK AND STAND FOR WHAT IS RIGHT!

What do you do when there’s no body giving you jack shit and you’re hungry? Add to this you wearing hand-me-downs, looking like you can’t be trusted? This is enough to drive you off the edge and try your hand at stealing, robbing, or selling drugs to make a dollar.

This is not a joke! In fact it’s our reality and for those who do have strong family support, we salute you, but please understand you are the few that are blessed with the foot hold that you have. This is not the case for the over-all majority, and this is the cause of high recidivism rates.

It’s time we reverse the psychology and STAND together. The way to strike back is not with violence as this is what they want! If we show them violence they will have a legitimate excuse to use brute force against us and explain to the public that they had to use brute force in order to contain the situation. However, their weakness is their wallet.

By sitting down and doing nothing, each institution will have the responsibility of feeding, cleaning, and all the maintenance. DO THE MATH.

The more institutions that have to employ outside contractors, the sooner we will see results.

Welcome to Operation PUSH.

Please forward this.

62 responses to “FL prisoners announce Operation PUSH starting Jan 15”

  1. Florida: In a State of Incarceration
    C. Michael Lau

    In 2010 Florida’s Governor Rick Scott’s response to prison reform, “I will not allow these prisons to become employment centers for these counties,” and one of his first orders of business was the closure of seven prisons, but reform has been falling short of expectations.
    Immediately after Scott’s reelection in 2014, it was reveled that prisoner abuse and crime within the prison system was rampant – out of control, and investigations had been covered up by the Florida Department of Corrections and law enforcement. There is speculation that cover-ups have been at the behest of the Governor’s Office. Some of these abuses have resulted in the deaths of prisoners.
    While lawmakers in Tallahassee claim to be searching for alternatives to end abuses and restore sensibility to a broken prison system, including attempting to legislate an independent oversight commission, Scott and prison officials attempt to disclaim the need for oversight that does not include the Governor’s Office.
    Though many lawmakers understand the need for a complete overhaul of the prison system, neither Scott nor anyone employed by the Department of Corrections wants reforms that introduce further prison closures.
    Florida’s bloated prison system with over 100,000 prisoners, is a strain on the state budget, bit its employ of correctional and support staff stimulate local economics, and a reduction of the prison population very well could force prison closures devastating the economy of economically challenged area of the state such as the Florida Panhandle – this area alone houses over half of the state prison population. Industry and agriculture in those areas have virtually dried-up leaving the Department of Corrections a major contributor to the area’s economy.
    Prisoners have become “human commodities.”
    A bloated prison population us actually a reward for counties housing prisoners. In 2001 Florida’s past Attorney General Bob Butterworth issued an opinion that counties housing prisoners should be allowed to count those prisoners in their population counts, stating, “In light of the specific language of Article VII, section I, Florida Constitution, and section 124.01 Florida Statutes, it is my opinion the Gulf County Board of Commissioners is not authorized to distribute the population numbers for the prison among county’s district, but must utilize the population numbers for the prison population figures as they exist in place…” (AGO 2001-55, August 1, 2001)(emphasis added)
    The political ramifications of prison reform and reducing a county’s prison population very well could alter the political demographics for a county that loses prisoners, and its bids for grants and other finding to support the county go away as well with that loss.
    Another reality – prisoners in Florida are taxpaying unemployed residence of each county housing them supporting a broken system, but has no vote or voice in their welfare.
    The court rooms become the trading houses for these human commodities, and crime in Florida feeds that commodities market. Until these counties find other industries and market, human commodities is no less than human trafficking. Isn’t that against the law?
    Email: cmichaellau@gmail.com

    Like

  2. […] same time of anti-pipeline escalation last year. This will kick-off what the prisoners are calling Operation PUSH, a work stoppage of indefinite length. Our friends at the Campaign to Fight Toxic Prisons re-posted […]

    Like

  3. […] The following is a statement is from a group of Haitian prisoners in the FL DOC system who are supporting the prisoner strike slated to begin on Jan 15. […]

    Like

  4. […] for at least one month or longer: No prisoners will go to their job assignments,” prisoners said in a lengthy statement, compiled from a series of letters they wrote in […]

    Like

  5. […] the least one month or longer: No prisoners will go to their job assignments,” prisoners stated in a lengthy statement, compiled from a collection of letters they wrote in […]

    Like

  6. The minimum mandatory sentences are a must issue 4 another major reason to bring to the Forefront of this nonviolent protest.

    Like

  7. The minimum mandatory sentences are a must issue 4 another major reason to bring to the Forefront of this nonviolent protest.

    Like

  8. the prr that is leaving people in the hardest predicament are their lives with families suffering as well. Individuals are getting life sentences 4 crimes that aren’t taking any life. They are taking the lives of young individuals with no way to make it back to society. But this enhancement also believes these individuals with no way to get parole it is mandatory and most of these system is under an enhancement. The prr is an issue that has been brought up time and time again over the last 15 years 2D legislative bored but for some reason keeps getting shot down. There are individuals with the same crimes yet sentences completely different like life and five or ten years. I see a major difference in the sentence for the same crime.

    Like

  9. […] for at least one month or longer: No prisoners will go to their job assignments,” prisoners said in a lengthy statement, compiled from a series of letters they wrote in […]

    Like

  10. Salute to all prison activists incarcerated in Florida’s prisons. My name is Abraham Kimani, and I am from Los Angeles CA. I am sending this message to express my full support for your Operation PUSH movement. Although I have never been incarcerated, I fully believe that all incarcerated people should deserve to be treated humanely. As an African-American working class socialist, I believe that incarcerated persons should be paid the same wages for prison labor as those who work on the outside receive for their labors. More importantly, I believe that all those who are incarcerated should have full civil rights and economic opportunities restored to them upon release. It is my belief that such restorative justice for those formerly incarcerated can greatly reduce the chances of them going back to prison. How can society expect those who have been incarcerated to be productive members of society when their rights to work and political participation have not been restored to them? I stand in full solidarity with those incarcerated in Florida, and throughout the U.S. who are fighting for change within themselves, as well as the conditions in prison. Prisons were not only designed to hold people in physical bondage, but to mentally enslave people (becoming institutionalized). It is also my belief that if incarcerated people are mentally free, then the chances of being physically re-enslaved in prison in the future are greatly reduced. To all those incarcerated fighting for justice, keep fighting the good fight, may justice prevail, and God bless you all.

    Like

  11. […] prisoners about why they organized the strike and what they hope to accomplish can be found at: https://fighttoxicprisons.wordpress.com/2017/12/06/fl-prisoners-announce-operation-push-starting-jan… SPARC Facebook Page: […]

    Like

  12. […] The following is a statement is from a group of Haitian prisoners in the FL DOC system who are supporting the prisoner strike slated to begin on Jan 15. […]

    Like

  13. Solidarity to You all from Illinois

    Like

  14. […] to the full text for Operation PUSH, which can be found on the website of The Campaign to Fight Toxic Prisons, the […]

    Like

  15. Reblogged this on Moorbey'z Blog.

    Like

  16. […] used by Florida prisoners and their families. The statement was compiled from a series of messages sent by prisoners to the Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee’s Gainesville chapter and the […]

    Like

  17. […] used by Florida prisoners and their families. The statement was compiled from a series of messages sent by prisoners to the Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee’s Gainesville chapter and the […]

    Like

  18. […] by Florida prisoners and their families. The statement was compiled from a series of messages sent by prisoners to the Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee’s Gainesville chapter and […]

    Like

  19. […] “Our goal is to make the governor realise that it will cost the state of Florida millions of dollars daily to contract outside companies to come and cook, clean and handle the maintenance,” the unnamed prisoners said in a statement posted on the website of the inmates’ advocacy group Fight Toxic Prisons. […]

    Like

  20. […] “Our goal is to make the governor realise that it will cost the state of Florida millions of dollars daily to contract outside companies to come and cook, clean and handle the maintenance,” the unnamed prisoners said in a statement posted on the website of the inmates’ advocacy group Fight Toxic Prisons. […]

    Like

  21. […] “Our goal is to make the governor realise that it will cost the state of Florida millions of dollars daily to contract outside companies to come and cook, clean and handle the maintenance,” the unnamed prisoners said in a statement posted on the website of the inmates’ advocacy group Fight Toxic Prisons. […]

    Like

  22. […] “Our goal is to make the governor realise that it will cost the state of Florida millions of dollars daily to contract outside companies to come and cook, clean and handle the maintenance,” the unnamed prisoners said in a statement posted on the website of the inmates’ advocacy group Fight Toxic Prisons. […]

    Like

  23. […] “Our goal is to make the governor realise that it will cost the state of Florida millions of dollars daily to contract outside companies to come and cook, clean and handle the maintenance,” the unnamed prisoners said in a statement posted on the website of the inmates’ advocacy group Fight Toxic Prisons. […]

    Like

  24. […] month, a group of prisoners announced Operation Push in a statement to the advocacy group Campaign to Fight Toxic Prisons. The organizers said that during the protest […]

    Like

  25. […] month, a group of prisoners announced Operation Push in a statement to the advocacy group Campaign to Fight Toxic Prisons. The organizers said that during the protest […]

    Like

  26. […] month, a group of prisoners announced Operation Push in a statement to the advocacy group Campaign to Fight Toxic Prisons. The organizers said that during the protest […]

    Like

  27. […] month, a group of prisoners announced Operation Push in a statement to the advocacy group Campaign to Fight Toxic Prisons. The organizers said that during the protest […]

    Like

  28. […] month, a group of prisoners announced Operation Push in a statement to the advocacy group Campaign to Fight Toxic Prisons. The organizers said that during the protest […]

    Like

  29. […] month, a group of prisoners announced Operation Push in a statement to the advocacy group Campaign to Fight Toxic Prisons. The organizers said that during the protest […]

    Like

  30. […] month, a group of prisoners announced Operation Push in a statement to the advocacy group Campaign to Fight Toxic Prisons. The organizers said that during the protest […]

    Like

  31. […] month, a group of prisoners announced Operation Push in a statement to the advocacy group Campaign to Fight Toxic Prisons. The organizers said that during the protest […]

    Like

  32. […] month, a group of prisoners announced Operation Push in a statement to the advocacy group Campaign to Fight Toxic Prisons. The organizers said that during the protest […]

    Like

  33. […] month, a group of prisoners announced Operation Push in a statement to the advocacy group Campaign to Fight Toxic Prisons. The organizers said that during the protest […]

    Like

  34. prisoners should be compensated at normal wages and that money held for them in escrow until they are released or disbursed to their families as normal paychecks. for those who will be released this can serve as a way to give them a boost upon release and reduce chances of recidivism. only a system that profits from putting people in cages would be against something like this that promotes public safety in the long run

    Like

  35. I commend the dedication , Florida Prison system is not reforming criminals its creating more hardened criminals . push on…..GOVERNOR RICK SCOTT , A SOCIETY IS ONLY AS CIVILIZED AS IT TREATS THE WEAKEST MEMBERS. PRIISON INMATE DEATHS ARE INTOLERABLE AND ALL CITIZENS OF FLORIDA SHOULD FIGHT FOR WHAT IS RIGHT …TREAT PEOPLE HUMANE .GOD BLESS ALL THE INCARCERATED AND THE PEOPLE WHO LOVE THEM .

    Like

  36. […] “Our goal is to make the governor realise that it will cost the state of Florida millions of dollars daily to contract outside companies to come and cook, clean and handle the maintenance,” the unnamed prisoners said in a statement posted on the website of the inmates’ advocacy group Fight Toxic Prisons. […]

    Like

  37. Does anyone know if tbe inmates are going to use the phones during the lay down? Is that part of the sacrifice inmates are making ? Does anyone know the current condituons inside the prisons that inmates are fully laying down ? I would love aome insite in to the reality of this operarion push. This is a call for all citizens of the state of Flprida to refuse to tolerate any discipline that is or could be considered torture or excessive

    Like

  38. I host “Leid Stories”on the Progressive Radio Network. Interested in this story, but having a rough time making contact.

    Like

  39. Reblogged this on Raising Cain and commented:
    This post outlines why prisons are toxic and why we need to fight them. #OperationPUSH

    Like

  40. […] “Our goal is to make the governor realise that it will cost the state of Florida millions of dollars daily to contract outside companies to come and cook, clean and handle the maintenance,” the unnamed prisoners said in a statement posted on the website of the inmates’ advocacy group Fight Toxic Prisons. […]

    Like

  41. […] for the strike began around last Thanksgiving. An anonymous letter was sent to the Campaign to Fight Toxic Prisons (FightXPrisons) and the Gainesville branch of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW). IWW […]

    Like

  42. […] “Our goal is to make the governor realise that it will cost the state of Florida millions of dollars daily to contract outside companies to come and cook, clean and handle the maintenance,” the unnamed prisoners said in a statement posted on the website of the inmates’ advocacy group Fight Toxic Prisons. […]

    Like

Leave a reply to Florida prisoners plan Martin Luther King Day strike over ‘slavery’ – Planet News Cancel reply