IDOC inmates continue to face commissary shortages
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[December 09, 2021]
By BETH HUNDSDORFER
Capitol News Illinois
bhundsdorfer@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – To Illinois prisoners,
commissary is more than candy bars, shaving cream and socks. It
represents normalcy and choice.
“It’s everything to them,” said Melly Rios, whose husband is in
Stateville Correctional Center serving 45 years for murder.
A recent report from the John Howard Association, a prison watchdog
group, detailed widespread supply shortages at Illinois Department of
Corrections prison commissaries around the state. Soap, deodorant,
detergent, writing materials, thermal shirts, socks, underwear and
canned meat and noodles are all in short supply.
“It’s not like luxury items like candy bars or the hot new Christmas
gift. These commissaries provide items that are basic necessities,” said
Alan Mills, Executive Director of the Uptown People’s Law Center. Mills
has litigated prisoner civil rights cases for more than 40 years.
An IDOC spokesperson wrote in an email that COVID-19 has impacted global
supply chains, leading to shortages. Essential raw materials are not
making it to distribution centers and there is a shortage of workers in
manufacturing centers and logistic companies, she wrote.
But the John Howard report released Monday points to a new vendor and a
contentious bidding process. In June 2021, Keefe Group was awarded the
contract for the entire IDOC system. The contract award was contested by
another vendor that was not awarded the contract. IDOC then contracted
on an emergency basis with Keefe to provide items.
Jennifer Vollen-Katz, the executive director for the John Howard
Association, believes both things are contributing to the shortages.
“I think that it’s a combination of those things,” Vollen-Katz said.
“But it’s confounding to me why it has taken so long to resolve.”
IDOC received approval and entered into five emergency contracts with
vendors, according to an IDOC spokesperson. The department expects that
the expanded contracts and more available avenues for purchasing will
allow for the restocking of prison commissaries.
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File photo provided by Illinois Times.
Two weeks ago, IDOC distributed bags of food and hygiene items,
toothpaste and brushes, into care packages to all inmates.
It’s a nice short-term solution, Mills said. But with an agency facing
staffing shortages and a global pandemic, Mills said this should be an
easy fix.
Under current security protocols, care packages from the public cannot
be accepted at IDOC prisons. The John Howard Association put forth the
suggestion to allow friends and family members of inmates to purchase
care packages from already approved vendors so they could be shipped
directly to inmates.
“Right now, that is not approved, but we hope they will consider it,”
Vollen-Katz said.
Rios told Capitol News Illinois in a phone call that she talks to her
husband every day. As she headed home late Tuesday afternoon to call
him, she raised her voice to speak over the traffic noise. She’s
worried, she said. He’s lost weight since he is unable to get noodles
and canned meat. But it’s more than that. It’s his state of mind, she
said, at losing one more thing.
“I know many people may think that they are bad people, but if you are
going to put them in there, you have to take care of them,” Rios said.
“I have to be his voice. It’s the only one he has right now.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service
covering state government and distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press
Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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