The Chow Hall in Tough Times (by Kenneth Hartman)
It’s a real honour to introduce this post. Serving life in California, Kenneth Hartman
is one of the best prison writers I've ever come across. I highly recommend his hook,
The guards are lined tip mere feet apart, ready to
pounce on extra cartons of milk or stray, smuggled
pieces of fmil Since the news that the courts have
ordered the shrinking of the bloated prison system in
California, there's a harsher, more aggressive posture.
These are tough times in the joint for all of us, on both
sides of the fence, albeit for different reasons.
A short female guard motions to me as I walk out
across their skirmish line. She appears to be
particularly unhinged; probably from working too
many overtime shifts, trying to make some extra bank
before that-becomes: a lot harder.
The stress level in these encounters is high for the
searelier.no less than the searched. Occasionally, a
prisoner can't take being muscled around any longer
and spins.on the offending guard. Fve never done
anything like that, not in my entire 32 years
incarcerated, but I can see how-it happens.
Fin over six feet tail so she lias trouble reaching up
high enough to pat me down. Frustrated, the little
guard is now barking out barely intelligible orders to
spread my legs farther out and straighten my arms,
while she's pushing ray waist around in front of her. I
realize this isn't really a search. This is part of a plan.
In California, the guards are all part of a union that de
facto runs the prisons. Traditionally, whenever a court
steps into their business and orders changes, the
■guards provoke some violence, it’s always worked to
hide the fail are of the prisons behind a wall of chaos
and strife.
Back in the early c80s? when I was at Folsom Prison, a
federal judge demanded the practice of locking people
up in the hole for alleged gang activities without, any
actual evidence be .ended. In response to this
usurpation, two tiers of cells were cleared out and 56
blacks and four Mexicans were put,on one. of the tiers
with the reverse imbalance on the other. Then they,
cranked open all the cells at the same time with the
gun post guards on the other side of the building, ^
Mind you., this was during a hot war between these
two groups:"
After the entirely predictable results, the poor federal
judge- reversed his order.
This time around if s going to be harder because the
U.S, Supreme Court doesn't often back downM" ■
When she realized she couldir’t get a rise out-of me;
she dismissed me in a littiT babbling some ■
incomprehensible gibberish as I walked on back to the
housing units.
All of this revved up .angst .and irritatioji- on their part
can be explained by two very human responses. The
first being the old kick~the-dog-syudrome common
amongst second graders after mom chastises them and
public employees when they're getting kicked off the
great, gravy train of taxpayer dollars.
More fundameiitaily though, at the deeper levels, il/s
all about tear. Fear of an uncertain future. Fear of
serious .and consequential scrutiny. Fear of being
exposed. The prisons in this state,.and all across this
country, have operated with virtual impunity for the
past quarter of a century. Reagan “s judges granted the
system practical immunity from prosecution. The
money poured in to pay for the biggest, most
expensive, and least effective prison, system in the
world. Thanks to the Great Recession the dynamic has
changed. This bottomless well of overtime and
unfunded liability is, finally, getting capped.
Punishment for the sake of inflicting pain is now too
expensive to continue.
When I walk out of the chow hall and see them all
lined up, primed and pumped tip for a fight I just
imagine them standing in line at the unemployment
office. Somehow, they don’t seem so menacing that
way.
4Trr4lfir4ri
Kenneth £, Hartman has served 32 continuous years
in the California.'Department of Corrections and
Rehabilitation on a life without the possibility of
parole sentence. An award-winning writer and prison
reform activist, he is the author of Mother California:
A Story of Redemption Behind Bars, (Atlas & Co..
2009), a memoir of hie in prison... For more
information, see vvw\v..kemietheharfman.com. He can
be contacted indirectly at
kenneth efaailmanffogmai 1.com or
kemietheh artman@hotmail. com