Free calls for incarcerated New Yorkers; how mobile money users save

Incarcerated people can now make phone calls for free in New York state

The department of corrections recently negotiated a new rate it will now pay to its telecom provider. Five other states have adopted similar policies since New York City passed its law in 2018.  

Previously, imprisoned New Yorkers were allowed three free phone calls, each lasting 15 minutes, per week. Calls after that cost 2.4 cents per minute. The change is expected to save 30,000 incarcerated people some $13.3 million per year, according to Worth Rises, an antiprison nonprofit. People imprisoned in New York can work but make only between 10 and 33 cents an hour, significantly less than the nationwide average of 86 cents an hour.

Why We Wrote This

In our progress roundup, phone communications – both basic and advanced – are enabling new benefits. In New York state, incarcerated people can make calls for free, facilitating better connections to family and friends. And mobile money services developed in Kenya are now shown to help people accumulate savings.

Studies have found that consistent contact with loved ones has benefits, from better parent-child relationships to incarcerated people being less likely to reoffend after release. New York has set a goal of slashing recidivism to 17%, from 19% today, by 2030.
Sources: Stateline, The New York Times, ILR Carow, Prison Policy Initiative

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