preload
KathleenKathleen

Beyond Alligator Alcatraz

By Kathleen Bird “Alligator Alcatraz,” the nickname for Florida’s Sumter Correctional Institution confinement unit, is infamous for cramming 32 men into one 750-square-foot space—just 23 square feet per inmate. Reports from watchdog groups and the Florida Department of Corrections describe broken toilets, sweltering heat, inedible food, and ignored medical needs. But what’s more alarming is how similar these conditions are to many prisons across the U.S. In most state facilities, a two-person cell offers only about 60 square feet total. Dormitory-style housing units often cram 60 or more inmates into shared spaces with only 60–75 square feet per person. According to the Prison Policy Initiative and ACLU, overcrowding, poor sanitation, and failing infrastructure are widespread—from Rikers Island to Mississippi’s Parchman Prison. These conditions persist due to chronic underfunding, public apathy, and political reluctance to appear “soft on crime.” Yet the cost of that indifference is measured in suffering, increased recidivism, worsening mental health, and ripple effects on families and communities. We must stop treating cruelty as a feature of incarceration. Real reform requires action: support the First Step Implementation Act, push state lawmakers for independent prison oversight, and back organizations like the Prison Policy Initiative, Southern Center for Human Rights, and Florida Cares. Contact your state representatives and demand that incarceration meets basic standards of human dignity. If Alligator Alcatraz is only slightly worse than the norm, then the entire system is the problem — and it's past time to fix it.#KathleenBirdWrites#PrisonReform #AlligatorAlcatraz#PrisonPolicyInitiative

Florida • 3 days ago
write a comment...