For the second time this year, prisoners in Alabama are planning a nonviolent demonstration and work stoppage to protest conditions inside the state’s prisons.
Melvin Ray, an inmate at the St. Clair correctional facility in Springville and founder of prison-based group Free Alabama Movement (FAM) says this weekend’s strike is an effort to improve education programs and end overcrowding, harsh sentencing, and what he calls “the free labor system” in which prisoners work for little-to-no monetary compensation.
In an interview with Salon, Ray said, “There is not even a pretense of doing anything about ‘corrections’ … they’re running a slave empire.” Ray says not enough is being done to rehabilitate inmates for their lives after incarceration.
Ray stressed the importance of this weekend’s demonstration remaining nonviolent, acknowledging that violence is one of the main reasons many inmates are imprisoned.
The work inmates do includes food preparation, laundry, and facility maintenance. The Alabama Department of Corrections also runs a prison industries program which operates 17 different facilities across the state where inmates do everything from furniture construction to license-plate manufacturing.
Most inmates work inside the prisons and receive no wages. According to the state Department of Corrections, that’s how it has always been. Other inmates work in outside facilities and receive only 35 to 50 cents per hour as compensation for their labor.
Ray says the reason his group has decided to protest with work stoppages is because labor remains “the only weapon or strategy … we have,” adding, “They’re incarcerating people for the free labor.”
Ray spoke to Salon from prison using a cell phone — something he’s forbidden to have by prison rules — and did not explain how he was able to make the call.









