Topic: ILLINOIS SPENT $2M+ ON CABLE IN PRISONS
Peccy's photo
Thu 12/06/12 07:54 AM
The Illinois Department of Corrections from 2010-2012 spent approximately $2.26 million on cable subscriptions for prison inmates, according to the Illinois Policy Institute and a recent CNSNews.com report.

The Illinois Policy Institute estimates that between July 2010 and June 2012, the Illinois Department of Corrections spent $2,261,009 on cable television for prison inmates, a Freedom of Information Act request shows.

TV channels provided to prisoners include MTV, CMT, Fox Sports, ESPN, Lifetime, BET, the Home Shopping Network, Speed, and Spike TV.

Wait, Lifetime?

“Spending more than $2 million on cable TV for inmates is something Illinois can’t afford, especially considering the state’s already costly prison system,” reads the Illinois Policy Institute’s Nov. 19 “2012 Piglet Book,” co-authored by Benjamin VanMetre and Ted Dabrowski.

“It should be worrisome that the state is wasting taxpayer dollars to fund multimillion dollar cable bills for inmates. Instead of watching Snooki on MTV, maybe inmates’ attention would be better focused on learning a trade skill or studying for a degree,” the report adds.

The goal of the “2012 Piglet Book,” according to its authors, is to “raise awareness about what they view as wasteful spending in Illinois,” as CNSNews.com puts it.

“Something in Illinois we continually hear all the time is that there’s no place left to cut, that we have to increase taxes because lawmakers have cut everything there is to cut,” VanMetre told CNSNews.com.

“But what we do in ‘Piglet’ is we highlight nearly 200 examples of just outrageous ways that lawmakers are spending our money. So, the goal of this project is to make individuals aware of where their tax dollars are being spent and to really push back against this idea that there’s no room left to cut spending,” he adds.

Conrad_73's photo
Thu 12/06/12 08:20 AM

The Illinois Department of Corrections from 2010-2012 spent approximately $2.26 million on cable subscriptions for prison inmates, according to the Illinois Policy Institute and a recent CNSNews.com report.

The Illinois Policy Institute estimates that between July 2010 and June 2012, the Illinois Department of Corrections spent $2,261,009 on cable television for prison inmates, a Freedom of Information Act request shows.

TV channels provided to prisoners include MTV, CMT, Fox Sports, ESPN, Lifetime, BET, the Home Shopping Network, Speed, and Spike TV.

Wait, Lifetime?

“Spending more than $2 million on cable TV for inmates is something Illinois can’t afford, especially considering the state’s already costly prison system,” reads the Illinois Policy Institute’s Nov. 19 “2012 Piglet Book,” co-authored by Benjamin VanMetre and Ted Dabrowski.

“It should be worrisome that the state is wasting taxpayer dollars to fund multimillion dollar cable bills for inmates. Instead of watching Snooki on MTV, maybe inmates’ attention would be better focused on learning a trade skill or studying for a degree,” the report adds.

The goal of the “2012 Piglet Book,” according to its authors, is to “raise awareness about what they view as wasteful spending in Illinois,” as CNSNews.com puts it.

“Something in Illinois we continually hear all the time is that there’s no place left to cut, that we have to increase taxes because lawmakers have cut everything there is to cut,” VanMetre told CNSNews.com.

“But what we do in ‘Piglet’ is we highlight nearly 200 examples of just outrageous ways that lawmakers are spending our money. So, the goal of this project is to make individuals aware of where their tax dollars are being spent and to really push back against this idea that there’s no room left to cut spending,” he adds.
I'd say those Guys are really living it up!shocked surprised

smart2009's photo
Thu 12/06/12 08:28 AM
Life is not fair. Let them enjoy...

Peccy's photo
Thu 12/06/12 09:49 AM
Heaven forbid they spend TV time learning a skill, studying, or something "useless" like that............:laughing: :laughing:

smart2009's photo
Thu 12/06/12 10:00 AM
laugh

msharmony's photo
Thu 12/06/12 12:55 PM
there are 24 hours in a day

few in society spend or should be expected to spend EVERY WAKING MOMENT with a book or a project, leisure/relaxation of some sort is part of the balance everyone NEEDS

breaking it down, the illinois system has roughly 50000 immates

2.4 mill over 24 months amounts to 100 thousand a month or 2 dollars per prisoner per month

not on my list of biggies,,,,

willing2's photo
Thu 12/06/12 01:28 PM
Pre-taped elevator music is very calming.
Give them the entertainment they earned.
30 minutes of pre-taped, relaxation music that is on auto-replay.

I am certain TAX-PAYERS would not want their money spent on entertaining criminals.

Put Unca Joe in charge. He'd fix dey whiney a$$es.

willowdraga's photo
Thu 12/06/12 01:57 PM

The Illinois Department of Corrections from 2010-2012 spent approximately $2.26 million on cable subscriptions for prison inmates, according to the Illinois Policy Institute and a recent CNSNews.com report.

The Illinois Policy Institute estimates that between July 2010 and June 2012, the Illinois Department of Corrections spent $2,261,009 on cable television for prison inmates, a Freedom of Information Act request shows.

TV channels provided to prisoners include MTV, CMT, Fox Sports, ESPN, Lifetime, BET, the Home Shopping Network, Speed, and Spike TV.

Wait, Lifetime?

“Spending more than $2 million on cable TV for inmates is something Illinois can’t afford, especially considering the state’s already costly prison system,” reads the Illinois Policy Institute’s Nov. 19 “2012 Piglet Book,” co-authored by Benjamin VanMetre and Ted Dabrowski.

“It should be worrisome that the state is wasting taxpayer dollars to fund multimillion dollar cable bills for inmates. Instead of watching Snooki on MTV, maybe inmates’ attention would be better focused on learning a trade skill or studying for a degree,” the report adds.

The goal of the “2012 Piglet Book,” according to its authors, is to “raise awareness about what they view as wasteful spending in Illinois,” as CNSNews.com puts it.

“Something in Illinois we continually hear all the time is that there’s no place left to cut, that we have to increase taxes because lawmakers have cut everything there is to cut,” VanMetre told CNSNews.com.

“But what we do in ‘Piglet’ is we highlight nearly 200 examples of just outrageous ways that lawmakers are spending our money. So, the goal of this project is to make individuals aware of where their tax dollars are being spent and to really push back against this idea that there’s no room left to cut spending,” he adds.


It is the way they lull the sheeple into a stupor, like with Faux News Channel. It makes the inmates easier to control, for real.

And cable is cheaper than training and rehabing them.


msharmony's photo
Thu 12/06/12 03:45 PM
they arent all animals deserving of only bread water and a cage

2 dollars a prisoner is not that much of an expense for them to have a connection to whats happening outside the walls

they are still human beings

one 'luxury' in the middle of daily threat of violence/death, 6x10 space, shared and unsanitary toilets, and God knows what else probably doesnt really bother most decent folks

taxpaying or otherwise



willing2's photo
Thu 12/06/12 03:52 PM
Edited by willing2 on Thu 12/06/12 04:01 PM
Better idea.

Pipe in continuous Barry Manilow. 24/ freakin' 7.

Music they can make love to.
rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl rofl

Bravalady's photo
Thu 12/06/12 07:29 PM
Well, some places you can't get TV at all without cable, isn't that right (?) But either way, (1) there are educational programs on TV, (2) I bet there are some kind of limits on what and how much they can watch, and (3) lulling them into a stupor isn't all bad, considering what bored and angry prisoners might be capable of.

Continuous Barry Manilow would be cruel and unusual and I'm sure it would go to the Supreme Court. laugh