Green jobs for prisoners
Photo: hamner.jonathan/Flickr
One of the department’s sustainability programs is a partnership with Evergreen State College. The pilot program features several activities including a moss-in-prison research project, a lecture series, an onsite greenhouse and garden, the use of worms for composting, recycling, beekeeping and water management.
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Comments(2)
Posted By DMW - Tue, Jun 23 2009 at 9:54 PM ESTThis is the revolution! A peaceful and wonderful one.
I love hearing stories like this, it gives me so much hope. Especially after listening to all the debate about there not being such a thing as global warming and the ignorance and push back to new laws that support sustainability. This program will change prisoners from the heart up! Once they see what the earth's makeup is they won't be able to help but be transformed. This has got to be the best form of rehabilitation imaginable. Whoever's idea this is deserves an award. They will.... More


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Oh, for Pete's Sake
DMW's comment on this post, breathlessly titled "This is the Revolution" is the silliest thing I've read all day. Yes, hon, brutal gang members, heartless rapists, and cold-blooded murderers are going to be magically transformed into yoga-practicing, granola types simply by messing around with worms and compost.
You realize, of course, that prisons are controlled by race-based gangs, that rape of smaller and weaker cons is common, and that although they're forbidden from having cell.... More