News

Becker bill seeks to end 'cruel' price markups at prison stores

SB 474, which caps markups at 35%, advances through Legislature

State Sen. Josh Becker, D-Menlo Park, speaks to media about school reopenings at Barron Park Elementary in Palo Alto on March 2, 2021. Photo by Magali Gauthier.

Seeking to curb what he calls cruel and egregious markups at California prisons, state Sen. Josh Becker is spearheading a law that would cap prices on items sold at canteen stores.

The new legislation, known as Senate Bill 474 or Basic Act, reduces the markups on items sold in prison stores to 35% above what is paid to vendors. The bill cleared the Legislature this week and is now on its way to Gov. Gavin Newsom for his signature.

For Becker, SB 474 is the second major piece of legislation that addresses prison conditions. Last year, he successfully advanced SB 1008, which allowed incarcerated individuals to make and receive phone calls free of charge.

The new bill was influenced by recent studies that showed markups of more than 200% for some items at prison canteens. A 2020 audit by the Inmate Welfare Fund found that canteen items were marked up an average of 65% of the price paid to the vendor, which contributed significantly to economic burdens suffered by both the incarcerated individuals and their family members.

Isa Borgeson, campaign manager at the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, testified at a June meeting of the Assembly Public Safety Committee that because of inadequate food and hygiene provisions in state prisons, most incarcerated people depend on canteen purchases for basic needs. But given the high markups and extremely low wages, essential items like toothpaste and body wash remain out of reach for many. The financial burden, she noted, often falls on their family members, who are disproportionately Black and brown women.

Help sustain the local news you depend on.

Your contribution matters. Become a member today.

Join

"It is unacceptable for incarcerated people and their loved ones to fund the Department of Corrections' operating expenses and staffing costs through high markups on essential goods," Borgeson said in her testimony in support of SB 474.

She also read a letter from Steve Warren, an inmate at San Quentin, who listed some of the prices that the canteen charges: $10.80 for a case of soup, $3.60 for a stick of deodorant; $2.40 for laundry soap. With inmates earning a minimum wage of $0.08 per hour, he receives about $12.80 per month.

"Overpriced canteen items force me to become a financial burden to my family," the letter stated.

In his testimony to the Assembly Public Safe Committee, Becker noted that the February 2023 price list at San Quentin State Prison shows Aquafresh toothpaste going for $5.50, more than twice of what it would cost at Walgreens, where it retails for $1.83. These markups, he said, "make may produces inaccessible and economically drain over $30 million a year from predominantly low-income families of color."

"We need the BASIC Act, because incarcerated people should not have to choose between basic necessities of food, hygiene products or health supplements," Becker said.

Stay informed

Get the latest local news and information sent straight to your inbox.

Stay informed

Get the latest local news and information sent straight to your inbox.

A 2020 report by Impact Justice, which surveyed 250 formerly incarcerated individuals and 230 friends and families of incarcerated individuals, underscored the extent of the problem. Three in five formerly incarcerated people reported they could not afford commissary purchases and many people are "forced to choose between buying food and purchasing necessities such as toothpaste or making costly phone calls to loved ones." Furthermore, 75% reported that they were served rotten or spoiled food while they were incarcerated.

"We heard stories of people so desperate for palatable food that they would trade sex for commissary items, form romantic relationships with others who could afford to shop at the commissary, or get involved in gang activity when commissary items were a reward," the 2020 report states "As one formerly incarcerated person said, 'If you didn't cook…you starved.'"

Assembly Majority Leader Isaac Brown, D-Los Angeles, who presented SB 474 on the Assembly floor, served as the principal co-author of the legislation.

"I have family who have been incarcerated," Bryan said in a statement Thursday, Sept. 14. "I've got J-Pay on my phone right now. You send a hygiene kit or you send some noodles, and then you see your final fines and fees, and you realize that this is the most expensive cup of noodles you've ever seen."

The legislation sailed through the formal process, boosted by support from more than 2,000 individuals and dozens of advocacy groups focused on prison reform and social justice.

Most Viewed Stories

Most Viewed Stories

In a Thursday statement, Becker called the prison markups of food and hygiene items "egregious and cruel." He noted that this year alone, prices have increased by least three times in some prisons, with coffee in these places now going for $9.05 and toilet paper for $1 per roll.

"We have a $15 billion prison budget in this state," Becker said in the statement. "It is time we stopped profiting off the sale of basic necessities to one of our state's most vulnerable populations."

Craving a new voice in Peninsula dining?

Sign up for the Peninsula Foodist newsletter.

Sign up now

Looking for more Redwood City stories? The RWC Pulse will be your new source of vital news and information. Sign up to be among the first to get our daily local news headlines sent to your inbox for free.

Gennady Sheyner
 
Gennady Sheyner covers the City Hall beat in Palo Alto as well as regional politics, with a special focus on housing and transportation. Before joining the Palo Alto Weekly/PaloAltoOnline.com in 2008, he covered breaking news and local politics for the Waterbury Republican-American, a daily newspaper in Connecticut. Read more >>

Follow on Twitter @paloaltoweekly, Facebook and on Instagram @paloaltoonline for breaking news, local events, photos, videos and more.

Get uninterrupted access to important local law enforcement news. Become a member today.

Becker bill seeks to end 'cruel' price markups at prison stores

SB 474, which caps markups at 35%, advances through Legislature

Seeking to curb what he calls cruel and egregious markups at California prisons, state Sen. Josh Becker is spearheading a law that would cap prices on items sold at canteen stores.

The new legislation, known as Senate Bill 474 or Basic Act, reduces the markups on items sold in prison stores to 35% above what is paid to vendors. The bill cleared the Legislature this week and is now on its way to Gov. Gavin Newsom for his signature.

For Becker, SB 474 is the second major piece of legislation that addresses prison conditions. Last year, he successfully advanced SB 1008, which allowed incarcerated individuals to make and receive phone calls free of charge.

The new bill was influenced by recent studies that showed markups of more than 200% for some items at prison canteens. A 2020 audit by the Inmate Welfare Fund found that canteen items were marked up an average of 65% of the price paid to the vendor, which contributed significantly to economic burdens suffered by both the incarcerated individuals and their family members.

Isa Borgeson, campaign manager at the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, testified at a June meeting of the Assembly Public Safety Committee that because of inadequate food and hygiene provisions in state prisons, most incarcerated people depend on canteen purchases for basic needs. But given the high markups and extremely low wages, essential items like toothpaste and body wash remain out of reach for many. The financial burden, she noted, often falls on their family members, who are disproportionately Black and brown women.

"It is unacceptable for incarcerated people and their loved ones to fund the Department of Corrections' operating expenses and staffing costs through high markups on essential goods," Borgeson said in her testimony in support of SB 474.

She also read a letter from Steve Warren, an inmate at San Quentin, who listed some of the prices that the canteen charges: $10.80 for a case of soup, $3.60 for a stick of deodorant; $2.40 for laundry soap. With inmates earning a minimum wage of $0.08 per hour, he receives about $12.80 per month.

"Overpriced canteen items force me to become a financial burden to my family," the letter stated.

In his testimony to the Assembly Public Safe Committee, Becker noted that the February 2023 price list at San Quentin State Prison shows Aquafresh toothpaste going for $5.50, more than twice of what it would cost at Walgreens, where it retails for $1.83. These markups, he said, "make may produces inaccessible and economically drain over $30 million a year from predominantly low-income families of color."

"We need the BASIC Act, because incarcerated people should not have to choose between basic necessities of food, hygiene products or health supplements," Becker said.

A 2020 report by Impact Justice, which surveyed 250 formerly incarcerated individuals and 230 friends and families of incarcerated individuals, underscored the extent of the problem. Three in five formerly incarcerated people reported they could not afford commissary purchases and many people are "forced to choose between buying food and purchasing necessities such as toothpaste or making costly phone calls to loved ones." Furthermore, 75% reported that they were served rotten or spoiled food while they were incarcerated.

"We heard stories of people so desperate for palatable food that they would trade sex for commissary items, form romantic relationships with others who could afford to shop at the commissary, or get involved in gang activity when commissary items were a reward," the 2020 report states "As one formerly incarcerated person said, 'If you didn't cook…you starved.'"

Assembly Majority Leader Isaac Brown, D-Los Angeles, who presented SB 474 on the Assembly floor, served as the principal co-author of the legislation.

"I have family who have been incarcerated," Bryan said in a statement Thursday, Sept. 14. "I've got J-Pay on my phone right now. You send a hygiene kit or you send some noodles, and then you see your final fines and fees, and you realize that this is the most expensive cup of noodles you've ever seen."

The legislation sailed through the formal process, boosted by support from more than 2,000 individuals and dozens of advocacy groups focused on prison reform and social justice.

In a Thursday statement, Becker called the prison markups of food and hygiene items "egregious and cruel." He noted that this year alone, prices have increased by least three times in some prisons, with coffee in these places now going for $9.05 and toilet paper for $1 per roll.

"We have a $15 billion prison budget in this state," Becker said in the statement. "It is time we stopped profiting off the sale of basic necessities to one of our state's most vulnerable populations."

Comments

Mondoman
Registered user
Green Acres
on Sep 18, 2023 at 1:19 pm
Mondoman, Green Acres
Registered user
on Sep 18, 2023 at 1:19 pm

This seems like a scheme to subsidize prisoners. Normal stores typically have a 100% markup (50% of final cost). The state will now be losing money on what it sells to prisoners.

If there are issues of too little food or missing necessities, why not address those rather than instituting a blanket subsidy for prisoners?


Jennifer
Registered user
another community
on Sep 18, 2023 at 3:09 pm
Jennifer, another community
Registered user
on Sep 18, 2023 at 3:09 pm

I pay more than $1 per roll and $3.60 per stick, and I don't drink coffee. As far as food, they eat for free at the taxpayers' expense. They don't need to be munching on chips and snacking on candy. Are they smoking weed all day? Fruits and vegetables are healthier even though they do have plenty of time for exercise. My compassion is for the victims of crime, not the perp. If and when they get out of prison, the slimmer the better. They're not "vulnerable." They're hardened criminals. The "cruelty?" When he held a gun to he/she? Give me a break.


Anonymous
Registered user
Duveneck/St. Francis
on Sep 18, 2023 at 4:15 pm
Anonymous, Duveneck/St. Francis
Registered user
on Sep 18, 2023 at 4:15 pm

What an odd focus for State Senator Josh Becker. I would prefer to vote in a new state senator who represents his/her constituents.


Jennifer
Registered user
another community
on Sep 18, 2023 at 6:25 pm
Jennifer, another community
Registered user
on Sep 18, 2023 at 6:25 pm

It's a very odd focus, but there is nothing normal about far-left and far-right extremists. They're a threat to democracy, and you never know how far-left or far-right someone swings until they're in office. They'll say anything to get elected, and the truth comes out once they get there.


MyFeelz
Registered user
another community
on Sep 18, 2023 at 8:00 pm
MyFeelz, another community
Registered user
on Sep 18, 2023 at 8:00 pm

How about some legislation to cap prices of meal replacement drinks for people who can't eat regular food? I usually buy it to have some in the car on road trips. It used to be easier to down a bottle of that instead of wasting time at a freeway ramp fast food joint. It now costs 3x what it did before grandpa Joe told us to suck up some inflation to save democracy in Ukraine. I know this is an unpopular viewpoint, but I am about DONE with sucking up inflation to benefit a concept. Ukraine isn't even a country anymore. It's just a memory. I'd like my "pre-Ukraine War price gouging" to stop. As for Becker, it seems like he may have bedded a prison rights advocate or something. His efforts to stamp out high prices at prison canteens makes me wonder if he is visiting somebody on the regular that he has to buy snacks for. edited: I had a nephew visiting and he had a jailhouse honey he was talking to using my landline. Even back in the pre-celll phone days the fees were ridiculous. The best way to reduce the fees is stop accepting collect calls from prisoners.


Alice Schaffer Smith
Registered user
Downtown North
on Sep 18, 2023 at 10:12 pm
Alice Schaffer Smith, Downtown North
Registered user
on Sep 18, 2023 at 10:12 pm

Another abuse of prisoners is California prison workers do not get paid the minimum wage for their work performed for others while in prison, the equivalent of slave labor. It is important to make a constitutional amendment to remove "involuntary servitude" in the State of California and ensure that a minimum wage applies to all workers.

I wholeheartedly support Senator Becker's sensitive and important protection against price-gouging of our incarcerated prisoners.


ALB
Registered user
College Terrace
on Sep 18, 2023 at 11:23 pm
ALB, College Terrace
Registered user
on Sep 18, 2023 at 11:23 pm

Right on Alice Schaffer Smith as Becker is doing ethical work in righting a wrong. Mitzvah in the vernacular means good deed but the original sense is commandment.


Mondoman
Registered user
Green Acres
on Sep 19, 2023 at 12:29 am
Mondoman, Green Acres
Registered user
on Sep 19, 2023 at 12:29 am

Maybe institute a prison "normal/living" minimum wage, then deduct meals, clothing, lodging expenses, etc. That way everything is fair and more transparent, even though the monetary end result would be similar to the current situation.


Jennifer
Registered user
another community
on Sep 19, 2023 at 8:27 am
Jennifer, another community
Registered user
on Sep 19, 2023 at 8:27 am

A "normal/living minimum wage" wouldn't come close to their living expenses. Housing, medical costs, food, etc. would be over $100k. I've read paying them minimum wage would cost $1.5 billion annually, and the money isn't there. In the words of Steve Glazer (D) they've "lost their liberties" and he goes on to say he's "unapologetic" in the way he feels. So am I. Criminals chose a life of crime because they're selfish, greedy and they're narcissists. While the rest of us work for what we have, they chose another route. I don't believe they're in prison because they grew up poor, etc. There are a lot of poor people with values. They're in prison because they lack character, they got caught and they're serving their time. Enablers making excuses for them add fuel to the fire. Once they get out, they've served their time. They're still incarcerated.


GTSpencer
Registered user
Midtown
on Sep 19, 2023 at 5:42 pm
GTSpencer, Midtown
Registered user
on Sep 19, 2023 at 5:42 pm

Novel idea......don't go to jail.


MyFeelz
Registered user
another community
on Sep 19, 2023 at 5:52 pm
MyFeelz, another community
Registered user
on Sep 19, 2023 at 5:52 pm

Anyone who is interested in learning about the use of incarcerated people to work for free (basically it's called SLAVERY) should watch a documentary called "13th". It's a netflix original documentary, free at youtube. Web Link Prison industries are big business, and Becker makes me laugh trying to lower the price for toothpaste for prisoners while ignoring the obvious -- state slaves who work for free because if they don't, they have to stay in their cage. Becker is in on the joke, and likely bagged a lobbyist who now demands payment for services rendered. Canteen prices are a ridiulous "ill" needing remedying? No. How about releasing prisoners who in many cases made plea deals and are now stuck with "work, or stay in your cell" as the only options? That's a cause worth fighting for. Not capping prices on candy bars and potato chips.


Online Name
Registered user
Embarcadero Oaks/Leland
on Sep 19, 2023 at 6:13 pm
Online Name, Embarcadero Oaks/Leland
Registered user
on Sep 19, 2023 at 6:13 pm

@ MyFeelz, indeed, especially since much of that slave labor involves telemarketing and fund-raising where they have access to people's personal information and get to request even more personal and financial info. For years there have been news stories about how that info gets misused, sold, etc.


Novelera
Registered user
Midtown
on Sep 19, 2023 at 7:13 pm
Novelera, Midtown
Registered user
on Sep 19, 2023 at 7:13 pm

Who are these self-righteous sourpusses who seem to have no empathy? A bill helping other human beings avoid outrageous price markups is commendable.


Mondoman
Registered user
Green Acres
on Sep 20, 2023 at 7:04 am
Mondoman, Green Acres
Registered user
on Sep 20, 2023 at 7:04 am

@Novelera I think the point is that the current markups are normal, not outrageous (at least based on my shopping). In any case, taking money from people who have not committed any crime to subsidize those who have seems like the wrong incentive structure.


Jennifer
Registered user
another community
on Sep 20, 2023 at 9:11 am
Jennifer, another community
Registered user
on Sep 20, 2023 at 9:11 am

We're all dealing with price gouging at the grocery stores, etc. and it stands to reason that's why prices are higher at the canteen. It is the wrong incentive structure, and normal, reasonable people understand this. In the words of another poster... stay out of jail.


NTB2
Registered user
College Terrace
on Sep 22, 2023 at 12:57 am
NTB2, College Terrace
Registered user
on Sep 22, 2023 at 12:57 am

Okay so there is a prison canteen food mark up. Bad. Yet. Becker is always barking at the wrong tree.

Hello Becker. Lethal cell gassing is going on right now. FYI: before inmates get to any gruel at a prison “food court” they are sickened by inhalation of poison. Toxic Smoke is in the air. Becker barks at the wrong end of the jail sentence .

This is wrong. he is diverting attention away from inhumane practices by snowing us over w prison food court price gauging.

Go to any windowless Costco warehouse. Price gauging abounds — yet we are free to shove a cart over while the customer moves ever so slowly musing down the isle for the next free sample — shopping meditation? I am trying to get the hay out a there with a few essentials to feed my children. And the gassing continues. Dump Becker. He’s useless.


One Town Over
Registered user
Mountain View
on Sep 22, 2023 at 9:12 am
One Town Over, Mountain View
Registered user
on Sep 22, 2023 at 9:12 am

We need to be making prison even more miserable. If we lengthen prison sentences and make prison so miserable (whippings, hard labor, rotten food, etc) it’ll solve crime because no one will want to risk going to prison.


Yolanda Harris
Registered user
East Palo Alto
on Sep 22, 2023 at 4:45 pm
Yolanda Harris, East Palo Alto
Registered user
on Sep 22, 2023 at 4:45 pm

The food in state prison is better than county jail because the inmates are being vocationally trained to become cooks upon release. There are many vocational programs in state prisons.

Some incarcerees prefer state prison over county jail because of the better food and the privacy of a cell over mass housing in barracks.

Commissary goods are always costly regardless of the venue but the options are limited. It's like going to CVS for snack food and personal items.


MyFeelz
Registered user
another community
on Sep 22, 2023 at 8:13 pm
MyFeelz, another community
Registered user
on Sep 22, 2023 at 8:13 pm

@One Town Over, how about this: Leave them in tents in the sun, making them wear pink underwear and feed them green bologna that isn't even fit for dogs to eat? It's been done, and it hasn't reduced crime in Arizona one bit. The stuff about whippings -- we have civil rights laws that prevent "cruel and unusual punishment". Some prisoners are only there due to minor offenses. Bill Clinton enacted some of the worst crime legislation, called "three strikes" and then later, to support his wife's candidacy, admitted it was bad legislation that destroyed families and communities. The worst thing about it is that even though the crafter of the legislation admits it was horrible, it hasn't brought anybody home. Watch "13th" at youtube. If that doesn't soften your heart any, you may not have one at all.


Jennifer
Registered user
another community
on Sep 22, 2023 at 11:57 pm
Jennifer, another community
Registered user
on Sep 22, 2023 at 11:57 pm

The "cruel and unusual punishment" happened when he committed MURDER, CHILD MOLESTATION, RAPE, ARMED ROBBERY, etc. Your "compassion" is misplaced. Most of us have compassion for the victims as well as the victims' families. In the words of Marc Klass "I'd trade it all in for one more hug." Feel free to have "compassion" for Richard Allen Davis. What destroys "families and communities" is the criminal element.


Don't miss out on the discussion!
Sign up to be notified of new comments on this topic.

Post a comment

On Wednesday, we'll be launching a new website. To prepare and make sure all our content is available on the new platform, commenting on stories and in TownSquare has been disabled. When the new site is online, past comments will be available to be seen and we'll reinstate the ability to comment. We appreciate your patience while we make this transition.