WEST HAVEN, CT — Prison phone justice advocates have posted a billboard on Interstate-95 in West Haven, calling on Governor Ned Lamont to stop charging families for phone calls from loved ones in state prisons. Advocates have been pushing the Connecticut state legislature to pass a bill making prison phone calls free since last year. The bill was raised by the Judiciary Committee again this year and scheduled for a hearing, but with the legislative session suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic, advocates have now turned their attention to the Governor and his executive action powers. Their billboard reads “Governor Lamont: It should be free to tell your child you love them.”
As prisons become the local epicenters of the COVID-19 outbreak, families are eager to connect with their loved ones behind bars. But with visits suspended, families are now entirely dependent on egregiously priced prion phone calls. Connecticut remains the second most expensive state for prison phone calls, a reality that weighs even more heavily on families as unemployment reaches Great Depression levels.
