Striking Corrections Officers Write Messages On Protest Posters For Fellow Officers To Join Them
On the way to school - to the Beacon High School or Middle School - parents, caregivers, students, staff, and retired Corrections Officers who are security guards, have most likely seen the strike posters that have been popping up on Matteawan Avenue, which is the main artery to the schools and the prison. Some call it a living metaphor for the school to prison pipeline. For some, it’s all a loop. Even some retired teachers become Corrections Officers, who were standing on the picket line today outside the Fishkill Correctional Facility.
This week there were two new posters. One reads: “Stop By And Thank Us For 2.5 OT, SCAB Cowards” (in the poster, it doesn’t need an abbreviation before the s. ALBB only points that out because ALBB’s readers take such pleasure at taking shots at ALBB when they are angry with ALBB’s articles…they exploit ALBB’s grammar issues for sport…so ALBB is taking the wind out of their sails).
The 2.5 OT is in reference to the additional pay that current Corrections Officers are getting for working through the strike. They are getting 2.5 times their normal rate.
Today, ALBB asked one Corrections Officer out on the line if it was hard to publicly call out other officers who are working. The officer responded: “I have mixed emotions for people not on strike. We work with them. Someone who is a single parent. Special needs. They have special circumstances, and I get it. I for one don't feel good about pushing on them. But lots of people don’t have special circumstances. People are afraid of NY State. Some people are greedy. One officer driving by rolled down the window and said 'I’m going work!' because he knew we knew he was getting paid so much more now in Over Time.”
“We are from all cultures,” the officer continued. “We are a giant dysfunctional family most days. The biggest thing is, when we are out here on the street, we can’t be in there to protect them,” the officer said, in reference to other officers, nodding to the jail across the street. “The protectors are all out here. Sometimes they [those not striking] don’t recognize the seriousness of the situation.”
While the officer was listing what he viewed as several federal violations made by DOCCS (Department of Corrections and Community Supervision) over the years, the officer included an example of fellow officers suing the DOCCS for prohibiting officers from growing and wearing beards. “DOCCS violated federal law by refusing to accommodate for Muslim officers to grow beards. They [DOCCS] lost that. We won. The officers won.”
Another officer today expressed concern over what was going to happen when Ramadan starts on Friday. “Who is going to give the Muslims their special meals?” one officer asked. “They [the Muslim male incarcerated people] don’t screw around. They have issues with the female officers. Their special meals and times are accommodated, but I don’t know how that is going to happen while we are outside.”
As new developments happen each day with the National Guard inside, who have no experience in the correctional world, some officers who are hearing what the National Guard is experiencing were imagining what might be next.
ALBB did not have time to inquire further on the accommodations or idiosyncrasies around incarcerated Muslim males and female officers, but will try during another visit.
Today, there was a large spread of donated food, including warming dishes from catering for Spanish and Italian food. Another Corrections Officer, a quiet person who was organizing the food spread, wanted ALBB to take a photo of the birthday cake, as it was a different officer’s birthday today.