States of Incarceration is coming to Wilmington, NC
States of Incarceration is coming to the University of North Carolina Wilmington! Stay tuned for more information and a new local story!
States of Incarceration is coming to the University of North Carolina Wilmington! Stay tuned for more information and a new local story!
In 1989, 80 women were sentenced to prison in West Virginia. At that time, women served their time at Pruntytown Correctional Center in Taylor County. The facility was a men’s prison where quarters were adapted for the small number of West Virginia women with felony convictions. By 2003, 14 years later, the state had spent $24.5 million to open Lakin Correctional Center, a maximum security prison with 302 beds, to deal with the rapidly growing number of women serving prison sentences in the state.
Three years later, in 2006, the state spent another $6.2 million to expand the facility to 462 beds. In 2016, 622 women were sentenced to prison, an increase of more than 677% from 1989. Though Lakin expanded to 584 beds in 2019, it was not large enough to hold the 771 women serving time. More than a quarter of those women were incarcerated at regional jails without access to trade skills development and some rehabilitation programs. Less than half the women at Lakin have a high school diploma; a majority are mothers, and 104 have given birth there since 2006.
Our Point of View
We are undergraduate and graduate journalism students, some from West Virginia, and some from other states. When we began a study of the rise of the mass incarceration of women in West Virginia, many of us had been covering stories on some of the state’s other big issues - the opioid crisis and the child welfare crisis. Over the course of a year and a half of interviewing formerly incarcerated women, we began to see the interrelation of all of these issues. We wanted to share women’s stories because we realized that the policies that led to mass incarceration affected every part of the state’s communities and every one of its people.
Visitation has been shown in studies to be a powerful tool of mitigation for many of the harms children experience when their parents are incarcerated, but visitation rates are woefully low.
— Amy Cyphert, author of “Prisoners of Fate: The Challenge of Creating Change for Children of Incarcerated Parents,” Published in the Maryland Law Review Vol. 77
The West Virginia Can Turn the Corner: Personal Testimonies and Policy Recommendations from the West Virginia Criminal Justice Listening Project report and project is referenced in one of West Virginia University's stories for the web.
The West Virginia Can Turn the Corner: Personal Testimonies and Policy Recommendations from the West Virginia Criminal Justice Listening Project report and project is referenced in one of West Virginia University's stories for the web.
The Beyond Bars Summit will bring together students, faculty, and community members from West Virginia University and around the state for in-depth breakout discussions and keynote addresses by Reginald Dwayne Betts (author of Felon) and Piper Kerman (author ofOrange Is the New Black). read more…
Register here for this virtual summit.