For the last several years, advocates, clergy, people of faith and many others around our country have been campaigning to lower predatory prison phone rates. We in the United Church of Christ heard Jesus' call in Matthew 25 to remember and visit those in prison -- as Federal Communications Commission Chair Tom Wheeler said when he gave the Parker Lecture in 2014 "the way you visit people in prison today is through communications."
Our campaign asked the FCC to ensure that the families and friends of inmates are charged fair rates for phone calls. We spoke out asking the FCC to follow up with its ruling lowering long distance rates and address local rates also. This campaign was necessary because, in most states and counties, the incentive for correctional facilities was to charge the highest telephone rates because much of the profit from these calls was given to the jail or prison as a "commission" or payment. Grandmothers and ministers were subsidizing the cost of jail and prison from their own pockets.
The good news is that the FCC heard us and adopted lower rates for local and long distance calls! Thanks to everyone, UCC's JPANet and Justice and Witness Ministries, our interfaith partners and everyone who helped with this successful campaign. Most of those new rules will go into effect today. Unfortunately, because the prison phone companies and a number of states have challenged the FCC's new rules in court, we will need to wait to fully benefit from the new rules until the law suit is over--probably not until 2017.
We have issued a guide to help understand which rates become effective today and what happens next.
While we wait for the law suit to end, it is important to keep the pressure on the states and prison phone companies that are fighting just and reasonable rates. Take action through the prison phone justice campaign, share messages on social media and sign petitions directed toward the state attorneys general who slowed down access to fair rates through their law suits.