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21 Prison J. 3 (1941)

handle is hein.journals/prsjrnl21 and id is 1 raw text is: 






The   President's   Report


     Since our last annual meeting there has been a marked  ad-
 vance towards better things at Moyamensing and Holmesburg, our
 two Philadelphia County  Prisons.  A  splendid report of some-
 thing over  thirty printed pages  has  been published  for the
 year 1939, prepared under the supervision of Dr. Thorsten Sellin
 of the University of Pennsylvania, one of the new members of the
 Board and  a member   of our Acting  Committee.  He  states the
 facts with outspoken directness, frankly pointing out  what  is
 lacking in both prisons. The report shows how City Council, and
 not the Inspectors, are to blame for most of the things in which
 the prisons fall short of present day requirements. And to our
 mind another fact, appearing on almost every page of the report,
 is that the Inspectors are continually hampered by having to care
 for both untried prisoners and convicted offenders. It must be
 clear to anyone familiar with the facts that until we have a House
 of Detention, on an entirely separate property and managed  by
 its own Board of Directors, the problem of caring for the untried
 prisoner will remain unsolved.
    At  Holmesburg  the distinction has now been definitely made
between  the labor in the manufacturing shops and the necessary
maintenance  work of the prison. The work in the shops has been
extended, and so far as possible under the meagre allowance made
by  City Council, antiquated machinery  has been replaced.  The
results are encouraging.  Substantial amounts  of clothing have
been sold to the House of Correction, the Philadelphia Hospital,
and  the Hospital for Contagious  Diseases. A  fine showing has
been made  by the prison farm  near Byberry, which, in addition
to furnishing a  variety of produce for  both prisons, produced
during the year  over seven thousand bushels of potatoes, which
Went  to the other institutions named. Unstinted praise for this
should be given Superintendent Baldi. In voicing the needs of the
Prisons before the Finance Committee of City Council, he stressed
the reasons for  developing prison industries. He  asked  for a
larger sum,  but he  got at  least $10,000, with which  to buy
raw materials and machinery  for the shops at Holmesburg during
the coming year. If the public could be made to realize the urgent
need of prison industries and the baneful effects of prison idle-
hess, pressure would undoubtedly be  brought upon  City Council
to encourage Dr. Baldi and give him adequate appropriations with
which to expand  his industries. It would be recognized, at least
in Philadelphia, that idleness and lack of suitable employment
at a fair, remunerative wage, does more than anything else to make
our prisons the nurseries of crime they are.
    There are two other matters which we  hope will not be over-
looked by the Inspectors. One certainly requires additional money
from City Council, and we hope  that Dr. Baldi will stress its im-
Portance when he  next appears before the city fathers. It is that
in each prison there should be established such a staff or clinic as
                               8

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