Unanticipated Consequences Chapter 1001: Return of the Chain Gang?
An article by Nicholas Riccardi in the L.A. Times (Mar. 1) reports the following::
Ever since passing what its Legislature promoted as the nation’s toughest laws against illegal immigration last summer, Colorado has struggled with a labor shortage as migrants fled the state. This week, officials announced a novel solution: Use convicts as farmworkers. The Department of Corrections hopes to launch a pilot program this month — thought to be the first of its kind — that would contract with more than a dozen farms to provide inmates who will pick melons, onions and peppers. Crops were left to spoil in the fields after the passage of legislation that required state identification to get government services and allowed police to check suspects’ immigration status.
Is this what the Colorado Legislature was thinking when it passed the immigration measure? To protect jobs for prison inmates?
KJ