| Idaho State Correctional Center, Kuna |
From our separate physical locations, Hallie and I met last night on Zoom to watch the 2026 Stillwater Awards, a national program that honors prison journalism. Patrick Irving, an inmate at the Idaho State Correctional Center (ISCC) whose prison blog (Book of Irving) we follow, won third place in the “Best Op-Ed” category for his essay, “Who Should Care for the Elderly in Prison.” (You can read it here.)
The following is from the website of the Society for Professional Journalists [SPJ]:
“The Stillwater Awards recognize excellence
in prison journalism — one of the toughest places to practice the craft.
The Stillwater Awards are named after the Minnesota town where Stillwater State
Prison was built. In 1887, the warden founded The Prison Mirror, the first
newspaper written and managed exclusively by inmates. Today, there are dozens
of prison publications across the country. The Stillwater Awards are
co-sponsored by SPJ and the Prison Journalism Project. Since 2020, PJP has
trained incarcerated writers and published their stories. Because of that, PJP
doesn’t participate in the judging of the Stillwater Awards. Winners
receive certificates and recognition at a virtual awards ceremony.”
Since our son Milo’s wrongful death while incarcerated at ISCC, my goal has been to do what I can to increase public awareness of the inhumanity suffered within prison walls. Unfortunately, there’s not much one individual can do. Frankly, it’s a sad fact that individuals and agencies can’t do much until the executive and legislative branches of our government begin to care. I believe in consequences for wrong-doing, but in our country, our practice is to incarcerate all offenders, which ruins lives. Just to point out one fact, it’s been shown that if non-violent offenders served sentences which allowed them to continue as contributing members of society, it would be less costly to the state.
This thought-provoking chart is a comparison of worldwide incarceration rates developed by the Prison Policy Initiative. Perhaps it's slightly out of date, but I can guarantee you, things haven't changed much.
Well, I’ll get off my soapbox for now. Congratulations to Patrick Irving for this well-deserved recognition. And to all inmates who write from prison, I say, “Keep up the good work.” Keep on keeping on. It’s all we can do. KW
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