{
"$type": "site.standard.document",
"bskyPostRef": {
"cid": "bafyreicjy3jf5qx6n7qn53ds7m3ikv7vjcf5gymopff3h2lc2n6minojk4",
"uri": "at://did:plc:mg5ozsljpp6t5b4lvwys4t72/app.bsky.feed.post/3mlcd3knzrxr2"
},
"coverImage": {
"$type": "blob",
"ref": {
"$link": "bafkreihcqek5r74sgerpntbzuxvgpopny37ph25ltiztsokabs7cmcnj4e"
},
"mimeType": "image/jpeg",
"size": 87035
},
"description": "Researchers said eliminating communication fees increased family contact and reduced financial strain.",
"path": "/free-prison-calls-linked-to-better-reentry-outcomes/",
"publishedAt": "2026-05-07T23:01:18.000Z",
"site": "https://broadbandbreakfast.com",
"tags": [
"report",
"in April"
],
"textContent": "WASHINGTON, May 7, 2026 – Free prison and jail phone call policies increased communication between incarcerated people and their families while reducing financial strain and improving reentry outcomes, according to a report released Thursday.\n\nThe report by prison reform nonprofit Worth Rises examined prison systems and local jails that eliminated fees for phone calls and other communication services.\n\nResearchers analyzed data from six prison systems and more than a dozen jail systems and interviewed incarcerated people, family members, correctional staff, and formerly incarcerated people.\n\nMore than 330,000 incarcerated people now have access to free phone calls under the policies reviewed in the report, according to Worth Rises. Researchers said the changes generated nearly 600 million additional phone calls and 6.4 billion additional minutes of communication.\n\nAverage daily call use per incarcerated person rose from 25.1 minutes to 44.8 minutes in prisons and from 26.7 minutes to 56.7 minutes in jails after facilities adopted free communication policies, the report found.\n\nFamilies saved an estimated $622 million after jurisdictions eliminated communication charges, according to the study. Researchers said many families redirected those savings toward housing, debt payments, and other household expenses.\n\nWorth Rises said expanded communication access strengthened family stability, increased economic mobility, reduced facility violence, and improved rehabilitation outcomes for incarcerated people.\n\nCorrectional staff interviewed for the report described free communication access as a tool that reduced tensions and operational disruptions inside facilities.\n\n“The free phone calls have reduced stressors greatly… It’s brought a calming effect to the [incarcerated] population” said **Justin Oles** , deputy warden at Connecticut prison.\n\nIncarcerated parents used expanded communication access to help children with homework, maintain relationships, and participate more consistently in family life during incarceration, the report also found.\n\nResearchers said stronger communication networks also helped incarcerated people prepare for parole hearings, employment, housing, and treatment programs before release.\n\nThe study examined prison systems in California, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Minnesota, and New York, along with the federal prison system and multiple county jails.\n\nWorth Rises described the prison communications sector as a $1.5 billion industry built around charging incarcerated people and their families for phone calls and messaging services.\n\nThe report arrives as the Federal Communications Commission once again revisiting prison communications policy under the Martha Wright-Reed Just and Reasonable Communications Act.\n\nUnder former FCC Chairwoman **Jessica Rosenworcel** , the agency approved 2024 rules that capped prison and jail phone rates, extended oversight to video calls, and restricted many ancillary fees after Congress expanded the FCC’s authority over the industry.\n\nBut after Chair **Brendan Carr** took over the agency, the FCC paused key parts of Rosenworcel’s framework and launched a new rulemaking process that could revise or weaken several of the earlier caps.\n\nCarr argued the prior rules risked “negative, unintended consequences” for correctional facilities and communications providers, while critics said the agency was effectively scrapping reforms designed to lower costs for incarcerated people and their families.\n\nThe FCC granted Securus Technologies a temporary waiver delaying compliance with parts of the agency’s prison communications pricing reforms in April, after the company argued immediate compliance could disrupt video communication services.\n\nToday, three providers control nearly 90 percent of the prison telecommunications market, according to the report.",
"title": "Free Prison Calls Linked to Better Reentry Outcomes",
"updatedAt": "2026-05-21T21:48:36.324Z"
}