Cuba Gooding Jr., female Fire fighters, Female Offenders, Firelight movie

What I Learned in Prison: In Front and Behind Bars #7

 

 

Did any of you catch the movie “Firelight,” this past Sunday night? It was a Hallmark Hall of Fame production that aired on ABC. Cuba Gooding Jr. played Dwayne Johnson (“DJ”), a counselor at a fire camp housed on the grounds of a youth correctional facility. The theme of redemption, belief in oneself, and perseverance were handled well.



It was eerie watching the movie as if I had stepped back in time and gone back to work. One of the main characters had the exact name as someone I supervised. I wondered if the script had been written by one of my co-workers or perhaps a previous firefighter in the program. The credits listed Ligiah Villalobos as the writer (of Under the Same Moon fame). A few things about the movie: open rooms, correctional officers all over the place, and the slightly sanitized atmosphere was different. 


The troubled lives, manipulations and games, the uniforms, and the physical work was done by the female offenders were the same. Their backgrounds as drug users, gang members, abused, and often ‘broken’ lives is also true.

 

 Inmate firefighting crews have been in California for over 50 years. These camps have developed some darn good crew members who have saved millions of dollars in property and saved lives. For five years I managed a  fire camp of both young men and women. (They were segregated by a fence). My male crews were Crew’s 1-4 and my female crew was Crew 5. It was one of the best assignments during my career with the California Department of Corrections (CDC).  


In my series on What I Learned in Prison I’ve said:


 females on both sides of the bars encounter problems within a correctional facility. 


For the incarcerated young women, there is the problem of self-esteem, lack of confidence, little education, and less than optimum health. It was inspiring to see self-doubting girls turn into physically and mentally strong firefighting crew members in 60-90 days, and I’m not talking about just the female offenders. The female staff went through similar fire education and safety training. Correctional staff accompanied firefighting crews on public works projects, during fire control and actual fire rolls.  


Stereotypes, bias, and some male chauvinism reared it’s head during this training. Sometimes from the California Department of Forestry (CDF) staff teaching the courses, CDC staff, and sometimes from male crew members. Crew 5 often endured catcalls from the inmate male crews, comments like ‘we’ll have all the harder work now that they’re here,’ to jokes about lowered standards. 

Photos by Hallmark Productions

What I remember most are the patronizing attitude of some male staff, the dismissive looks, and the stereotypes some of the male staff believed.  The female offenders weren’t the only one’s to encounter these attitudes.


During my own training, which was far less physically demanding than the female offenders, one of the Fire Captains attempted to flunk me in a test. Part of the exam was to deploy a fire shelter within seconds, scramble under it and hold it down with my knees and elbows. The Fire Captain then yanked on it to ensure the shelter was tight. My tester yanked the shelter several times…until he tore it. I was the Camp Superintendent, I imagined he did that or worse to all of my female staff. He had, I later found out. He transferred soon after. 

 

Women on both sides of the bar learned to confront the attitudes and handle it, often times supporting one another through cheers, encouraging words, or a pat on the back. 

On one of the websites, announcing the movie, I found a comment that reflects my thoughts on the movie:
 
“Great movie and moving presentation of the crews work. States with such crews do a great job in assist normal crews and provides a future for detainees. Congratulations to Hallmark again.” Tom Smith, retired Batallion Captain.



Although I appreciate Captain Smith’s comment, notice the use of ‘normal’ crews. I’m sure he meant civilian firefighting crews. 


When  we received our first CDF female Fire Captain we knew that she had to have endured a lot more than we did to become a Fire Captain. Her presence also showed the female offenders that becoming a Fire Captain could be attained.
 
When I think back about that time, I know I was fortunate to have a few staff members, both in CDC and CDF, like DJ (Cuba Gooding Jr.) who made the female firefighting program a success for several years.  Along the way, the program helped to change the dismissive attitudes about women firefighters and their capabilities. 


More importantly, it taught the women, on both sides of the bars, that even with prevailing negative attitudes they could handle difficulties with perseverance, support, and belief in themselves.   

 






 
California Department of Corrections, Female Offenders, Juvenile Justice

What I Learned in Prison: Women in Front and Behind Bars #6

GA Daily News

For the past few weeks, I’ve written about my past career with the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, Division of Juvenile Justice. It’s a state agency that oversees more than 162,821 prisoners within institutions with an additional 91, 700 more offenders on parole.

 
My intent is to give a very small view of the world that is foreign to most and share some lessons learned from my experiences from life inside youth correctional facilities from 1980-2008. 
 
In past posts, I talked about female offenders as the fastest growing prison demographic in the U.S and gave some of my career backstories.
My training  involved several stages with the main value gained by on-the-job training. Listening to staff and  female offenders was helpful too. My college degree was the least helpful except when it was time to write case reports.

There are three photos here. All look like the typical teenagers that I worked with in prison. Can you tell which one committed murder, assault with a deadly weapon, drug trafficking? 

AP Photo
CA Dept. Corrections





Sorry, no points given for correct answers as you may recognize two of these young women from recent newspaper articles. The point is that many female offenders looked like these girls but were in for some heinous crimes. As a staff member, a woman, and not too distant from their ages at the time, it could be easy to forget that the offenders were some very troubled people. 


                                                            You can’t judge a book (person) by its’ cover

After I returned from the Academy I was assigned another young woman to my caseload. She had to be reassigned from her Youth Correctional Counselor who transferred. The caseworker pointed to a girl in the dayroom. She looked older than the rest and with her long dark hair, pretty face, and eager smile she looked like a college sorority girl. The caseworker said the girl was enrolled in the community college program within the facility. “Sure, no problem,” I said.  


“Glad it wasn’t me,” one of the older staff women said when I told her I had the girl assigned to me. “I had her four years ago.” 


I didn’t have time to read the girl’s case file. It was time for weekly small group and I assembled my caseload of gangbangers, drug offenders, and thieves. One girl moved her chair away from the college looking ingenue when she sat down. Throughout the group time, I caught the drift that the college girl wasn’t disliked but feared in some way. She seemed intelligent, minded her own business, and paid attention although she didn’t interact with anyone. 


After group, I walked my girls to their rooms, unlocked their doors, and locked them back in. The ingenue had the room closest to the top of the hallway and I locked her in first. When I locked in the last girl, she turned to me and said she didn’t want to be on my caseload anymore if the ‘satan-worshipping murdering’ so and so remained on the caseload. 


“As long as she doesn’t do that in group, she’s staying,” I said. “But you don’t have to sit next to her next time.” The girl looked relieved. 


I made a beeline to the staff desk and asked the other staff about the comment. “Yeah, didn’t you read her file? She’s famous, you know the girl from up north who….” Not only was she famous, her crime was infamous and the subject of books. A television movie came out after her release to parole. 


The lesson about not judging a book by its cover never had so much meaning. 


Have you ever come across a difficult situation where you learn a lesson?