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California prisons now nonsmoking
By Los Angeles Times
Published: 07/04/2005

Doing time in a California state prison won't be quite the same beginning today. Inmates, once given tobacco and matches along with their prison blues and toothbrush, will now be forbidden to smoke.
Born of legislation passed last year, the tobacco ban was sold as a boon that would offer a big drop in prison health-care costs and clean air for inmates and officers who don't like to light up. The Republican assemblyman who pushed the ban last year predicted it would save $280 million a year.
Judging from the experience of other states - and reports from a few California prisons that are already smoke-free - health costs will go down. But their experience also shows that forcing inmates to kick the habit has downsides.
One is the birth of a black market for tobacco, and the smuggling, extortion and violence that accompany it. With roughly half of the state's 163,000 inmates addicted to nicotine, tobacco demand will prompt scores of entrepreneurs to begin selling the newest contraband behind bars, prison officials say.
Rising tensions also are a worry. When Maine banned smoking in prison in 2000, assaults quadrupled.
At Folsom State Prison east of Sacramento, where the prison canteen stopped selling tobacco earlier this year, an underground economy is now in full swing. A tin of Bugler - which retailed for about $11 in May - now goes for $200 on the cellblock, convicts say. Lighters, matches and rolling papers command similarly inflated prices.
"It's crazy, you know what I mean?" said Michael Johnson, 45, a bespectacled inmate from Stockton struggling to kick a 20-cigarette-a-day habit. "Tobacco is gonna be more valuable than dope."
Inmates aren't the only ones who will be forced to snuff out their smokes. More than 30,000 employees inside the Department of Corrections' 33 prisons and camps also must abide by the new law.
"We're offering smoking-cessation classes and other support," said Matt Kramer, Folsom's acting warden, "but it will require a lot of patience by all of us to get through this transition."


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