Title: Food Service
1Chapter 13
2Objectives
- Explain the training requirements for food
service departments and outline the process of
food preparation and storage - Describe the main security challenges posed by
food service operations in prisons and jails - Explore the various methods used to serve meals
to inmates
3Introduction
- Poor kitchen management can result in negative
reactions from the inmate population - Food service operation is subject to more
scrutiny than most aspects of the facility - Food service staff have to ensure that meals
taste good, meet appropriate nutritional
requirements, portions are appropriate, and
sanitary conditions are maintained
4Extensive Training Requirements
- Both internal and external demands place heavy
pressure on corrections food departments - Effective management of this department
positively influences the overall function of the
institution - Potential exists for disruptive action from
dissatisfied inmates or a calming effect from a
good food program
5American Correctional Food Service Association
- Works to enhance, represent, and promote the
correctional segment of food service industry - Provides education seminars, tours of food
service operations, written educational
materials, and opportunities to discuss issues of
common interest and establish a network among
correctional food service professionals - Certification program to raise professional
standards among food service personnel
6Historical Background
- Early prisons in US were private, and inmates had
to pay for food, bedding, water - Not until 1970s that the public became concerned
with the state of correctional facilities - Courts attempted to define some rights and impose
standards on a case-by-case basis - ACA developed standards including food service in
1977 - Most institutions have a full-time food service
manager
7Food Service Facilities and Equipment
- Some institutions have state-of-the-art
facilities, where others are outdated - Most common serving method is cafeteria system
- In jails and facilities without a cafeteria,
meals are preplated in the kitchen and sent to
the housing unit on trays or carts
8Menu Preparation
- ACA standard requires advanced menu planning
- Jails have 1 week advanced preparation of meals
due to limited storage - Prisons have a 28 day menu rotation
- Menus are planned by food service manager and/or
dietitian - Should reflect inmates cultural and ethic
preferences, as well as medical and religious
needs
9Food Supplies and Storage
- Common sources are state purchasing warehouses,
state contracts, local wholesale food
distributors, local vendors - Some systems have farms
- All food should meet or exceed government
standards - Temperatures should be checked and recorded as
required
10Food Preparation
- Many institutions use Armed Forces Recipe Cards
as guides for food preparation - Institution should have daily cleaning and
inspection system to ensure sanitation - Also need a hazard analysis critical control
point system to ensure all procedures are
followed - Clean uniforms and aprons should be worn, as well
as head coverings and beard guards
11Special Diets
- Medical diets should require medical
authorization - Religious diets should be approved by the
chaplain - Special diets should be specific and furnished in
writing to food service manager - Need system to ensure that only authorized
inmates receive special meals
12Meal Service
- Dining room creates a potential site for serious
disturbances - Should be designed to enhance attractiveness of
meal time atmosphere - Food should be served promptly after preparation
and at appropriate temperature - Control of eating utensils should be maintained
13Dining Room Routine
- Inmates should be given time to wash before
eating and should be fully clothed - Dining room should provide normal group eating
areas and permit conversation - Line cutting should be monitored closely by staff
14Unit Dining
- Primarily used in jails and regional adult
detention centers - Meals are preplated and sent to housing area
- Food carts should be searched for contraband
- Inmates should not serve food to other inmates in
segregation - Inmates must be required to give back all
utensils and other items on the tray
15Commissary Options
- Inmate store is usually available for inmates to
purchase a wide variety of discretionary food
items
16Supervision Issues
- Kitchen area should be out of bounds for non
kitchen workers - Institution should have specific system for
searching vehicles, loads, and drivers - Trash control is another security issue related
to escape attempts
17Controlling Kitchen Tools
- Tool control is primarily related to knives
- Should be stored in a locked cabinet in a secured
area - Written inventory of all items should be kept and
checked at each shift change - Equipment should be constantly checked to make
sure no parts are missing
18Yeast, Sugar, and Extract Control
- Can be used to make homemade alcohol
- Extract contains alcohol and may simply be drunk
by inmates - Inmates with unusual amounts of sugar, fruits, or
unbaked bread should be viewed with suspicion as
potential brew makers
19Food as an Incentive
- Staff should never be allowed to use food as
payment for work or as a special privilege
20Conclusion
- Food service operations are very important to an
institutional routine - Food service staff must observe proper nutrition,
cost controls, security, and supervision
practices in the food preparation area - A well-run food operation will greatly enhance
the morale, safety, and security of the prison
setting
21Chapter 14
22Objectives
- Describe key concepts applying to the fiscal
management of penal institutions - Name at least three approaches to prudence in the
utilization of public funds - Explore the issues that can cause balanced budget
failure
23Understanding Financial Operations
- Budget development formulation of funding
request - Budget execution expenditures and distribution
of funds - Budget oversight systems and internal controls
that ensure that funds are used in a manner
consistent with budgetary goals
24Understanding Financial Operations (cont.)
- Public administrators need to be cautious about
the perception of expenditures (ex. excessive
landscaping) - Budget-tracking staff ensure that money is spent
as planned and appropriately conserved - Common sense and good public stewardship should
be exercised by all with authority to spend funds
25Political Influence
- Correctional staff should never forget that
typically public funds are utilized to create,
operate, and otherwise manage all correctional
facilities - Elected representatives provide broad policy
guidelines within the criminal justice system and
make sure that an institutions financial
decisions reflect those policies - Every aspect of correctional management is
subject to law, policy, guidelines, rules, and
other controls
26Budget Development
- Anticipating and planning future requirements is
critical - Per capita costs of inmate management must be
factored into the daily cost of projections along
with adjustments for anticipated inflation - Capital outlay must be included
- Poor planning can lead to crisis management
27Budget Development (cont.)
- Budgeting for Human Resources
- Most important and expensive part of institution
budget - Senior administrators attempt to do more with
less, but managers have to use overtime for
reasonable supervision - Caution should be exercised when attempting to
reduce correctional security personnel to save
money
28Budget Development (cont.)
- Budget and Planning Committees
- Subject matter experts should provide the
rationale behind the funding requirements needed
to operate their developmental programs - Committee should serve in an advisory capacity to
chief executive officer - History of past obligations, anticipated new
costs, and projections of a funding source for
unanticipated expenses should be
well-substantiated
29Managing the Institutional Budget
- Ebb and flow of prison and jail management
requires some flexibility in financial management - Financial staff should be on the lookout for
invalid obligations - Early detection of disparities in the budget is
critical to an administrators ability to take
corrective action - Financial auditing is critical to the integrity
of the budgeting process
30Managing the Institutional Budget (cont.)
- Internal requirements might include
- System for accountability for purchasing and
maintaining property and equipment - Policies limiting or eliminating personal use of
equipment - Second level of procurement authority to ensure
that contracts and small purchases are
competitively priced - Documentation to support destruction of property
31Managing the Institutional Budget (cont.)
- Jail and prison staff must be aware of special
funds for which staff have stewardship
responsibility - Inmate canteen committee could allow inmates to
have a voice in the use of canteen profits - Public scrutiny must be an important
consideration in all aspects of institutional
spending
32Conclusion
- Many benefits to providing basic financial
knowledge to correctional leadership - Stewardship of the publics resources requires
conservative decision making, a well-developed
sense of integrity, and the ability to apply
administrative accountability in the overall
process
33Chapter 15
34Objectives
- Explain the positive and negative aspects of
media access to prisons from the perspective of
the public and of prison administrators - Identify the key elements of an effective media
strategy - Outline aspects of good media training
35Introduction
- Reporters frequently produce stories about the
plight of inmates - Most stories portray prisons negatively and
rarely provide an accurate description of what
goes on behind institutional walls and fences - Written policy on handling media requests is very
helpful
36Media Access Legal Considerations
- Pell v. Procunier Supreme Court concluded that
prisoners had adequate means of communicating via
mail and with family and friends and did not have
a right to face-to-face interviews with the media - Saxbe v. Washington Post First Amendment does
not guarantee the press a right to access
information that is not available to the public
37Interview Considerations
- Many correctional jurisdictions believe it is
important to permit representatives of the media
into institutions to interview specific prisoners - Questions to consider
- Who is making the request?
- What is the purpose of the intended story?
- What will be the demands on staff?
- What will the effect be on prison operations?
38Administrative Concerns
- Foremost responsibility is to maintain safe and
orderly operation of the prison facility - Substantial or sustained media coverage of a
particular inmate has the potential to create
difficulties for the inmate and administrators - It makes sense to grant media requests if they
can be accommodated with minimal disruption and
little threat to safety
39Media Access Policies
- More restrictive policies run the risk of
angering the public and media - Must be accountable for expenditure of public
funds - Should be cautious to not routinely grant
requests to just one source and deny requests
from another
40Media Access Policies (cont.)
- Written policy should include
- All media requests should be in written form
- Representative should make reasonable attempts to
verify allegations - Must make an appointment to visit
- Inmates may not receive compensation
- Request for interview can originate from inmate
or media - Administrator should approve or disapprove
requests in a timely manner
41Media Representatives
- Responsibility of the institutions liaison to
work with the author to learn about the story and
minimize distortions of prison - Effective PIO will provide effective sound bites
to ensure the most positive portrayal of the
institution and staff - Correctional institution will also sometimes
contact the media for newsworthy events
42Community Coverage
- Prison or jail administrators will most likely
have to actively solicit media support for worthy
programs - Members of the community can also provide
positive media coverage
43Conclusion
- Focus of media coverage will vary
- There will be opportunities for positive
exposure, and therefore, the institution should
maintain positive relationships with members of
the media
44Chapter 16
- Community Relations Boards
45Objectives
- Describe the primary purpose of a community
relations board - Outline the goals of successful CRBs
- Explain the logistics involved with setting up
and running CRBs
46Introduction
- Community relations boards can help a community
and a correctional institution live together as
neighbors and partners
47Composition of CRBs
- Nominations can be sought from agencies or
individuals - Local facilities need to tailor to their needs
- Several groups should be represented
- People affected by physical presence
- Local officials
- Outreach members who provide a link to the
community
48Objectives of CRBs
- Improved Communication
- CRB members can provide honest and worthwhile
feedback from the community perspective - Enable the exchange of accurate information
between the community and facility - Facility can remind community representatives
that staff live in the same neighborhoods they do
and want the neighborhoods to be safe
49Objectives of CRBs (cont.)
- Ease of Reentry
- Citizens demand good information and reassurance
with respect to reentry - Issue of reentry is to end the cycle of
recidivism - Accountability and support for inmates returning
to public life is a vital task - CRBs can serve as important bridges to the
community to provide for effective reentry
50Objectives of CRBs (cont.)
- Community Involvement in Institutional
Programming - Board meetings can highlight different prison
programs and introduce staff to the members - Can help members understand the needs and
mandates of the facility - CRB can look for volunteer opportunities within
the facility - May help develop programs where the inmates can
contribute to the community
51Logistics
- Institution staff should inform prospective
members of scheduled meeting times before they
are asked to participate - May be appropriate to set term limits in advance
- Chair facilitates meetings through an agenda
- Bylaws should be structured by superintendent
with input from board members - Community needs to be aware of boards existence
and name of members
52Conclusion
- CRB can contribute greatly to an institution and
its community - Capacity of a CRB to react to incidents and
prevent confusion can be a great service to all - Members can help develop a partnership between
the institution and the community
53Chapter 17
54Objectives
- Distinguish between a spoils system and career
service - Outline the importance of correctional
administrators working with legislators - Identify the types of issues posed by
implementing legislation in the correctional
environment
55Political Interest in Prison Operations
- Federal and state legislators attempt to
substantially affect correctional operations - Legislators forced correctional officials to
reduce or eliminate many programs and
recreational opportunities - Most correctional administrators believe that
programs and recreation are necessary to provide
for self improvement and inmate management
56Implementation of Laws
- Administrators should avoid the strife of
politics - Legislators establish policy and administrators
implement their decisions - Leadership in federal system have always been
career civil servants - State systems differ between civil servants and
political appointees
57Political and Societal Changes Affect Penal
Facilities
- The public expects prison and jail environments
to be severe and punishing - It is difficult and dangerous to withdraw
privileges or programs from prisoners once these
privileges and programs have been given - As civil servants, all staff are expected to
fulfill the requirements of the law regardless of
personal opinion
58Conclusion
- Politicians are increasingly interested in prison
operations and demand results - Senior staff must exert leadership beyond the
prison fences - It is not appropriate for civil servants to lobby
or otherwise directly seek to influence
representatives