The first three include potato tots, four Otis Spunkmeyer cookies and a Pepsi. The cheeseburger and wings cost $22.99, pizza and wings are $21.99, just wings are $12.99 and the breakfast sandwich is $8.99. They cost triple what I pay at the canteen. The contractor in April started selling double cheeseburgers, barbecue boneless wings, personal pepperoni pizzas and French toast breakfast sandwiches. That means the onus on getting us personal care items or supplemental food falls to our families.īut that cost pales in comparison to the latest offerings from Aramark, called iCare Packages. That’s a steep price, especially considering most residents in Florida’s prison system aren’t paid - at most institutions, the only paid residents are the canteen operators and the staff barber. If I buy a pepperoni calzone ($3.96), a bag of garlic, bagel chips ($1.44), a Coke ($1.05), and add some Velveeta jalapeño cream cheese (93 cents), I'll have spent $7.38. The sandwiches are low quality, microwaved fare, the type you might find at a local convenience store - burgers, burritos, chicken sandwiches and so on. Residents have also cobbled together what we call a “Happy Meal” two or three times a week when we are allowed to buy up to three items at the canteen: a hot sandwich, a bag of chips and a soda. Southern barbecue and sloppy Joes are the standard. There are three types of lunches at Everglades Correctional Institution in Florida. NovemIs the New Aramark iCare Package Worth the Price?īy Justin Slavinski, Prison Journalism Project November 5, 2023 Is the New Aramark iCare Package Worth the Price?īy Justin Slavinski, Prison Journalism Project We have official accounts on Twitter Facebook Instagram and Linked In. If you share republished stories on social media, please tag Prison Journalism Project.If we send you a request to remove our story, you must do so immediately.Any site our stories appear on must have a prominent and effective way to contact you.No scraping our website or using our stories to populate websites designed to improve search rankings or gain revenue from network-based advertisements.You also can’t republish our work automatically or all at once. No reselling or syndicating our stories, including on platforms or apps like Apple News or Google News.Please contact No selling ads against our stories, but you can publish it on a page with ads that you’ve already sold. No translation of our stories into another language without specific permission.You must also retain all original hyperlinks, including links to the Prison Journalism Project newsletters. You can also make minor revisions for style or headline size, and you can trim stories for space. For example, changing, “today” to “last week,” or San Quentin to San Quentin, California. Please contact No editing the content, including the headline, except to reflect changes in time, location and editorial style. No republishing of photographs, illustrations or graphics without specific permission.In the byline, we prefer “, Prison Journalism Project.” At the top of the text of your story, please include a line that says: “This story was originally published by Prison Journalism Project” and include a link to the article. You must credit Prison Journalism Project.You can use the URL or copy and paste the story into your CMS. You are free to republish them under a Creative Commons license unless otherwise noted on the page. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.Prison Journalism Project is happy to share our writers and reporters’ stories with your print and online audiences. PJP Chapter of Society of Professional Journalists.
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