Tucked away in the Central Valley, Central California Women’s Facility sits off Highway 99 between Fresno and Merced. Farmland surrounds much of the prison, and visitors are rare.
The 640-acre facility is the largest women’s prison in California, and holds more than 2,000 women, nonbinary and transgender people. In total, women make up just 4% of the state’s prison population.
For these reasons and more, the prison in Chowchilla seems an unlikely place to have its own newspaper. But last year, an organization for prison journalism helped open up a media center and started training journalists there.
()
In September, they put out their first issue of The Paper Trail, an in-house newspaper written and edited by incarcerated people. Its supporters say it’s the first effort of its kind at a women’s prison in the U.S.
“ It’s been amazing to be a part of something starting here for women that inspired a lot of women,” said Megan Hogg, a writer for the paper who has been incarcerated at CCWF for 12 years. “The first issue that came out, people were like ‘Oh, wow, we have a newspaper.’ You cannot find a copy now. People are like, ‘Can I look at yours?'”
Listen
• 4:52
California’s largest women’s prison now has its own newspaper
I visited the prison in December. It was so huge that my escort told me corrections officers use tricycles to get around. It took us more than a half hour to walk from the prison’s front gates into the media center. Along the route were long, sparse yards, check points and a cafeteria.
The prison grounds were mostly quiet on the Friday morning of my visit, but the newsroom was abuzz. A handful of staff members sat in front of desktop computers while others gathered around a table to discuss story ideas and works-in-progress.
Behind them, writing on a whiteboard declared: “Journalism: providing information to people so they can make informed decisions in their lives.”
Leaders of The Paper Trail talk about editorial goals with advisor Jesse Vasquez.
Libby Rainey
)
Ice, lizards & unexpected stories
The Paper Trail has the look of a local paper, and in some ways its content mirrors that style, with coverage of community events like an in-prison farmer’s market and pickleball games.
Other stories illustrate the oddities and surprises of prison life. A recent piece by Hogg compared lizards to Fendi bags — because it’s become popular to capture and keep them as pets. Another incarcerated reporter, Brenda Bowers, wrote a story about ice and how most people can’t get ahold of it at the prison.
“It’s something that people probably wouldn’t think about, because they get it so freely out there, but in here, you gotta pay for it, or bargain and wheel and deal,” she said.
The paper also includes tips and guides to life inside. A recent issue featured two pieces on experiencing menopause behind bars.
“Although CCWF is a women’s facility, there is a never-ending need for sanitary products,” Delina Williams wrote in one of them. “It adds an extra layer of stress for women trying to care for their very private needs, not to mention the overall difficulty of striving for ‘normalcy’ within the razor wires.”
The paper is distributed in print, on tablets available inside the facility, and online. It’s funded by the nonprofit The Pollen Initiative. That group’s executive director Jesse Vasquez drives from Oakland twice a week to work with the paper’s staff.
Vasquez was himself formerly incarcerated at San Quentin State Prison, where he served as the editor of a newspaper there called The San Quentin News. (Full disclosure: I volunteered for that paper several years ago.)
“The men have always gotten the majority of attention by the fact that there are far more men. Most of the programming, most of the services revolve around the majority of people they’re going to serve,” Vasquez said. “So in this endeavor with The Paper Trail, I’ve noticed that they have a sense of empowerment.”
The Paper Trail is the first newspaper out of women’s prison in the country.
Libby Rainey
)
Reporting from the inside
The Paper Trail launched during a time of change for women’s prisons in California. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the number of women in California prisons fell 31%, according to the Public Policy Institute of California. CCWF also began housing transgender women in recent years. One of The Paper Trail’s earliest articles was about the facility’s first ever LGBTQIA+ Pride Walk.
It also started during a period of scandals at CCWF. In July, a woman died at the prison during a heatwave. In January, a former correctional officer, Gregory Rodriguez, was found guilty of 64 counts of sexual abuse and battery against multiple incarcerated women, including rape.
Editor-in-chief Amber Bray said in December that she’s interviewing people about their experiences with Rodriguez for the paper’s first story looking into the abuse.
“ What I would like for us to do is use the opportunity to say, ‘Yeah, this is what happened to some people here, and it’s sad, and it’s unfortunate. But we’re not defined by it,'” she said.
Bray has access that would be impossible for an outside journalist to get.
In journalism classes, she said, they were told “don’t limit your thinking on what you can cover. If you see that there’s a problem, well then go and learn about the problem, pitch the story, and, you know, see where it goes.”
Bray will face a different dynamic when the story is ready to publish: The Paper Trail is subject to review by officials with the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.
“ They’re not able to do hard-hitting, investigative journalism from within a prison. I mean, it’s just common sense,” said William Drummond, a journalism professor at UC Berkeley and an advisor to the San Quentin News, which goes through the same review process. “If you do that, and embarrass the warden and the staff, you aren’t going to be in business long.”
Prison newspapers in California are growing
Prison newspapers are rare, but not new, in California. The San Quentin News dates back to at least 1940, and was re-launched in 2008. That project has since won awards and been the subject of news coverage itself. Mule Creek State Prison near Sacramento has a newspaper, as does Pelican Bay State Prison in Northern California. The Paper Trail at CCWF is the fourth, and latest, prison newspaper in the state.
There are also a handful of newsletters produced and distributed at state prisons including at California Institution for Women in Southern California, according to Vasquez. The advocacy organization California Coalition for Women Prisoners has a long-running newsletter called The Fire Inside.
Coverage in collaboration with news organizations outside prison walls have grown in recent years, too, with podcasts such as Ear Hustle out of San Quentin and Bay Area radio station KALW’s show Uncuffed. Those programs work with incarcerated and formerly incarcerated people to tell their stories, and both recently expanded to California Institution for Women in Chino.
Drummond said the reason prison media projects are expanding is simple: it’s an opportunity for incarcerated people to tell their own stories.
“ When they get involved in a newspaper, they discover something. And that is, in a very basic sense, you get a following. You get to say stuff people then react to,” he said. “It means you’re affirming yourself and your identity. And I’ve seen this happen dozens of times.”
For Megan Hogg at CCWF, this meant being seen as someone who’s more than the crime that landed her in prison.
“We’re still mothers, we’re still sisters, we’re still daughters,” Hogg said. “We will never deny, yes, I did something horrible, and yes, someone was harmed by it in unimaginable ways. However…we don’t want to be defined only by that.”
For Delina Williams, the newspaper represents a step forward for all women who are affected by the criminal justice system.
“ The opening of this media center starts a whole new era of women being able to speak their truths,” she said.
More writers being trained
A new cohort of incarcerated people at CCWF are now training to join and contribute to The Paper Trail, Vasquez said. As the paper grows, he said its challenge is two-fold: writing “news you can use” for people inside California’s prisons, and getting their voices heard by those on the outside.
While chasing those bigger goals, the new journalists are in a day-to-day grind that is all too familiar to any working writer: pitching stories, getting edited and trying their best to reflect and communicate the world around them.
“Writing is not easy,” said the paper’s features editor Sagal Sadiq. “But when the perfect sentence is down on paper, it’s like, yes, it’s beautiful. [There’s] nothing like it.”
This post was originally published on this site be sure to check out more of their content.