San Quentin, CA. Prison populations across the U.S. have been hit hard by COVID-19. At San Quentin State Prison, the Prison University Project is trying to provide material and emotional support. The Prison University Project is a nonprofit working to expand access to higher education inside the California prison system. Due to COVID-19, all programming that is considered non-essential has been suspended, this includes the college classes offered by Prison University Project. However, the organization is taking on other projects to support the San Quentin prison community.

In recent weeks, the Prison University Project has coordinated the installation of mobile showers for corrections staff to help mitigate the possible spread of COVID-19. 

The Prison University Project also provides food trucks that allow staff to grab something to eat before or after their shifts.

Efforts to assist staff during the pandemic is just one of the initiatives the Prison University Project has taken on. The organization’s outreach notes, “Most notably, we coordinated the successful deliveries of care packages to the entire populations of San Quentin and Avenal State Prisons. […] San Quentin’s leadership has also allowed us to send magazines, textbooks, art supplies, hand-crank radios, and digital content (via closed-circuit television) to people on death row and other areas of the prison outside of the general population areas.”  

Prison University Project unloads care packages. (Photo credit, Lt. Sam Robinson)

Prison University Project student and Senior Editor of the San Quentin News, Juan Moreno Haines (pictured above) has emerged as a voice of the incarcerated during the COVID-19 crisis. 

Juan Moreno Haines’ published pieces with information about what’s happening inside San Quentin during the COVID-19 pandemic can be seen at this link: https://theappeal.org/authors/juan-moreno-haines/

From the Prison University Project:

Here’s how to help incarcerated individuals at the moment. Increasing visibility of both formerly and currently incarcerated individuals by sharing and supporting their “advocacy efforts and publications widely” is one way in which people on the outside can help. Donations to the Prison University Project’s general operations and to its Covid-19 Care Package Initiative, both of which are linked here, are also useful. Additionally, donations to organizations such as Bonafide are appreciated. Bonafide helps individuals inside prepare for release and supports them when they leave the prison by providing essential supplies including cell phones and clothing. 

The mission of the Prison University Project is to provide an intellectually rigorous, inclusive Associate of Arts degree program and College Preparatory Program, free of charge, to people at San Quentin State Prison; to expand access to quality higher education for incarcerated people; and to foster the values of equity, civic engagement, independence of thought, and freedom of expression.