Literary pick for week of April 7

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(Courtesy of the publisher)

Letty said, ‘It’s possible that Scott is trying to determine whether it’s feasible to cleanse the earth, Gaia, of what he considers to be a disease that will destroy Gaia, that disease being humanity. It’s possible that he will try to do that — and maybe has done it — by loading the Marburg pathogen into a measles virus. Or something like that. I don’t understand the mechanics of it.” — from “Toxic Prey”

There’ve been plenty of thrillers speculating about terrors of a deadly disease spreading throughout the world, and nobody does it better than John Sandford in “Toxic Prey,” 34th in his series featuring U.S. marshal Lucas Davenport and now Letty, his adopted daughter.

SMALL FILE — MAX. WIDTH FOR PRINT: 2 INCHES — John Sandford’s book, “Toxic Prey,” is getting outstanding reviews in April, 2024. (Courtesy of Penguin Random House)

Sandford, pen name for former Minnesotan and Pulitzer Prize-winner John Camp, turned 80 in February and this milestone birthday seems to have energized him because this book is fast-paced and scary.

Brilliant researcher and scientist Lionel Scott belongs to a a group of like-minded people who believe in the Gaia hypothesis, which posits that Earth — Gaia — has always balanced herself but now fossil fuels and other human intrusions have been too much to overcome and the only way to save the dying planet is to kill half the world’s population. Experimenting on humans, Scott figures out a way to bind the lethal Marburg virus found in fruit bats in a cave in Kenya to the measles pathogen that is contracted through the breath of an infected person or physical contact. There has never been anything like this. It is so deadly it can kill in less than a week. If Scott and his companions leave New Mexico and infect surfaces in hub airports in the U.S., the disease will spread around the world.

When Scott disappears, Letty is dispatched to find him before he can carry out his plan. Although she has credentials from the Department of Homeland Security, her boss is an influential U.S. senator. As scientists and others in the medical community learn of Scott’s experiments, they become more frightened and the case goes to the highest levels in Washington and England. Lucas is called in to help and the action never lets up as Letty’s team is joined by state police, military police from local U.S. Army bases and local law enforcement.

A safehouse is found where medical experiments have taken place; three recovering but still sick men are found in a bus; a woman is killed when the Gaia believers need her house. Everything the Letty/Lucas team learns convinces them they must do anything to prevent Scott and his helpers from destroying the world, even if it means shooting them on sight. Eventually, there are so many agencies involved in the search that everybody hardly fits on the pages. It’s all presided over from Washington, D.C., by Letty and Lucas’ handler who informs the president of the danger and is instructed to give them anything they need, from makeshift hospitals to helicopters.

The action bounces between Letty’s and Lucas’ teams and the planning and whereabouts of Scott and several women who are willing to die to carry out their plans. Will Scott try one last method of swiping the liquid virus while Lucas, Letty and sniper Cartwright lie in wait for him?

This is Letty’s third appearance (after “The Investigator” and “Dark Angel”), and she’s coming more into focus. In the first book she was a Superwoman, caring mostly about her guns and generally humorless. She’s more human in “Toxic Prey” (Putnam, $32), enjoying the company (and bed) of a British MI5 agent. This leads to some funny dialogue between her and her dad, who knows she’s an adult but still, the idea of his daughter in bed with a guy…

This is Sandford at his best; real characters, a little humor, action, and a plausible and chilling reminder of what could happen if zealots get their hands on lethal toxins. Sandford’s devoted fans will love this one, and newcomers will be hooked. Happily, they have 33 previous Prey books to discover.

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Other voices: No, voters aren’t imagining it. Inflation has been a bear

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By most standard economic measures, President Joe Biden has presided over a strong economy. In terms of growth, job creation, wage gains and employment levels, it’s hard to find fault. But, as everyone knows, voters heading to the polls in November aren’t feeling the way the data suggests they should.

Why? Inflation and its corollary, the high cost of borrowing money.

Everyday Americans are still suffering from the price spike that hit during the early days of Biden’s administration, and no amount of evidence showing that inflation is back down again has changed that fundamental view.

While the Federal Reserve deserves credit for guiding the post-pandemic recovery without putting the country into a recession, America is still feeling what some have dubbed a silent recession, or “vibecession.” A Gallup poll in January found that 45% of Americans rate the economy as “poor,” and most of the respondents said it’s getting worse.

That’s not the message from the White House, certainly, or from the Fed. But some economists looking for an explanation have focused on whether inflation is being undercounted, an idea once dismissed as a flimsy right-wing talking point.

A new economic analysis by former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers and several others suggests inflation was much worse at its peak than the official numbers showed. The reason is that the method for calculating inflation changed: In 1983, the government took housing finance expenses out of the formula for the consumer price index. Among other changes since then, it replaced home ownership costs with a less-volatile metric based on rent.

Using the pre-1983 calculation, according to the Summers analysis, CPI was running at a stunning 18% as of November 2022, far higher than the single-digit official rate. The index has failed to keep up with the high cost of borrowing, Summers says, which could explain why people have a bad feeling about the economy.

After all, the average American carries more than $100,000 in debt across mortgages, car loans, student loans and credit cards — and borrowing costs remain high. As it turns out, consumer sentiment has tracked much more closely with the old method for calculating CPI than the modern one that de-emphasizes debt service.

Summers’ forecasting has been shaky over the years, but he’s on to something when he writes, “The economy is booming and everyone knows it, except for the American people.”

What to do about it? This is where policymakers can get into trouble.

Biden is trying to reframe the debate by criticizing businesses for shrinking the size of their products while also raising prices. His “shrinkflation” gambit is supported with some real-world evidence: Those bags of pretzels don’t hold as much as they used to, and there’s less toothpaste in the tube.

We’ve been critical of some consumer products companies for taking advantage of the inflationary environment by hiking prices simply because they could. But in general, blaming businesses for responding to rising prices seems like little more than typical political blame-shifting. Of course businesses had to respond, and Biden ought to acknowledge that inflation is stickier than he anticipated it would be — and not because corporate America is pulling off some stealthy plot.

The Fed, meantime, could come to Biden’s rescue by cutting rates, and Chair Jerome Powell says it’s still planning to make at least three cuts this year. But its No. 1 priority should be tamping down inflation.

Voters are smart to recognize the pain they’re feeling from inflation and the high interest rates needed to fight it. We urge the Fed to keep doing whatever’s necessary to stamp it out, political fallout be damned.

— The Chicago Tribune

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‘Going to get out eventually’: Corrections officials, inmates say MN prison conditions a matter of public safety

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Brown water, scorching summer heat with no air conditioning, one visitation day per week. Those incarcerated in Minnesota Correctional Facility-Stillwater didn’t expect prison life would be easy living, but no one told them it would be like this.

“We filtered the water with socks,” former Stillwater inmate Jesse Curry said. “It was medieval.”

Minnesota Correctional Facility-Stillwater was the first prison established in the state in 1853. Its current, second facility in Bayport opened in 1914. The building has no central air, and in September, roughly 100 inmates protested conditions with a sit-in, sending the prison into lockdown for over a day. The state departments of Corrections and Health later launched an investigation into the water quality at the prison and promised to develop a water management plan that would include hiring outside plumbers.

Kent Jones, a Stillwater inmate of over 24 years, said a reduction in visitation days to just one a week began out of COVID-19 concerns but have not returned to normal since then. Even at one day a week, he said cancellations happen often.

“The DOC talk about the importance of family … but they are not family-friendly,” said Jones, who was convicted of a 1992 rape and murder in Sherburne County.

Prison conditions and family visits are about more than just inmate comfort. It’s about public safety.

A 2011 Department of Corrections study found that visitations from friends and family helped reduce the rate of prisoner recidivism by at least 13 percent. The more often prisoners were visited, the less likely they were to reoffend within five years of release. Other studies have found that the condition of prisons have an effect on recidivism.

Less reconviction means a smaller burden on the taxpayer. The Council of State Governments’ Justice Center, using data from 41 states, found in 2021 that supervision violations and revocations cost taxpayers nationwide over $8 billion. Recidivism cost Minnesotans specifically over $91 million.

More inmates, fewer staff

Inmates go about their day in a cell block at the Minnesota Correctional Facility-Stillwater in Bayport. The Department of Corrections expects the statewide prison population to rise above 9,000 by 2025. (John Autey / Pioneer Press)

The source of the problems go back further than last summer’s protest. The Stillwater prison’s infrastructure has been exacerbated by overpopulation and understaffing.

From 2018 to the start of 2022, the state Department of Corrections lost over 400 staff, according to data from the prison system.

While these drops were offset by prison population decreases during the pandemic, staffing continued to decline when the prison population rebounded to pre-pandemic levels. Data from the Department of Corrections project the prison population will continue to rise to 9,057 by 2025; the department currently is funded for fewer than 8,000.

A 2020 evaluation report by the state’s Office of the Legislative Auditor found that “several conditions at the state prisons reduce safety, including persistent staffing shortages, heavy overtime use, suspensions of prisoner activities, unprofessional workplace relationships, limited oversight and outdated infrastructure.”

That report surveyed prison staff, and over half said that they did not believe the prison had enough resources to provide helpful programming to prisoners. The report also found that staff turnover is over 11 percent since 2019, and that Stillwater turnover specifically jumped to 15 percent in 2019, nearly 5 percentage points higher than the previous five years.

These staffing issues are cited by inmates, former staff and Corrections Commissioner Paul Schnell, who said staff retention is at the heart of many of the problems incarcerated people experience.

Department of Corrections Commissioner Paul Schnell listens to inmates of the Minnesota Correctional Facility-Stillwater in Bayport on June 20, 2019. “Nothing happens at a prison without staffing,” Schnell said in a recent interview. (Jean Pieri / Pioneer Press file)

“Nothing happens at a prison without staffing, security staffing in particular, so this becomes one of the driving factors,” Schnell said.

Jones complained about health concerns inside Stillwater prison and said he had difficulties getting staff to take his issues seriously. Jones specifically cited a persistent rash or acne he has had for years.

Curry, who was convicted of first-degree sexual misconduct, had been incarcerated at Stillwater since 1993. He also complained of issues regarding health treatment. During his incarceration, he developed intestinal cancer, which he said he had immense difficulty receiving treatment for due to prison staff being unwilling to facilitate travel to outside hospitals that would have the resources to treat him.

Curry also suffers from other health issues including diabetes and a weak heart.

“I have doctor’s notes saying that I need exercise to get my heart going,” Curry said. “But I was barely let outside.”

Jones said that inmates who participated in a sit-in protest about discolored drinking water at the prison were denied showers for a week or more, as well as meals.

“They use hygiene as a weapon against us,” Jones said.

Employment and education opportunities inside prison are slim, too. Stillwater used to have more programming for education and employment in trades and industry, but after an inmate used a hammer to murder Stillwater corrections officer Joseph Gomm in a metal shop in 2018, that programming went away and never returned. Now Jones folds balloons for $3 an hour, a skill that would not transfer well to outside employment upon his potential release in 2030.

Inmate Kent Jones waits to be led back to his cell at the Minnesota Correctional Facility-Stillwater in Bayport on Feb. 9, 2024. Jones, a Stillwater inmate of over 24 years, has concerns about health care and visitation opportunities at the facility. (John Autey / Pioneer Press)

“I’m not anti-DOC or anti-guard by any means,” Jones said, “but the treatment is simply not fair.”

Former staff say action needed

Antonio Espinosa worked as a corrections officer at Stillwater for nearly two decades. Gomm was his friend. Espinosa said the treatment of prisoners in response to incidents like Gomm’s murder is often unfair.

Antonio Espinosa is the founder of Art from the Inside. (Courtesy of the Bush Foundation)

“Everyone had to pay for one person’s actions,” Espinosa said, referring to how education in trades and employment in industry jobs disappeared after Gomm’s murder.

Those jobs still have not returned or been replaced in any significant way, according to Espinosa, who has been recognized for his “Art from the Inside” exhibits of inmate artwork.

Gomm’s murder was mentioned in the 2020 evaluation report, which said the DOC tracks whether prisoners are assigned to programming or not, but this tracking does not change based on whether that programming is actually available: “For example, prison administrators told us that the Stillwater facility stopped offering programming for weeks following the death of Officer Joseph Gomm in July 2018. However, in August 2018, Stillwater’s idleness rate was similar to that in months prior, and over half of the facility’s prisoners were still ‘assigned’ to some program.”

Espinosa said that not only was Gomm’s murder a blow to morale for prisoners who lost those opportunities as a consequence, it was also a blow to staff, many of whom Espinosa noted became more withdrawn at work. Some quit entirely.

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Staff retention has always been difficult. Espinosa knows more than anyone that it’s a difficult job that requires a certain kind of personality: “You think that just because you have a uniform and some power, you can treat these people (prisoners) however you want; that’s not going to work.”

Corrections officers often have to deal with interpersonal issues that go far beyond the physical confrontations seen in movies. Espinosa said that a guard has to wear “a lot of hats” and has to be empathetic.

“One moment, you’re security. One moment, you’re a therapist. One moment, you’re a pastor for these people,” Espinosa said. He believes that many of the people who end up in prison are “broken,” or “hurt” and are in need of healing.

“I had to take a step backwards and see how I could help the system and help people,” Espinosa said, and encouraged people outside of prisons to involve themselves by talking to representatives and getting involved with activist work. “We can’t forget these people; we can’t leave them behind.”

Newer prisons, too

Stillwater isn’t the only prison in the state facing these issues. Brandon Bacchus, who is out of prison under the Intensive Supervised Release program after an assault conviction, was incarcerated at Minnesota Correctional Facility-Rush City.

A contrast to the state’s oldest prison, Rush City is its newest, constructed in 2000, but Bacchus’ complaints mirror many of those about Stillwater: inmates having to eat meals in cells instead of in a cafeteria, a lack of visitation days and only two days a week where he was allowed out for recreation.

An aerial view of the Minnesota Correctional Facility-Rush City, which opened in 2000. (Courtesy of the Minnesota Department of Corrections)

“They only let us outside here and there,” he said. Bacchus particularly recalled a day where after being let out into the yard, he and other inmates were not let back inside for hours while it was raining.

Medical care was also an issue shared with Stillwater. Bacchus said he suffered from an intestinal infection during his time in Rush City and experienced cold sweats, vomiting and other symptoms of stomach-related sickness. He said it took months to see a doctor for the infection.

“I felt like I was in a third-world country,” Bacchus said.

Possible solutions

Schnell said creating new programming during the pandemic was difficult. Some prisoners were released during the pandemic to create more space for social distancing inside facilities. Courts started to work through a backload of cases as the pandemic eased, which caused the prison population to quickly rise again, at a rate that staffing could not keep up with.

An aging workforce and a lack of competitive pay and benefits also contribute to staffing shortages and poor staff retention, Schnell said.

Video chat access can help ease the lack of visitation days, though Schnell acknowledged that “it’s certainly not the same as in person.”

Schnell sees a solution for many prison issues in a bill that passed the state Legislature last year, which would reallocate current resources and funding within the Department of Corrections to foster individualized “case plans” and programming tailored to each prisoner.

The idea is that the better prisoners respond to programming, the sooner they can be released. Under current policy, such programs are usually implemented toward the end of a sentence, but under the Minnesota Rehabilitation and Reinvestment Act they instead will be implemented from the beginning. Most Minnesota prison inmates would be eligible to participate in this programming. Those who are serving life sentences or given indeterminate sentences would not be eligible.

“What we want to do is incentivize people to take advantage of and participate and maximize their involvement in evidence-based programming contact,” Schnell said. “We know that cognitive behavioral intervention, how people think, how they see themselves, how they define themselves … those types of things that we need to address, there’s a variety of ways to do that.”

His examples of programming that would address behaviors and help to reintroduce incarcerated people back into society included cognitive group therapy, substance abuse treatment, vocational programs, connections with family and leadership opportunities for prisoners who showed particular growth.

But for there to be programming, there needs to be the infrastructure for it. This includes not just the staffing issues, but the physical space itself. Stillwater is over a century old and Rush City, Schnell says, currently only has a portable classroom on its grounds for such programming.

“We address a crumbling facade or water … but second is one of the biggest priority projects that we want to be looking at, or at least exploring, is programming space at Rush City and some other facilities,” he said.

Reinvesting resources

A Minnesota Department of Corrections K9 officer patrols the Minnesota Correctional Facility-Stillwater as members of the Minnesota House Corrections Division tour the Bayport facility in January 2019. (Jean Pieri / Pioneer Press file)

A more tailored approach that would allow some prisoners to be released earlier based on response to treatment and programming, rather than the current one-size-fits-all approach, Schnell said, would allow for a more efficient use of resources by focusing on prisoners most in need of them.

Savings from a more effective use of resources would then be redistributed in quarters, Schnell said: 25 percent would be invested into transitional services, such as temporary housing for those just released from prison, and another 25 percent would be invested in primary prevention and fighting root causes of crime such as poverty.

Not all of these funds would go straight back into corrections: 25 percent would go back to the state’s general fund “as a dividend to taxpayers,” and a final 25 percent would be for victim services: healing for survivors of the crimes perpetrated by prisoners benefitting from corrections programs.

The corrections bill was passed about a year ago and was supposed to begin implementation in August, but in a memo last year Schnell said full implementation could take until early 2025. Schnell said he has the power to release more prisoners now, which would reduce strain on the staff and system, but he was concerned that releasing prisoners without proper support sets them up for failure.

The Minnesota Correctional Facility-Stillwater prison is seen, Dec. 15, 2020, in Bayport, Minn. (AP Photo/John Minchillo, File)

“If we had the kind of safety net and structure that could support that in the community, that would be a viable opportunity that does not exist today,” Schnell said.

Curry, who is currently released on intensive supervised release, now volunteers with the Ramsey County sheriff’s office to rehabilitate former gang members. He said there needs to be more understanding from law enforcement and prison staff, as well as more staff members at all levels who have experienced incarceration.

“A lot of us are going to get out eventually,” he said, noting that while he was in prison, he couldn’t pay bills for his car or house, both of which he lost, leaving him homeless once he saw the outside. That was something that affected more than just him. “We are still human beings, we still have families.”

As an answer to the philosophical question of ‘What are prisons truly for?’ Schnell said that holding people responsible and punitive actions are only pieces of a bigger picture.

“And yet, we know that if all we’re going to be in the business of, if that’s the essence of criminal justice response to wrongdoing, we’re going to fail … our history here is to simply lock people up, and to try and hold them accountable and believe that putting two grown adults in effectively a bathroom together, and expecting that experience itself is going to keep them from engaging in future misconduct when they get out. It’s just not.”

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Literary calendar for week of April 7

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Georgia Finnegan (Erik Saulitis)

BALLET IN MINNESOTA: Georgia Finnegan, ballet dancer and teacher, and dance photographer Erik Saulitis discuss “Grace & Grit: A History of Ballet in Minnesota,” about the dance’s roots in this state and the people and companies who were significant in its growth. This gorgeous oversized paperback, filled with historic and contemporary pictures in black and white and color, begins with an interesting history of ballet from its origins in Italy to popularity in France and eventually Russia, where the greatest dancers were trained. We meet pioneers such as Marius Petipa, father of classical ballet, and Diaghilev’s Les Ballets Russes. Those who established companies in the Twin Cities and outside the metro include Loyce Houlton, whose version of “The Nutcracker” is a local favorite, and Lorant and Anna Andahazy. There are back stories for Minnesota Dance Theatre, James Sewell Ballet, St. Paul City Ballet and more. Free. Presented by Landmark Literati. Noon Tuesday, April 9, Landmark Center, 75 W. Fifth St., St. Paul.

FITZGERALD IN ST. PAUL: St. Paul poet Klecko hosts the St. Paul Stories of F. Scott Fitzgerald, presented by Friends of the St. Paul Public Library. This program focuses on “Winter Dreams.” First published in Metropolitan magazine in 1922, it’s about a middle-class boy who grows up to be rich and pines for a married woman, themes that would later appear in “The Great Gatsby.” Free. 6 p.m. Thursday, April 11, Highland Park Library, 1974 Ford Pkwy., St. Paul.

NITA PROSE: Author of the bestselling mysteries “The Maid” and “The Mystery Guest” makes a virtual appearance in MELSA’s Club Book series. 7 p.m. Monday, April 8. Free. Live at facebook.com/ClubBook.

RONDA ROUSEY: Presents “Our Fight” in conversation with Maria Burns Ortiz. 7 p.m. Monday, April 8, Magers & Quinn, 3038 Hennepin Ave. S., Mpls.

BELL/CISEWSKI: Poets Carolyn Light Bell and Paula Cisewski read from their work. 7 p.m. Wednesday, April 10, Magers & Quinn, 3038 Hennepin Ave. S., Mpls.

JOHN J. WATERS:Presents “River City One: A Novel.” 7 p.m. Thursday, April 11, Magers & Quinn, 3038 Hennepin Ave. S., Mpls.

What else is going on

(Kevin Cannon / Rain Taxi Review)

It’s not too early to prepare for the April 27 Twin Cities Independent Bookstore Day with Rain Taxi again offering a pocket-sized “passport” offering local readers discounts and a chance to win prizes when they visit any or all of the 28 stores in the days leading up to IBD. Illustrated by local artist Kevin Cannon, the passport is free and can be picked up at any participating store between April 24 and April 28. During these five days readers can get passports stamped at the participating bookstores; a sample page for that store is good for a future discount. Getting 15 stamps makes passport holders eligible for various prize pack drawings and those who get all 28 stamps are eligible to win the grand prize, a $25 gift certificate from each participating store, amounting to $700 worth of books. (For a list of participating stores and other information, go to raintaxi.com/twin-cities-independent-bookstore-passport-2024/)

Khenpo Sherab Sangpo’s reading from “The Heart of Tibetan Buddhism,” listed in the March 24 Literary Events calendar, is postponed from March 26 to May 7 at Magers & Quinn in Minneapolis.

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