I was at the Sherburne County jail last Monday for a one-hour presentation to inmates called "How to Stay Out of Jail." There was a young black man who was sitting in a chair in the waiting area when I arrived. I asked if he was there to visit someone, and he said, "Yes, I'm here to visit myself." He went on to tell me he came to turn himself in because he had received a warrant for his arrest. He was somewhat sullen and not a happy camper. He was on the large side and not someone I'd like to meet in a dark alley, no matter his racial makeup.
Shortly after that, an officer arrived. The man looked nervous and, to me, acted a bit defensively when he told the officer why he was there. The officer smiled when asking him to stand, and put cuffs on him. "I'm going to use two sets of cuffs so you'll be more comfortable," he said. He then talked to the young man in a reassuring voice and told him he'd arrived early enough to make the court docket that day and would not have to spend the night in jail.
The officer talked to him in a friendly and ongoing manner instead of letting him stand there in a stew. I could see the guy relaxing and actually saw him smile. This exchange lasted for five minutes before another officer came to take him to wherever he would go to await his court time. The first officer told the second one that — here he used the man's first name — had turned himself in on a warrant and would he please take good care of him before the court time. The second officer was as friendly as the first one, and off he and the warranted one went, like two acquaintances on a trip to a casual meeting, other than that one of them was handcuffed.
I told the program director who came to get me for the presentations what I had just witnessed. He said matter-of-factly, "That's the way we treat everyone here — with respect." As I went around the jail to the different places where I gave my talks, I noticed that is the way all the officers acted with inmates — with respect and in a friendly way.
Why don't we hear more stories like this?
Patrick Day, Buffalo, Minn.
The writer is an author, publisher and business coach who visits jails as part of his Gideon ministry.
HEALTH INSURANCE
Much has been misleading; Tom Price's tweet was not
In a July 7 editorial, the Star Tribune Editorial Board criticizes a tweet from Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price that correctly pointed out that 28.2 million Americans remain uninsured under Obamacare. Secretary Price referred to the 28.2 million uninsured as "28.2 million promises broken." The editorial labels the statistic "misleading" — while acknowledging its accuracy — and calls Price's tweet "bizarre" and "disingenuous."
The fact is that President Obama promised to "sign a universal health care bill into law that will cover every American," as well as making the now-infamous claim that it would cut the cost of family premiums by up to $2,500 a year. Folks in Minnesota know that claim was indeed "disingenuous," given that premiums have risen by 50 percent to 66 percent in back-to-back years. In fact, according to the most recent data, more than 94,000 Minnesotans paid the IRS nearly $20 million just for the right to go without the kind of health insurance Washington told them to buy.