Safe Call Now® Peer Advocate Captain Tammy Norton |
The public watches many new TV episodes these days of
“Orange is the New Black” or “Prison Break” and they wonder, what is it really
like to work in a prison setting? Sean prompted me to write a piece for the
blog and intimidated I was, not because I didn’t have plenty to say, I have
worked in prison settings for the past 21 years-I just didn’t know how to say
it.
When you hire on as that new
Correctional Officer you never know until you walk through those gates that
lock you in-and THEM out-how you are going to feel about this new career choice
you have made. I have seen many new recruits turn around and head straight back
out the gate once they heard the sounds of the locking mechanisms that are
prevalent in my work environment-slam shut. T.V. can’t describe that feeling you
get when you are outnumbered 200 to 1 and all you carry is a set of keys, a
radio, and if you are lucky, a small canister of pepper spray.
The stresses of this environment are
numerous from shift work, threats of violence from the offender population to
either you or another offender, demands and manipulations of the prison culture
or everyday difficulties of working with a negative environment or co-worker.
Correctional officers also suffer poor public image, lack of relief to access
vacation leave time, lack of natural lighting due to ancient construction of
most systems and the physicality and nature of the job. Officers are expected
to carry equipment, walk and stand on concrete floors or go down on these same
floors when necessary to stop an altercation or in defense which can lead to
chronic neck/back and knee problems for the individuals, so the normal 9-5 work
day does not apply in this profession.
A significant amount of your
workforce in this career are “Type-A” personalities. “Type A” individuals tend
to be very competitive and self-critical. They strive toward goals without
feeling a sense of joy in their efforts or accomplishments. Inter-related with
this is the presence of a significant life imbalance. This is characterized
by a high work involvement, but these individuals rarely-if ever will ask for
help in certain areas.
When you work in a prison
environment you know you have to rely on your fellow officers for assistance at
any given time, so asking for that assistance has been second nature yet in
this culture stress, substance abuse or PTSD are the secrets many will die from
rather than reveal.
I got sober at the age of 26, 5
years before I began my life sentence in the correctional field. I can remember
at a meeting a fellow recovering alcoholic told me-do NOT take that job,
correctional officers are all drunks and you will drink over it! I have to
admit in my 26 years of sobriety the job hasn’t made me want to take a drink-
yet it has pushed me to help other responders who hold the secret of alcohol
addiction, substance abuse, depression or PTSD symptoms, so tight that at times
the pain is too great and they end their lives rather than ask for help or
allow anyone else to see what they perceive as a “weakness”.
Correctional departments across the
country are attempting to promote “Officer Wellness” programs-they offer weight
watcher meetings at work, give discounts and incentives on gym memberships yet
still ignore they have a workforce plagued by stress, depression and substance
abuse to deal with the everyday negativity of a job, prescription addiction due
to numerous job injuries or surgeries or the constant hyper-vigilance you
develop when you are surrounded by manipulation, deceit and threats of violence.
This feeling you have doesn't end at the end of your shift-when you exit that
closed environment and say take your family out to dinner or to a mall-you are
hyper-alert to everyone around you. You constantly scan the environment for
threat-is that person a child molester,-hey didn’t I just release that guy last
week? You never relax.
Now is the time for us in the
correctional field and as an organization to recognize and reach out to those
officers in need. The time for shame and secrets has cost to many men and women
their lives. Ignoring those staff that comes into work every day with alcohol
on their breath, or displaying depressive or irrational behavior in hopes they
will “get their shit together” should be in the past. Administrators and
organizations have to make asking for help less judgmental, communicate about
resources, offer assistance and support so those staff know they are valued and
not alone. Now is the time to offer that back-up we all desperately depend on
at times of crisis-because at the end of the day…..one life lost due to fear of
letting anyone else know you are in pain…is one too many.
Captain Tammy Norton
Absolutely OUTSTANDING!!!
ReplyDeleteLove this article, finally from the corrections perspective. Great job Tammy!!!
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