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Homegrown: Our neighbors behind bars

The past few months have highlighted the strange relationship between Umatilla County and the Oregon Department of Corrections. Specifically, the relationship between the 80,000 people living outside the walls of our two prisons and the 3,200 men who live inside Two Rivers Correctional Institution in Umatilla and Eastern Oregon Correctional Institution in Pendleton. Like most people who live in Umatilla County, I have friends and acquaintances who work or have worked at the prisons. And, like most people, I don’t personally know any of the men currently behind bars. What I do know about life inside the prisons is second hand. From the perspective of employees and family members. From tours and information provided by administration. From

Inmates at Umatilla prison raise approximately $15,000 for Hermiston nonprofits

UMATILLA — Inmates at Two Rivers Correctional Institution, Umatilla, raised approximately $15,000 in donations for Agape House, a nonprofit food bank, and Martha’s House, a transitional family shelter, in Hermiston. The effort comes from a group of over a dozen adults in custody who call themselves the “Paradigm Shift Club.” The group’s mission statement is “shifting society’s view of AICs, shifting how AICs look at staff, the way staff look at AICs and trying to get everybody to work together for common causes,” according to James Cambell, a recreation specialist for Two Rivers Correctional Institution. The fundraiser was meant to be a local effort to help institutions such as Martha’s House, which often serves families with a loved one who is incarcerated and will occasionally provide discounted housing for formerly incarcerated individuals, Cambell said. The group raised $10,068.79 for the shelter.

Inmates at Two Rivers raise approximately $15,000 for Hermiston nonprofits

HERMISTON — A fundraiser conducted by inmates at Two Rivers Correctional Institution has gathered approximately $15,000 for Hermiston nonprofits, including Agape House, a nonprofit food bank, and Martha’s House, a transitional family shelter. The effort comes from a group of over a dozen adults in custody, or AICs, who call themselves the “Paradigm Shift Club.” The group’s mission statement is “shifting society’s view of AICs, shifting how AICs look at staff, the way staff look at AICs and trying to get everybody to work together for common causes,” according to James Cambell, a recreation specialist for Two Rivers Correctional Institution.

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