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California detainees boycott commissaries as prices spike

California detainees – Immigrants held at two federal detention sites in California say commissary prices have surged on basic necessities like coffee, tampons, and hygiene items—pushing more than 300 detainees to sign grievance letters and join a boycott, while advocates press for

On a dormitory day at the California City Detention Facility, one detainee said the math stopped making sense: the commissary had become too expensive for essentials, and the prices kept climbing.

Detainees at two federal facilities in California have launched a boycott in protest of increasing commissary prices they say are burdensome. The protest is aimed at items including tampons, coffee and soup—goods detained people can buy in addition to what they receive for free at the facilities.

The Times reviewed a grievance letter and spoke with three detainees involved in the boycott at the California City Detention Facility, about 80 miles east of Bakersfield, and at the Golden State Annex in McFarland.

Advocates with the California Collaborative for Immigrant Justice said more than 300 detainees are estimated to have signed grievance letters sent recently to facility administrators.

Both facilities are operated by private prison corporations: the California City facility is run by Tennessee-based CoreCivic, and the Golden State Annex is run by Florida-based GEO Group. The Times has reached out to the Department of Homeland Security, GEO Group and CoreCivic for comment.

Detained immigrants are provided certain essentials, such as food and soap, free of charge. But many also purchase items at commissary stores—items detained people say are of better quality or otherwise unavailable. Detainees said shampoo and other hygiene items sometimes run out for days. They also described meals as small and said they can exacerbate diabetes and other health issues.

In a grievance letter. the detainees wrote that the three daily meals provided at the California City Detention Facility are “the bare minimum to keep a person alive.” They argued that charging inflated prices on necessities amounts to “price gouging and profiteering against vulnerable incarcerated population who have no ability to refuse or shop elsewhere.”.

The detainees said an 8 oz. jar of Folgers instant coffee costs $18 at the California City facility. They said a single instant ramen soup is 75 cents, and a box of 40 tampons costs nearly $21. They contrasted those prices with Walmart pricing—saying the same Folgers coffee costs $8.97. Maruchan chicken ramen soup is 50 cents. and 40 Tampax tampons are $12.19.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement detains immigrants for civil purposes. Detention is meant to facilitate removal proceedings but is not meant to be punitive.

Detainees are paid $1 per day under a voluntary work program for cleaning or cooking, and many rely on money from family and friends.

In their grievance letter, the detainees called the markups an “unacceptable business practice” with no apparent limit. They said they view the situation as an example of captive market exploitation and economic coercion.

The detainees requested a review of commissary pricing by facility leaders. a comparison of prices with prison industry standards. an immediate reduction in prices of essential items and the implementation of reasonable price caps. They also requested an increase in the portions of daily meals. including for meals meeting religious requirements. which they said are particularly small.

Pressure for change is already moving through California’s political system. In May. the California State Senate passed a bill that would prohibit the excessive markup of products sold at private detention centers. limiting prices to 35% above the vendor cost. Existing California law already limits such markups in state prisons. The bill is now in the Assembly.

Priya Patel, an attorney at the California Collaborative for Immigrant Justice, represents people who have been detained at both facilities. She said commissary pricing frequently comes up during legal service consultations.

“The higher the prices get, the higher of an impact the conditions have on people and the more difficult it becomes to fight their cases,” Patel said.

The collaborative is also part of litigation tied to conditions at the California City facility. It is one of the organizations that brought a lawsuit last year alleging inadequate medical care. as well as insufficient clothing. food. water and outdoor recreation time at the California City facility. which can hold more than 2. 500 people. The lawsuit remains ongoing. In March, a U.S. district judge in San Francisco appointed an external monitor to ensure the facility provides “constitutionally adequate health care.”.

The lawsuit describes multiple commissary-related issues, including that the facility doesn’t provide headphones for tablets, making private phone calls—including privileged calls with attorneys—impossible unless the detainee can afford to purchase headphones from the commissary.

The complaint also recounts a case involving mobility. “One detained person has difficulty walking and standing for extended periods of time without shoes that provide arch support. ” the complaint says. “He arrived at California City with appropriate shoes to accommodate his mobility disability. which were approved as an accommodation at a prior ICE facility. California City staff confiscated those shoes and instead provided him with plastic. orange sandals.” It adds that “several weeks after staff confiscated his shoes. he had an appointment with a doctor at California City. ” where the doctor told him to “buy different shoes from commissary to accommodate his foot condition.”.

A contract between CoreCivic and ICE for the California City facility. dated April 1. 2025. says the contractor must provide notice of any price increases. It also states that “any revenues earned in excess of what is required for commissary operations shall be used solely to benefit aliens at the facility.”.

For Alfredo Parada Calderon, 52, the boycott is rooted in a sense that the system isn’t just expensive—it’s unaccountable. Parada Calderon has been detained at the California City facility since September. He said commissary prices were already high before they increased around mid-June.

He said he asked an ICE officer why prices had increased so much. The officer told him he wasn’t aware of the change but that the vendor is Keefe Group, which supplies commissaries at prisons and immigrant detention centers across the country.

Parada Calderon said detainees in his dormitory submitted a grievance about commissary prices, and the answer was vague.

“They’re blaming it on inflation,” he said.

Parada Calderon said his family sends him about $100 per month to spend on commissary items. which he uses on packets of crackers. coffee. soups. soap. shampoo. deodorant and chips. “Enough is enough,” he said. “It’s a horrible enough place to be in and you guys are making it even more horrible. not just for me but for my family. The detainees want to be heard and this is the only option we actually have — a peaceful protest.”.

A researcher who studies prison systems said the boycott reflects a wider strain on families trying to support people held far from home.

Tommaso Bardelli. a researcher at New York University who studies mass incarceration. said the families of most people in prison are working class and may sacrifice other bills to send money. He said they often do so because commissary spending has become one of the few ways to stretch the daily reality of detention.

“Families sacrifice their electricity bill or credit card payment,” Bardelli said. “The money they send no longer pays for small luxuries, because prisons have over the years reduced how much they spend per person on necessities such as food.”

Bardelli published a research article in 2022 about inequality within prison commissary stores. He said commissary is often now “the difference between starving and a semi-normal diet.”

Inside detention, the boycott is asking for something basic: for prices to come down, for portions to be larger, and for detainees to have a way to challenge costs they say function like a captive tax on people who can’t step away from it.

California immigrant detention commissary prices CoreCivic GEO Group ICE CoreCivic contract Keefe Group California City Detention Facility Golden State Annex California Collaborative for Immigrant Justice boycott grievance letter price caps tampons coffee

4 Comments

  1. I’m not shocked. Commissary prices always feel like a scam. Coffee and tampons?? Like how is that even legal if it’s jacked up that much.

  2. Wait, I thought they just get like food provided and that’s it. If they’re paying for tampons then maybe they should just not buy them? Idk, the whole thing sounds like detention policies are messed up but I’m also confused how a boycott changes anything if the facility runs it.

  3. 300 people signing letters sounds huge, but I bet nothing happens. They keep saying prices are spiking and it’s “basic necessities” like hygiene stuff—meanwhile everyone acts like commissary is some neutral thing. Also why is there a Golden State Annex, is that like a private company or something? The article makes it sound like it’s just getting worse and worse.

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