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At the Serving Time Cafe, Utah prison inmates cook up great sandwiches and a future

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(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) Chonsey Leslie dumps an order of fries onto a customer's order. Leslie and her fellow inmates are slammed with a line of customers every day from 11pm to 2pm closing time.  Every Monday through Friday, a half-dozen or so Level 4 inmates file out of the Olympus Facility at the Utah State Prison to cook, bake and serve the public at the Serving Time CafŽ. The operation is part of Utah Department of Corrections Industries (UCI) and is aimed at helping inmates return to society.(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) Brittney Christensen, 35, serves food to customers as her latest batch of chocolate mint brownies from scratch bakes in the oven. Every Monday through Friday, a half-dozen or so Level 4 inmates file out of the Olympus Facility at the Utah State Prison to cook, bake and serve the public at the Serving Time CafŽ. The operation is part of Utah Department of Corrections Industries (UCI) and is aimed at helping inmates return to society.(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) ÒIt makes me feel happy,Ó said Chonsey Leslie, 27, about working in the Serving Time Cafe with her friends Shacoy Saunders, left and Brittney Christensen, right. ÒIt gives me something to look forward to each morning. It helps tremendously.Ó
Every Monday through Friday, a half-dozen or so Level 4 inmates file out of the Olympus Facility at the Utah State Prison to cook, bake and serve the public at the Serving Time CafŽ. The operation is part of Utah Department of Corrections Industries (UCI) and is aimed at helping inmates return to society.(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) As she slips back into the prison yard after working a shift at the cafe, Chonsey Leslie waves goodbye to her two supervisors. Every Monday through Friday, a half-dozen or so Level 4 inmates file out of the Olympus Facility at the Utah State Prison to cook, bake and serve the public at the Serving Time CafŽ. The operation is part of Utah Department of Corrections Industries (UCI) and is aimed at helping inmates return to society.(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) ÒMost of us want to change, and what we are trying to do here is find a way to change," said Shacoy Saunders, one of eight women working at Serving Time Cafe who get to leave the prison to work as short order cooks and bakers. 
Every Monday through Friday, a half-dozen or so Level 4 inmates file out of the Olympus Facility at the Utah State Prison to cook, bake and serve the public at the Serving Time CafŽ. The operation is part of Utah Department of Corrections Industries (UCI) and is aimed at helping inmates return to society.(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) l-r  Only the most trusted inmates are selected to work at the cafe. Chonsey Leslie, Shacoy Saunders and Brittney Christensen are three of eight prison inmates who have clean records and no disciplinary actions during their time served inside prison. All of the cafe inmates must have been given a parole date to work there. Every Monday through Friday, a half-dozen or so Level 4 inmates file out of the Olympus Facility at the Utah State Prison to cook, bake and serve the public at the Serving Time CafŽ. The operation is part of Utah Department of Corrections Industries (UCI) and is aimed at helping inmates return to society.(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) l-r Department of Corrections officers Sgt. Trevor Kimmel and Sgt. Brian Smith joke with cafe manager Carolyn Price and her students, many of whom they supervise on the inside of the women's facility. Every Monday through Friday, a half-dozen or so Level 4 inmates file out of the Olympus Facility at the Utah State Prison to cook, bake and serve the public at the Serving Time CafŽ. The operation is part of Utah Department of Corrections Industries (UCI) and is aimed at helping inmates return to society.(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) The Serving Time Cafe has a regular following and would-be diners should get there a little early or face the lunchtime crush. Diners on Wednesday, November 1, 2017 peek through prison bars to read the daily specials.  Every Monday through Friday, a half-dozen or so Level 4 inmates file out of the Olympus Facility at the Utah State Prison to cook, bake and serve the public at the Serving Time CafŽ. The operation is part of Utah Department of Corrections Industries (UCI) and is aimed at helping inmates return to society.(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) The Serving Time CafŽ is the brainchild of Carolyn Price, right, a correctional supervisor at the state prison and manager of the cafŽ. Menu items often have cheeky names like the Prison Blues Burger, or the Parole Violator and desserts are listed under Felonies. Every Monday through Friday, a half-dozen or so Level 4 inmates file out of the Olympus Facility at the Utah State Prison to cook, bake and serve the public at the Serving Time CafŽ. The operation is part of Utah Department of Corrections Industries (UCI) and is aimed at helping inmates return to society.(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) "We talk about teamwork, being a team player," said Carolyn Price of her charges. Every week, Price and her staff of eight inmates, who are proud to be in the program, hold a safety meeting after serving breakfast and lunch to discuss what went well in the past week and what needs improvement.  Every Monday through Friday, a half-dozen or so Level 4 inmates file out of the Olympus Facility at the Utah State Prison to cook, bake and serve the public at the Serving Time CafŽ. The operation is part of Utah Department of Corrections Industries (UCI) and is aimed at helping inmates return to society.(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) Brittney Christensen, 35, makes a batch of chocolate mint brownies from scratch bakes in the oven. Christensen and her fellow inmates have clean records and no disciplinary actions during their time served inside. Every Monday through Friday, a half-dozen or so Level 4 inmates file out of the Olympus Facility at the Utah State Prison to cook, bake and serve the public at the Serving Time CafŽ. The operation is part of Utah Department of Corrections Industries (UCI) and is aimed at helping inmates return to society.(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) Chonsey Leslie, right, steps into the baking room to belt out a tune with Brittney Christensen, left, as country music blares on the radio as Christensen makes a pan of brownies and Leslie minds the deep fryer. Every Monday through Friday, a half-dozen or so Level 4 inmates file out of the Olympus Facility at the Utah State Prison to cook, bake and serve the public at the Serving Time CafŽ. The operation is part of Utah Department of Corrections Industries (UCI) and is aimed at helping inmates return to society.(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) In the afternoon, the women are escorted back to the Olympus Facility. Based on their position, they earn between $1.40 and $1.75 per hour and can use that money to pay fines or save it. Every Monday through Friday, a half-dozen or so Level 4 inmates file out of the Olympus Facility at the Utah State Prison to cook, bake and serve the public at the Serving Time CafŽ. The operation is part of Utah Department of Corrections Industries (UCI) and is aimed at helping inmates return to society.(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) Chonsey Leslie shares a laugh with Department of Corrections officer Sgt. Trevor Kimmel. Every Monday through Friday, a half-dozen or so Level 4 inmates file out of the Olympus Facility at the Utah State Prison to cook, bake and serve the public at the Serving Time CafŽ. The operation is part of Utah Department of Corrections Industries (UCI) and is aimed at helping inmates return to society.

Draper • If you liked “Orange Is the New Black” television series, you’ll love the Serving Time Cafe in Draper, where female inmates cook up a storm and have a pretty good time, too.

Monday through Friday, a half-dozen or so Level 4 inmates — the most trusted classification — file through the razor-wire fence enclosing the Olympus Facility at the Utah State Prison and cross the street to the small eatery. It’s open to the public — no security clearance necessary — for breakfast beginning at 8 a.m. and lunch from 11 a.m. until 2 p.m.

Yes, you can get breakfast all day. But then you’d miss such things as the Prison Blues Burger, or the Parole Violator — a breaded chicken sandwich with onion rings. And you can’t escape without trying the peanut butter brownies — they’re so tasty, they should be labeled contraband.

The menu has dozens of offerings, from Navajo tacos to Reubens on rye, and the prices are right.

Brittney Christensen, 35, is the baker and she really loves it. Wednesday, she was cooking up some cookies made from scratch.

“This adjusts us to society a lot faster,” she said of working in the cafe. “I’m a very social person, so greeting people and seeing the public is very important to me.”

The place has a regular following and would-be diners should get there a little early or face the lunchtime crush. Hunger was in the eyes of folks lined up out the door as the women behind the counter were slinging burgers and french fries like crazy.

Steve Maestas hits the Serving Time Cafe, located at 14072 S. Pony Express Road, at least once a week for lunch.

“A friend said, ‘You gotta try this place,’” Maestas recalled. “And he’s right, the food is so good. The Tater Tots are good, the burgers are good, the tacos are good. Everything is good.”

The operation is part of Utah Department of Corrections Industries (UCI) and is aimed at helping inmates return to society, said supervisor Carolyn Price, a veteran of 28 years at Point of the Mountain.

“A lot of them have low self-esteem,” she explained. “But here, they can see what they are capable of. I try and encourage them and say, ‘Look what you’ve done.’ ”

Many of the women inmates are doing time for crimes in which drugs played a role.

“When they do drugs, they are a different person,” Price explained. “But when they are straight, you can see the potential.”

Working at the cafe beats sitting inside the prison, said Chonsey Leslie, 27, with a big smile. On this day, she’s cooking pork chops and cod and french fries.

The cod is good, she said, but her favorite is the Prison Blues Burger that comes with a layer of blue cheese between two meat patties, topped with sauteed onions.

An infectious grin gives away her feelings about working at the cafe.

“It makes me feel happy,” Leslie said. “It gives me something to look forward to each morning. It helps tremendously.”

Only the most trusted inmates are selected to work at the cafe, said Scott Crowther, the director of UCI. Not only is it a good opportunity for them, he said, but it also gives the public a chance to see inmates as people.

“It helps break down barriers,” Crowther said, “what I call the ‘Big Bad Wolf syndrome.‘ ”

Shacoy Saunders, 33, said she, too, enjoys working at the cafe and the relatively big bucks it pays — $1.65 an hour. Most prison jobs pay much less.

Managing money has been one or her weaknesses, she explained. Now Saunders works to budget her money for the prison commissary, where inmates can buy items found in grocery stores.

Like many inmates, Saunders has been in and out of prison on parole violations and new crimes. It’s difficult, she said, because she is missing her children grow up. She has two: one 15 and one 16.

“We all make bad decisions and some of us get caught,” she said. “Most of us want to change, and what we are trying to do here is find a way to change.”

The menu at the Serving Time Cafe doesn’t include hope, but it’s certainly in the air.


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