Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Mass Appeal to Governors: Don't Privatize Prisons | Mother Jones

Mass Appeal to Governors: Don't Privatize Prisons | Mother Jones

Mass Appeal to Governors: Don't Privatize Prisons

| Fri Mar. 2, 2012 3:00 AM PST

The private prison giant Corrections Corporation of America has made states an offer they can—and should—refuse. That's the message that went out to state governors on Thursday in letters signed by 60 policy and religious groups. The letters urged the governors of all 50 states not to take up a blanket deal CCA has put forth to buy and privatize their state prisons in return for a promise to keep those prisons filled.

Two weeks ago, the Huffington Post revealed that CCA was reaching out to states, offering to buy their prisons as a way to deal with their "challenging corrections budgets." The company is proposing that it receive, in exchange for the cash, a 20-year management contract that would require the states to keep their prisons at least 90 percent full for the duration.

This power play by the private prison firm may indicate some anxiety in what has historically been a growth industry. (See charts below.) Beginning in 2009, for the first time in nearly 40 years, the overall US prison population declined slightly. And in several states, plans to privatize prisons have been scaled back, stalled, or rejected.

The most notable of these defeats came last month in Florida, where the state Senate narrowly rejected a plan that would have turned over more than two dozen Florida prisons to private companies. Had the proposal moved forward, it would have transferred 14,500 prisoners into private hands and represented "the largest single contract procurement in the history of our industry," George Zoley, CEO of the GEO Group, told investors. (GEO, headquartered in Florida, is the nation's No. 2 prison corporation behind CCA.)

The Florida Senate has a strong Republican majority, but nine GOP senators broke ranks and voted with Democrats against privatization, reportedly citing public safety concerns. Within days of the vote, Florida Gov. Rick Scott indicated that he hadn't given up on the plan, which is supposed to save the state $16.5 million a year. "I'm disappointed the Senate didn't do that; I'm going to look at what I have the opportunity to do," he told reporters. Scott also said he was exploring opportunities to pursue the massive prison privatization plan unilaterally, presumably by executive order.

More private prisoners...: Mother Jones July/Aug 2008 issue

Beget a kickass stock.
More private prisoners (top) beget a kickass stock (above).
From Mother Jones' July/August 2008 prisons package.

The governor made the unlikely promise that the money saved on prisons could be spent on education and health care, while lawmakers supporting the bill warned that those areas might be cut further if the privatization plan fizzles. But there are other options that neither Scott nor most Republican legislators are willing to put on the table.

Florida's overall corrections budget topped $2.3 billion in 2010—but contrary to Scott's claims, the state spends relatively little per prisoner. (On its website, the Florida DOC boasts that most of its prisons are not air-conditioned, and that its inmates work long hours in prison-based fields and factories.) Private prison companies, meanwhile, are notorious for saving money by depriving prisoners of decent food and health care, but in Florida they would be starting out from an already lean position. Some lawmakers have expressed doubt that the savings would ever materialize.

Florida hosts 100,000-plus inmates. New York, with a larger population, has only 56,000.

Corrections cost so much in Florida not because of profligate spending, but simply due to the sheer number of inmates. Thanks largely to laws dating back to the 1990s, which raised mandatory sentences and cut opportunities for parole, the Sunshine State hosts more than 100,000 inmates. New York, with a slightly larger total population, has 56,000.

The logical way to save money on corrections is to reduce the prison population. Even get-tough states like Texas, Oklahoma, and Mississippi are now reforming draconian sentencing laws and diverting low-level nonviolent offenders into alternative programs. Not so, Florida. In 2009, as the national prison population declined, Florida's increased by 1.5 percent, according to a Pew report. The state's only proposed solution has been this privatization bid.

The advocacy groups who sent Thursday's letters hope that states will take a harder look at the alternatives. CCA's offer, notes one letter spearheaded by the ACLU and signed by 26 other organizations, "is a backdoor invitation to take on additional debt while increasing CCA's profits and impeding the serious criminal justice reforms needed to combat the nation's mass incarceration crisis." Another, signed by 32 religious entities, says there is a "moral imperative in reducing incarceration through evidence-based alternatives to imprisonment."

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  • First step in the authoritarian right's effort to construct concentration camps for those who don't approve of brown shirts and jackboots or their dangerous ideology. Second step.......

  • Second step: Systematic Neo-Slavery.

  • They are kind of required to do that since their first plan of farming out American jobs in exchange for slave labor in Asia went so well the American economy doesn't have any hope of recovery unless we can implement slave labor here. And the best way to do that is to gut the education system and create a permanent criminal class of minorities and the poor. Why minorities and the poor? Because they will be the only ones left in the crappy public schools! Those with money will move to private schools and those with time will home school according to a Tea Party curriculum. The third group will be trained to become disfunctional, debt-ridden consumers without a moral compass. It's a recipe!

  • We will know them by their toothless grins :-(

  • Sounds like A Brave New World by Huxley...

  • The EVIL that Orwell warned us of in his "1984" has sprung to life in America. The evil that is now American justice makes NAZI prisons look like city jails. Capitalism has found the ultimate commodity----the human being.

  • "The logical way to save money on corrections is to reduce the prison population."
    -true

    But the logical way to to increase shareholder profits for CCA and GEO Group investors is to increase the prison population- by any means necessary.

    It's not about criminal justice outcomes or public policy. It's just the logical outcome of fundamentalist capitalism and conservative cultural mythology, a.k.a. Willie Horton, Joe Arpaio, Insecure communities and the tragic farse that is the "war on drugs."

    There was a symposium in NYC on this stuff recently and one of the speakers wondered which was more destructive- using the criminal justice system to deal with drug addiction, or our addiction to incarceration itself?

  • "a blanket deal CCA has put forth to buy and privatize their state prisons in return for a promise to keep those prisons filled."

    That is insane. A promise to keep them filled? WTF is that?

    Chief: "I got a call from CCA and the prison population is down. Why don't you go downtown and round up some people who really aren't causing any harm to anyone. We don't want to let CCA down. Gov. Corbett will be on my a**."

    Johnny Cop: "Sure thing Chief. I wasn't really busy, just looking at this case involving violent crime. It can wait."

  • But if the contract requires the state to have inmates, doesn't that make them state employees? I smell a class-action suit for back wages. . .

  • It is already common to violate probation for petty issues...Many inmates are in prison because they violated their probation in some way sometimes minor sometimes not. But this opens a whole can of worms with the justice system in America...judges sentencing to satisfy a contract with the state...didn't this already happen with juveniles somewhere?

  • It happened in Philadelphia. A judge was connected to a private prison and was sentencing juveniles to exorbitant jail time.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02...

  • Wouldn't it then be possible to overturn convictions on the grounds that the state has a requirement to keep X number of people in prison?

  • Not if they're brown. This is Murka!

  • Below links are about a Sheriff in Florida who 'repatriated' the county
    prison back into the hands of the county to save money... This sheriff's office has saved Florida's Hernando County taxpayers more than a million dollars in just one year by taking the privatized prison away from CCA.

    http://whyihatecca.blogspot.co...

    http://www2.hernandotoday.com/...

    (Edited by author 3 days ago)

  • Same thing happened in Bay County, basically. They resumed operation of their county jail and were actually able to return around $2 million to the county budget.

  • For-profit prisons don't benefit anyone except the for-profit prison corportations. Additionally, with SCOTUS' decision on Citizens United, this opens up the possibility/probability of all kinds of hanky-panky between the prisons corps. and elected officials/judges. In Florida, CCA has already "contributed" about $1million to various campaigns, and they gave the maximum allowed, $25K, to fund Gov. Scott's inauguration party.

    The implications of this are just mind-boggling.

  • I was disappointed the article didn't touch on that.

    As a resident of this nutbag, neocon state, (florida) I cannot even believe this fool gets elected. He is a crony capitalist criminal.

    He made drug testing mandatory for public aid, enriching his wife's company (which did the testing, conveniently) at a massive cost to taxpayers. He found out a whopping 2% actually failed, and thankfully the courts struck down the lunacy.

    This is the same guy who as CEO of the largest healthcare corporation defrauded the US government of millions through medicare fraud. He got "fired" and handed millions on the way out the door, along with hundreds of millions in stock.

    The man is a greed machine and a menace to the citizens of Florida.

  • This governor is now planning to "backdoor" prison privatization and institute it via executive order. Rick Scott is a disgusting piece of vermin who is totally disregarding the wishes of his constituents to benefit his own agenda. I look forward to 2014 and the opportunity to remove him from public service (and I use the term loosely where it regards him).

  • Let's not forget those judges in whatever state it was who put juvies in jail in return for kickbacks from the private prison system. No SOY for LENT!

  • You make an excellent point my fellow primate:

    http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/J...

  • Pennsylvania

  • I sincerely hope the governors do not do this. I can't even begin to imagine just how horrible and how much awful the prisons would be if they were being run by for-profit, private companies.

  • See Texas where 100% of the people in Huntsville strongly support the death penalty.

  • Texans do tend to love their death penalties.

    It is a sad state of affairs, indeed. Especially since it has been proven that the death penalty does absolutely nothing to deter or even minimize violent crime.

  • AND it costs the states more to house these people on death row, what with legal fees due to appeals and such. I read somewhere that it costs about half a million to house a criminal for life without parole (essentially forever) compared to about $1.5 million or more for a death row inmate.

    I am opposed to the death penalty more for humane reasons rather than monetary reasons, but they factor into it, too. The death penalty needs to be abolished.

  • David E. Jones 03/02/2012 09:47 AM

    What are we doing, people?

    (Edited by author 3 days ago)

  • We can honestly say that the corruption that began in the Federal Government thirty or so years ago has made it down into the State level. Top down approach to slowly implementing an authoritarian regime in the US.

    Leaders set the agenda and provide the examples. You take one person of an agency, the director, and they set the rules. Natural human behavior will accomplish everything else in that department. Which is why you don't need so many people to effectively subvert a government and turn it into an authoritarian dictatorship. Occasionally, the director will need to issue a clarification of the rules if someone shows some initiative or questions authority.

    See the Milgram Experiment and look into George Orwell's past along with the experiment that was Orson Wells' broadcast of War of The Worlds. Also, look at the Stanford Prison Experiment. The degeneracy of America is directly reflected in who it elects. Eight years of Bush was enough to instill some very bad qualities in American society that have become the norm.

    To return to a more civilized, sane society... well... unfortunately, America is quickly approaching the point of no return. That point is when...

    show more
  • We're sending as much as we can to SPLC?

    Groundbreaking Settlement in SPLC Case Protects Incarcerated Children from Abuse in Mississippi

    Children
    and teens incarcerated in Mississippi will no longer be housed in a
    privately run prison or subjected to brutal solitary confinement under
    the terms of a groundbreaking settlement reached in an SPLC lawsuit.

    The federal class action suit
    charged that conditions at the Walnut Grove Youth Correctional
    Facility, which houses boys convicted as adults, are unconstitutional.
    The facility is operated by GEO Group Inc., the nation’s second largest
    private prison corporation.

    “This represents a sea change in the
    way the Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC) will treat children
    in its custody,” said Sheila Bedi, deputy legal director for the SPLC.
    “As a result of this litigation, Mississippi’s children will no longer
    languish in an abusive, privately operated prison that profits each time
    a young man is tried as an adult and ends up behind bars.”

    Under
    the proposed decree, the MDOC will be required to remove boys from the
    GEO-operated prison and house them at a stand-alone facility governed by
    juvenile justice, rather than adult, standards. The MDOC will be
    required to...

    show more
  • How did this happen? With privatized prisons, there is less oversight. Public prisons have oversight, even if they still suck the big, green weeney.

    Why are private prisons inexcusable? Historically, every private prison system has generated horrific abuse resulting in public outcry and dismantling of the system. From rape, slavery, child rape, abuse... etc... this is just a scratch on the surface.

    See the Stanford Prison Experiment for why this will happen. And continue to do so. Of course, many won't care until it happens to them... by then, too late.

  • Also highlights the fallacy of "rehabilitation".

    Clearly the corporation has a vested interest in each and every prisoner serving his whole sentence. Clearly the corporation has a vested interest in the prisoners commit more crimes while in jail, so as to add additional time to the sentence.

    Can't see where this is effective at anything other than CCA profiting from the public trust.

  • Corrections,Bureau of Prisons and probation programs in Florida are a growth industry.Budget is based on how much you spent last year with an allowable request for increase in funding.If they come in under budget that money is supposed to return to the States General fund.One problem is there are different kinds of Justice.One for the poor and underrepresented(State Atty's & Public Defenders are initially grossly underpaid)and sometime it is the only job they can get. Judges tend to be white collar criminals.The filling of beds is the goal.
    Other class of justice in Florida is for the wealthier or "Powerful" defendants.Rush Limbaugh pled nolo to possession of oxycontins and got 6 months probation and arrest expunged.Anybody else would have paid supervision costs of probation,fines,fees or incarceration.WD Childers in Fl. found guilty as county commisioner of engineering/profitting from a land deal spent 1 week in prison then sent home for medical reasons,etc.Florida's population and crime rate rise and we have built new prisons,private companies have built private prisons and take inmates from in and out of state.
    They need the beds filled and private companies are determined to turn a profit whereas the State facility is destined to stretch the...

    show more
  • In Missouri they are not feeding inmates real food...they are getting a protein pellet mixed in with other foods...Soylent Green anyone?

  • Also, Missouri prisons do "outsource" the medical care of inmates...there is a corporation who supplies the doctors and other medical personnel, however, if a major medical situation arises the inmate is sent to a state hospital in Columbia. There are so many BIG problems with the health of prisoners...not a problem if we execute them or keep them incarcerated for life but, so many leave prison with incurable ailments like, HepC, HIV they didn't have when they went in...not to mention bedbugs and body lice...Not so different from third world countries, we are just better at making things appear to be something it isn't.

  • Let's not forget that the prisons run by public entities and staffed by public employees aren't run quite all that well either. Along with public law enforcement interests that aren't amenable to sentencing reform, they contribute heavily to a politics of fear and de-humanization that appropriates billions of tax dollars flowing to corrections whatever the larger economic condition.

    Further, correctional supervision through probation and parole is implemented to create high recidivism rates, keeping the jails and prisons overcrowded and perhaps prompting more funding for facility expansion and the construction of new facilities.

    So long as the people and those they place into office perpetuate the pubic shame of a criminal justice system run entirely amok there will always be discrete interests, public and private, that will endeavor to profit from it.

  • Your comment, sadly, has merit, regarding publicly-run prisons, but if one had to make a comparison, the government-run facilities are operated much more efficiently and humanely than private prisons. And regardless of how one feels about people who are incarcerated, they deserve to be treated humanely. Most are NOT animals and do not deserve to be treated as such.

  • Someone needs to add up all the promised inmates to private prisons... I wonder what that will show. Two judges in Pennsylvania got busted for sending children to private prison for extraordinarily long terms in return for cash. Do you really think that was the only case? That judges are not aware that private prison contracts demand inmates?

    How long before the state is paying the judges performance bonuses for sentencing criminals - innocent or not? After all, these practices are just Capitalism.

  • Gregory Williams Yesterday 03:25 PM

    this is a backdoor slave system in many ways, the operators of privatized prisons want to LEASE out labor from prisons as a way to offset costs by allowing the prison operator to profit from what is basically forced labor. It is also disturbing that here again we see the vile republican habit of giving a contractor the right to violate the laws and an exemption from liability and prosecution for the private prison operators.

    WRONG IS WRONG and as usual where and when it comes to republicans and corporations THEY SEEK THE WRONG.

  • The company is proposing that it receive, in exchange for the cash, a
    20-year management contract that would require the states to keep their
    prisons at least 90 percent full for the duration.

    Sounds like a recipe for tyranny, as the state must maintain prisoners who otherwise might be set free or never go to prison in the first place. NOT GOOD!

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