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Private Prisons = Big Savings, Right?

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  • Private Prisons = Big Savings, Right?


    State Representative Chad Campbell of Arizona said private prisons "leave the most expensive prisoners with taxpayers."

    “There’s a perception that the private sector is always going to do it more efficiently and less costly, but there really isn’t much out there that says that’s correct.”

    Such has been the case lately in Arizona. Despite a state law stipulating that private prisons must create “cost savings,” the state’s own data indicate that inmates in private prisons can cost as much as $1,600 more per year, while many cost about the same as they do in state-run prisons.

    The research, by the Arizona Department of Corrections, also reveals a murky aspect of private prisons that helps them appear less expensive: They often house only relatively healthy inmates.

    “It’s cherry-picking,” said State Representative Chad Campbell, leader of the House Democrats. “They leave the most expensive prisoners with taxpayers and take the easy prisoners.”

    In the 1980s, soaring violent crime, tougher sentencing and overcrowding led lawmakers to use private prisons to expand. Then, as now, privatization advocates argued that corporations were more efficient. Over time, most states signed contracts, one of the largest transfers of state functions to private industry.

    Nationally, the number of state inmates in private prisons grew by a third over the past decade to more than 90,000, but it has stagnated, and some states have reduced total prison populations — shifting nonviolent offenders to treatment programs while bolstering probation. Now, Ohio lawmakers want to privatize prisons with 6,000 inmates, and Florida will transfer institutions with 15,000 inmates to private management. The Arizona plan would add 5,000 private prison beds.

    The measures would be a shot in the arm for an industry that has struggled, in some places, to fill prison beds as the number of inmates nationwide has leveled off. But hopes of big taxpayer benefits might end in disappointment, independent experts say.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/19/us...ef=todayspaper



    making the white sheep the perps might just be the ticket . . .


  • #2
    Re: Private Prisons = Big Savings, Right?

    Or perhaps America can consider exporting the prisoners to China. I'm sure the sweat shops in China will be more than happy to accept them.

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