Thursday, May 19, 2011

Private Prisons Profit By Leaving The Sick Ones Behind

Since the facts don't matter, nothing in here will matter. The fact that privitization is not a panacea and private industry will not handle everything the world has to throw at it will not influence opinion.

This is ugly on so many levels. First off, the private companies can be more "efficient" by leaving out the sick inmates. Why is the State so acquiescent to a system where they are getting screwed with the sick inmates? Nothing good about privitization at all.

And here is the really ugly part in this. Not a WORD in here about rehabilitation. That's out the window. The problem with prison is that the people that get in get OUT. And they are with all of us. It behooves us to pay attention to these people beyond dealing with them as cheaply as possible.
The conviction that private prisons save money helped drive more than 30 states to turn to them for housing inmates. But Arizona shows that popular wisdom might be wrong: Data there suggest that privately operated prisons can cost more to operate than state-run prisons — even though they often steer clear of the sickest, costliest inmates.

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

The state’s experience has particular relevance now, as many politicians have promised to ease budget problems by trimming state agencies. Florida and Ohio are planning major shifts toward private prisons, and Arizona is expected to sign deals doubling its private-inmate population.

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.

“There’s a perception that the private sector is always going to do it more efficiently and less costly,” said Russ Van Vleet, a former co-director of the University of Utah Criminal Justice Center. “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.”


[The New York Times]

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