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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsNebraska Lawmaker Wants Her State To Stop Paying Private Prisons For Empty Cells
By Alan Pyke
Promising to keep private prison cells full will be illegal in Nebraska if a proposal from state Sen. Amanda McGill (D) becomes law.
McGill, who is running for higher state office this year, has introduced legislation banning the government from guaranteeing payment to private contractors regardless of the level of service the contractor provide. While that may sound so obvious as to be unnecessary, states often make those kinds of promises to corporations when they privatize public services.
The most notorious examples are private prison contracts that guarantee companies like the Corrections Corporation of America (CCA) a certain minimum occupancy level at prisons, and promise to pay CCA the difference should prison populations sag below that level. Such lock-up quotas appear in two-thirds of all prison privatization contracts, according to a report last fall by the anti-privatization group In The Public Interest (ITPI).
McGills legislation would ban those kinds of payment guarantees across all state contracts, but is specifically targeted at prison contracts. The bill also would amend the states corrections contracting law in a variety of ways to both protect taxpayers and regulate prison companies more tightly....Contracts that force public payments for empty cells give elected officials reason to keep prisons as full as possible, which means criminalizing as many behaviors as possible. The largest driver of Americas incarceration epidemic is the futile, decades-old War on Drugs, but backroom deals with prison companies compound the countrys larger problem.
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http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2014/02/01/3237401/nebraska-prison-contracts-reform/
NaturalHigh
(12,778 posts)This especially applies to my home state of Oklahoma.
Stop sending non-violent drug offenders to prison. Stop locking people up for marijuana possession. Not only would we not need private prisons, we could probably close down some of the state prisons.
Merlot
(9,696 posts)to jail just to keep the jails full.
Michael Moores movie "Capitalism: A Love Story" had some kids with minor offenses getting locked up in detention by a crooked judge. Eventually, the judge got his own justice and was put behind bars for taking payoffs from the company that ran the detention center.
NaturalHigh
(12,778 posts)Law and Order SVU did a really good episode about that too.
pnwmom
(109,021 posts)pnwmom
(109,021 posts)Merlot
(9,696 posts)While it does say there will be tighter regulation on judges, it's main focus seems to be the contract payments.
Brigid
(17,621 posts)How about banning privately run prisons?
kcr
(15,321 posts)All the private prisons will do in response is ramp up the lobbying for tough on crime to fill the prisons to make up the difference. As long as profit is a motive, there will be a motivation to fill those cells. This legislation won't change that.
pnwmom
(109,021 posts)They don't want to take the risk of a declining population.
icymist
(15,888 posts)If big corporations want to privatize the public sector then the public should not have to subsidize them when they lose money.