Kuwait Times

California bans private prisons and immigrant detention centers

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LOS ANGELES: California on Friday banned private prisons and immigrant detention centers under a bill signed by the liberal state’s governor. The measure stipulates that beginning next year, the state’s Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion is prohibited from entering into or renewing a contract with a private, for-profit prison to incarcerat­e people.

The bill also calls for such facilities to be phased out by 2028. “During my inaugural address, I vowed to end private prisons, because they contribute to over-incarcerat­ion, including those that incarcerat­e California inmates and those that detain immigrants and asylum seekers,” Newsom, who has repeatedly sparred with the Trump administra­tion over immigratio­n, said after signing the bill. “These for-profit prisons do not reflect our values,” he added

California lawmaker Rob Bonta, who authored the bill, described the signing as “a truly historic moment for California.” “By ending the use of forprofit, private prisons and detention facilities, we are sending a powerful message that we vehemently oppose the practice of profiteeri­ng off the backs of California­ns in custody, that we will stand up for the health, safety and welfare of our people, and that we are committed to humane treatment for all,” he told a news conference.

Rights advocates also hailed the measure, pointing to what has been described as inhumane conditions at many of the private facilities where several inmates have died in recent years. Mario, a 31-year-old Mexican immigrant who spoke at the news conference, said he had spent six months at one of these for-profit detention centers and had “experience­d first-hand the injustice, the lack of medical care, the lack of nutritious food, the lack of everything.” “This is completely unacceptab­le,” he said. “People’s lives are at stake and people’s lives have been lost because of this.”

There are currently some 115,000 inmates being held at California prisons, and approximat­ely 1,700 of them are housed in private facilities. The state was previously notorious for its prison overcrowdi­ng but federal judges in 2009 imposed a cap, leading to privately outsourced incarcerat­ion. There are currently four dedicated immigratio­n detention facilities in California with an inmate population of about 3,700, officials say.

Bryan Cox, acting press secretary for US Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t (ICE) told local media that the new bill signed Friday would not deter immigratio­n enforcemen­t. “ICE would simply have to transfer individual­s a greater distance from their arrest location,” he told local media. “The greatest impact would be felt by California residents, who would be forced to travel longer distances to visit friends and family in detention.”

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