Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Empty jails hope to cash in on illegal immigratio­n crackdown

- By Claudia Lauer

DALLAS >> Several Texas counties that are struggling with debt because their jails have few or no prisoners hope to refill those cellblocks with a different kind of inmate: immigrants who have entered the country illegally.

The debt dates back to the 1990s and the first decade of the 2000s, when some rural counties were losing employment prospects and population. To bring jobs and money, they built correction­al centers with hundreds and sometimes more than a thousand beds that could be used to house inmates from other counties as well as prisoners for the state and federal government­s.

In some cases, the strategy worked, at least for a while. But a decline in crime and an increase in alternativ­e sentencing reduced the Texas prisoner population and created a glut of jail space.

Now the debts, utility bills and maintenanc­e are becoming so burdensome that counties are confrontin­g a difficult choice. They can seek a federal contract to house some of the immigrants expected to be detained in President Donald Trump’s immigratio­n crackdown. Or they can sell the vacant detention centers to private prison companies that aim to do the same.

Jails and private prisons across the country are weighing their options after the Department of Homeland Security announced in January that it was shopping for more jail space as part of its efforts to secure the border.

In some places, the situation is the reverse of Texas, with public prisons full and states paying for extra beds. A private prison operator that had been housing 250 inmates for Vermont recently dropped the state as a client because the federal government will probably offer more for the same space.

“Anyone with vacant beds is hoping the federal government will lease them at a much higher rate,” Lisa Menard, acting commission­er of the Vermont Department of Correction­s told lawmakers in February. “Immigratio­ns and customs enforcemen­t are looking to lease beds everywhere.”

Three vacant Texas detention centers have been sold to private prison companies in the last fewweeks, according to county officials and records filed with the national Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board.

Some of the jails require updating to meet U. S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t standards, but the existing facilities could put Texas at an advantage compared with other states where the companies would have to spend months building detention space.

Meanwhile, the traditiona­l inmate- holding business is still declining. A proposed budget fromthe Texas Senate would end state contracts with four facilities, including three that are privately run, making it more important for those companies to get immigrant contracts to stay profitable.

ICE would not discuss how many beds the agency might need or its timetable for obtaining them. Agency spokesman Carl Rusnok declined to discuss any negotiatio­ns, citing the confidenti­ality of the federal contractin­g process.

At least one advocacy group is wary of the secretive process and of putting more detainees in privately run facilities after complaints and violations of inmate-care standards.

“If this is the plan to expand to the bottom of the barrel in detention centers, that should raise huge red flags for people concerned about immigrants’ well- being and rights,” said Bob Libal, executive director of Austin- based Grassroots Leadership, which seeks immigratio­n and detention reform.

Management and Training Corp. recently purchased a South Texas detention center that was shuttered after a 2015 inmate riot left it uninhabita­ble. The Willacy County Correction­al Center, about 45 miles north of the Mexico border, fetched close to $ 68 million, allowing the county to pay off the constructi­on bonds.

Until the riot over alleged deficienci­es in medical care, the company ran the facility in a private- public partnershi­p with the county.

Company spokesman Issa Arnita said MTC was “working closely with ICE and hoping to get a contract.”

Officials in Maverick and Jones counties confirmed that their empty correction­al centers were being purchased by the private prison company known as the GEO Group Inc., which runs themost immigrant detention facilities of any private company operating in Texas.

A spokesman for GEO said the company does not comment on specific transactio­ns.

Like a handful of other counties across Texas, Maverick County formed a nonprofit corporatio­n — the Maverick County Public Facility Corporatio­n— to obtain financing through municipal bonds and insulate the county fromdirect financial responsibi­lity. A private operator would then run the detention center and split the profits.

After a 2013 contract disagreeme­nt with GEO over the division of profits, the private company pulled out and the county tried to operate the facility and repay the bonds, said Maverick County Judge David Saucedo, the county’s top administra­tive officer.

The county eventually reached an agreement with bondholder­s to foreclose on the facility.

Other counties have entered into agreements with private prison companies to renovate their empty facilities in expectatio­n of reopening if immigrant detention opens opportunit­ies.

However, some county officials say they have no plans to work with prison companies because of previous experience­s.

After Emerald Correction­al Management pulled out of its contract to run a 600- bed facility in 2014, La Salle County decided to operate the detention center itself.

With 350 to 450 prisoners on any given day, many picked up by the U. S. Marshals Service, the county about 40 miles north of Laredo is finally turning a profit. Judge Joel Rodriguez was cautious about the prospects of an increase in immigrant detentions.

“There are a lot of facilities in Texas sitting empty,” he said. “And I don’t know if they will be filled because of this.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Management and Training Corp. recently purchased the Willacy County Correction­al Center in Raymondvil­le, Texas, that was shuttered after a 2015inmate riot left it uninhabita­ble.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Management and Training Corp. recently purchased the Willacy County Correction­al Center in Raymondvil­le, Texas, that was shuttered after a 2015inmate riot left it uninhabita­ble.

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