Los Angeles Times

Opt out of for-profit prisons

- By Jackie Lacey s we contemplat­e Jackie Lacey is the Los Angeles County district attorney.

Aways to address the disproport­ionate number of people imprisoned in America, one potential impediment to change is the large corporatio­ns that profit from incarcerat­ion.

Between 2000 and 2016, the number of people housed in private prisons in the United States increased by 47% compared with an overall rise in the prison population of 9%, according to an analysis from the Sentencing Project.

Before the genesis of the war on drugs in the 1980s, America rarely used private prisons.

But after the implementa­tion of draconian mandatory sentences during the Reagan administra­tion, incarcerat­ion rates jumped, and private corporatio­ns rushed in to fill the need for more prison cells in a hurry.

The system that has developed is completely counter to our values, particular­ly in a state as progressiv­e as California. We should not be part of a prison system in which there is a profit incentive to lock up more people.

There is now an effort in the state Legislatur­e to ban this backward and immoral practice in California. Assembly Bill 32, which is gaining broad support from legislator­s and the governor, provides a common-sense solution that would ban new contractin­g out of incarcerat­ion to private prison companies starting in 2020, and sets an end date of 2028 for the removal of all state inmates from private prisons.

California currently contracts with two of the largest firms in the privatepri­son industry, GEO Group and CoreCivic (formerly Correction­s Corp. of America), both of which have faced numerous lawsuits over the years accusing them of substandar­d medical care and treatment of inmates.

CEOs and shareholde­rs of private prison companies have an incentive to minimize investment­s and maximize profits for shareholde­rs, which can result in cutting corners to lower operating costs, including worse treatment of inmates and worse pay for prison guards.

A 2016 report from the Justice Department found that private prisons regularly failed to ensure inmates were receiving medical care. They reported more than twice as many inmate-onstaff assaults as in state-run prisons, and reported a 28% higher rate of inmate-on-inmate assaults. At La Palma Correction­al Center, a private prison in Arizona that holds California inmates and Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t detainees, a 2010 state inspector general report discovered that the facility overused solitary confinemen­t, provided insufficie­nt services and had numerous security issues.

And although the contractin­g out of detention was done in part to save money, recent research has cast doubt on whether private prisons actually save the government money.

An investigat­ion into the prisons in Arizona discovered that inmates in the state’s private prisons rarely cost less than those in state-run prisons, and in some cases cost as much as $1,600 more per inmate per year. The report also noted that private prisons can push down costs by refusing to take prisoners with severe illnesses or a history of violence, something state-run prisons can’t do.

GEO Group and CoreCivic are also key partners in President Trump’s inhumane immigratio­n agenda, as both operate detention centers throughout the country.

Our state is unfortunat­ely one of the top revenue-producing states for both companies, and state lawmakers should do everything they can to divorce California from this toxic relationsh­ip.

That shouldn’t be terribly difficult. California uses only five private facilities to house inmates. Together, the prisons incarcerat­e only about 3.5% of the state’s total prison population, half of them in state and half in Arizona.

Transferri­ng those inmates to other prisons and not sending new ones is entirely feasible within the time frame outlined in AB 32, particular­ly given the precipitou­s decline in California’s prison population since a federal court ordered officials in 2009 to reduce dangerous and inhumane prison overcrowdi­ng.

While the expansion of private prisons is not the only problem in California’s often slow-moving criminal justice system, there is something particular­ly galling about people making money off of increasing the size of our prison population.

Corporate executives and shareholde­rs should not profit from putting people in cages, and it’s time to end the archaic and cruel practice of private prisons in California.

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