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Private Prison Corporation Offers Cash In Exchange For State Prisons

Posted: 02/14/12 09:37 AM ET  |  Updated: 02/14/12 06:27 PM ET

Private Prisons
A June 2005 file photo of the Lake Erie Correctional Institution in Conneaut, Ohio, which the state sold to Corrections Corporation of America last year.

As state governments wrestle with massive budget shortfalls, a Wall Street giant is offering a solution: cash in exchange for state property. Prisons, to be exact.

Corrections Corporation of America, the nation's largest operator of for-profit prisons, has sent letters recently to 48 states offering to buy up their prisons as a remedy for "challenging corrections budgets." In exchange, the company is asking for a 20-year management contract, plus an assurance that the prison would remain at least 90 percent full, according to a copy of the letter obtained by The Huffington Post.

The move reflects a significant shift in strategy for the private prison industry, which until now has expanded by building prisons of its own or managing state-controlled prisons. It also represents an unprecedented bid for more control of state prison systems.

Corrections Corporation has been a swiftly growing business, with revenues expanding more than fivefold since the mid-1990s. The company capitalized on the expansion of state prison systems in the '80s and '90s at the height of the so-called 'war on drugs,' contracting with state governments to build or manage new prisons to house an influx of drug offenders. During the past 10 years, it has found new opportunity in the business of locking up undocumented immigrants, as the federal government has contracted with private companies in an aggressive immigrant-detention campaign.

And Corrections Corporation's offer of $250 million toward purchasing existing state prisons is yet another avenue for potential growth. The company has billed the "corrections investment initiative" as a convenient option for states in need of fresh revenue streams: The state benefits from a one-time infusion of cash, while the prison corporation wins a new long-term contract. In addition, supporters of prison privatization have argued that states can achieve cost savings through outsourcing, as prison corporations give fewer benefits to employees.

"We believe this comes at a timely and helpful juncture and hope you will share our belief in the benefits of the purchase-and-manage model," reads the letter from Harley Lappin, CCA's chief corrections officer, who was a former director of the Federal Bureau of Prisons.

Ohio sold off one of its largest prisons to Corrections Corporation last year as a way to plug holes in its budget, and government officials estimate that outsourcing the prison could save the state $3 million annually. Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal (R) proposed putting three state prisons on the block last year to generate one-time revenue, but he failed to persuade state lawmakers to endorse the plan.

Others have raised serious doubts about the wisdom of selling off and privatizing state prisons, which could give private corporations substantially more bargaining power in long-term contracts with states. Prison management contracts can be canceled or re-bid frequently, with the state still retaining ownership of the prison as an asset. But if a private company owns the prison, the state would have fewer options if it wanted to cut ties. Any alternatives for housing prisoners would likely cost more, such as building a new prison from scratch or finding another company to take in its inmates.

A series of studies has also cast doubt on the private prison industry's main selling point: efficiency. Research across numerous states has shown that the promised savings from private prisons can be illusory at best. Cost comparisons often fail to account for extra administrative expenses borne by the state, or differences in health care costs for sickly inmates who normally remain in state supervision.

What's more, many civil liberties advocates question why a profit motive should be tied to incarceration policies, raising concerns that cutting costs could have an adverse effect on public safety. In 1998, six prisoners, including five convicted murderers, escaped from a Corrections Corporation prison in Youngstown, Ohio, putting the company in the national spotlight amid findings of inept supervision by guards and poor training by prison officials.

"It's a real gamble for states to say, 'Gee, we're going to save a lot of money this way,'" said Zach Schiller, research director at Policy Matters Ohio, which did several studies analyzing Ohio's sale of a state prison to Corrections Corporation of America. "The idea that we should do this because we need money on a one-time basis seems like awfully short-term thinking. If we want to talk about what our needs are for the budget, and what our needs are for housing prisoners, let's look at those on a long-term basis and see what the best decisions are."

A spokesman for Corrections Corporation of America, Steve Owen, said the company's contracts with any government agency are completely transparent. He pointed out that in many states, including Ohio, governments require demonstrated cost savings of 5 percent or more to enter into a contract with a private operator.

"There has to be a cost savings, and they have to monitor that over time, so I think that speaks for itself," Owen said. "At the end of the day, if we can't provide the scope of services and the quality of services and do it at whatever the cost savings that are required, they're not going to continue to do business with us."

But estimated savings often come down to how those calculations are made, and outside researchers have questioned the numbers. In Arizona, for example, a 2010 report from the state's auditor general showed that it cost the state more to house prisoners in private facilities than public prisons after factoring in administrative costs and adjusting for the types of medical care provided to less healthy inmates who tended to be housed in public facilities. And in Florida, where lawmakers this week could decide whether to privatize more than two dozen state prisons, reports about private prisons from the state's legislative research office note, "cost savings estimates are subject to caveats and should be evaluated cautiously."

EXPANDING IN TIGHT TIMES

In recent years, Corrections Corporation of America has made it clear that it sees opportunity in the new era of state budget crises. During earnings calls with investors, company executives have pointed out that the Great Recession has brought renewed interest in privatization.

"We continue to believe we are very well-positioned in a market that, despite the economic pressures faced by our customers, has provided healthy financial performance," Corrections Corporation chief executive Damon Hininger said in the company earnings call last November. "Indeed, it is because of these pressures, which lead to severe capital constraints and the need to avoid increasing their pension liabilities, that we believe our value proposition to customers is getting stronger."

The letter sent last month to 48 states was billed on the example of Ohio, which last year sold a prison near the shore of Lake Erie to Corrections Corporation for $72.7 million.

"We want to build on that success and provide our existing or prospective government partners with access to the same opportunity," the letter said.

Those who follow the private corrections industry said the purchasing approach gives prison companies a new option for growth. Although U.S. prison populations have swelled to enormous proportions, growing more than sevenfold since the mid-1970s, growth has slowed and populations are expected to decline in many states.

"You've not seen inmate populations at the state level grow for the last two years," said Kevin Campbell, a senior research analyst who follows the corrections industry at Avondale Partners, an investment firm. "So if you as an industry are going to continue to grow, then you have to think, 'How do we take shares away from the public sector to the private sector?'"

The outright ownership of a prison generally makes state contracts more beneficial to a private operator such as Corrections Corporation of America, Campbell said. If a state owns a prison and contracts it out, the pricing tends to be more competitive, as numerous companies would be jockeying for the management job.

"That just keeps a lid on how profitable a management contract can be," Campbell said. "That's why their preference would be to own versus just straight-out manage a contract."

Yet critics point to inherent problems in such long-term contracts, particularly provisions that require a prison to be 90 percent full throughout the life of an agreement. In Ohio, for example, contractors are guaranteed payment at the 90 percent rate "regardless of the actual number of inmates at the institution at that time."

The mandate to keep prisons full raises questions about cost efficiency -- what if there aren't enough inmates? -- but it also presents a moral question about maintaining a constant supply of new prisoners.

"It becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy," said Shakyra Diaz, policy director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio. "In order to have it at 90 percent, you need to be able to make criminals to fill it at 90 percent."

Corrections Corporation's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission clearly point out that business success is tied to a status quo in criminal justice policy.

"The demand for our facilities and services could be adversely affected by the relaxation of enforcement efforts, leniency in conviction or parole standards and sentencing practices or through the decriminalization of certain activities that are currently proscribed by our criminal laws," the company's most recent annual filing noted. "For instance, any changes with respect to drugs and controlled substances or illegal immigration could affect the number of persons arrested, convicted, and sentenced, thereby potentially reducing demand for correctional facilities to house them."

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As state governments wrestle with massive budget shortfalls, a Wall Street giant is offering a solution: cash in exchange for state property. Prisons, to be exact. Corrections Corporation of Americ...
As state governments wrestle with massive budget shortfalls, a Wall Street giant is offering a solution: cash in exchange for state property. Prisons, to be exact. Corrections Corporation of Americ...
 
 
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
dizmo4 02:16 PM on 02/14/2012
Operating the prisons yourself or signing a contract to pay someone else to run prisons.   Either way the government is spending tax payer dollars.   Don't see how there can be any cost savings under this model, especially when private prisons have to turn a profit for their shareholder no matter what.   That's almost certainly going to mean sub-par care for the inmates and  Read More...
02:40 PM on 05/07/2012
Don't sell our and your civil rights to corporate america......what price is your civil rights worth? mine are priceless
08:54 PM on 04/22/2012
Corporations need to make a profit right? To see a profit they need to keep the prisons full.
Watch out america...soon a speeding ticket will result in incarceration.
Law enforcement and Judges will be given incentives to see that these private prisons stay full. The system is so broken now..................the future is scary.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
weathergirl
loved politics as a little girl!
02:30 PM on 04/14/2012
So we, the taxpayers gurantee a profit to private corporations by keeping the private corporations at 90 percent occupancy for 20 years in exchange for a one year of monetary windfall to close deficits???? How is this any better than the bailout that the GOP/baggers are screaming at the top of their lungs. It seems that just like the private schools, the private prisons can cherry pick their inmates so that they fill them with white collar crime and low risk offenders leaving the high medical inmates, along with the high risk to the few remaining pubilc prisons in each state. Furthermore, Rep Allen West of FL is screaming about all of the commies in Congress, how is the fact that forced labor for a private company any different than the communists re-education camps??? Finally, what about the states with the death penalty??? I thought that the definition of murder is when one person kills another. Since corporations are people, when they (the corporation) puts someone to death, they are committing murder, correct????
Epilef2000
Cafe Con Leche Party
07:27 PM on 04/18/2012
continue on having the drug war for another 40 years, and its going to get worse.. or rather--more costly for taxpayers
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
weathergirl
loved politics as a little girl!
12:33 AM on 04/19/2012
It gets even better when it comes to the drug wars! CA has legalized marijuana for person medical use. It can be carried openly on all flights within CA. So what does the DOJ do, they invade and destroy medical mj growing facilities. Since these are all registered and paying taxes with the city that they are located in...None of this hunting done the plants in remote areas of either state or federal park lands. Let us stop these wars like in Afghanistan. Let's bring our people home by this Christmas and give everyone a happier New Year! The war on drugs has failed like most wars! Let us start having more rehab for everyone especially help people who need to go through more than once because it is difficult to go cold turkey!!! If we get our people off drugs, then we will not be funding the drug cartels in this country and other nations!@ F and F!
02:48 PM on 03/20/2012
Here's a thought... Speed up the death penalty process and move 'em through the line. Less mouths to feed, less money to spend.
09:12 AM on 03/02/2012
The term "corrections department" seems to refer only to the financial status of the prison system. Human beings, once charged with any crime, are caught in the revolving door of probation, parole and prison to keep the cash flowing into the corruptions department! A horror, and disgrace for our country!
07:18 PM on 02/29/2012
Wow! ANOTHER way to 'stick it to the little guy'. Bottom line, privatization is for PROFIT. How obscene is it to PROFIT off the unfortunate and/or egregious actions of the least of us regardless of the crime. The wolves see an opening and (NATURALLY) run for it. The REASON privatization is a HORRIBLE idea is exemplified in the 'guaranteed 90%' clause. So, what happens if society realizes that 'correction' is not the answer, and the INCENTIVE FOR PROFIT is removed? Who gets sued? The PEOPLE. What a way to guarantee the profit motive...keep em' coming, keep em' coming, no matter what they've done (or DIDN'T do..) just keep em' coming... Prisons are NOT a 'cash cow' for the fortunate to suck off of at the expense of the less fortunate. This scheme is about as transparently disgusting as any other offered up by republican shills... Absolutely ridiculous...
03:47 PM on 02/26/2012
For profit, corporate prisons are one of the biggest abominations in human history. To be viable, a corporation needs to continue growing. Do the math, for a prison corporation to grow, it needs a continuous and ever growing supply of fresh meat. Ever notice how many more things have become illegal just since the '80s? The gov. sells all this to us as new public safety measures, but all that has happened is the US having the worlds leading incarceration rate and largest prison population. Coincidence? I think not.

With NDAA 2012, the "Patriot Act", the War on Drugs, the War on Terror, and all the other erosions of liberty "necessary for public safety", one half of the population will be working to house the other half in a prison. Think about that carefully when you go to vote. Hint: Obama wants more prisons, as do Romney, Santorum and Newt.
07:35 PM on 05/15/2012
You hit the nail on the head! This is the new slavery.

A majority of inmates are there for drug related crimes. More than half of our prison population are addicts. Born that way? An ever increasing budget for the War on Drugs since the 70's and this is where the money trail lead. What a country.
11:44 AM on 02/26/2012
From the article...

"Corrections Corporation of America, the nation's largest operator of for-profit prisons, has sent letters recently to 48 states offering to buy up their prisons as a remedy for "challenging corrections budgets." In exchange, the company is asking for a 20-year management contract, plus an assurance that the prison would remain at least 90 percent full"

Yes, I realize that states are in bad financial shape, but "an assurance that the prison would remain at least 90 percent full"?

Seriously? Think about what that kind of assurance would do to police practices. Arrest quotas will be the new normal for every community. And the drug war would be even harder to end. So...no thanks.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wynsar
Progressive Family for 4 generations
01:59 AM on 02/26/2012
http://epubs.utah.edu/index.php/jlfs/article/viewFile/91/81 page 8/footnotes

case against CAA for abuses in Detention Centers setup for illegal immigrants and their families/
Philip Perry (Dick CHeney's son-in-law) was General COunsel for Department for Homeland Security at a time when CAA received lucrative contracts to set up detention centers.
He then lobbied for CAA while working as an attorney for Latham & Watkins
To profit from human suffering is disgusting
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wynsar
Progressive Family for 4 generations
01:55 AM on 02/26/2012
http://epubs.utah.edu/index.php/jlfs/article/viewFile/91/81 Page 8 /footnotes
Case relating to abuses by CAA against immigrants in detention centers run by CAA fascinating reading ...but sad

Philip Perry(Cheney's son-in-law) was General Counsel for Dept. Homeland Security....now works for Latham & Watkins and lobbied for CAA and CAA is very involved in detention centers for illegal immigrants and their families.......CAA received lucrative contracts from the Dept. of Homeland Security...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wynsar
Progressive Family for 4 generations
01:05 AM on 02/26/2012
And let us guess who is a big player in this Corporation/ DIck Cheney's son-in-law....
everyone please connect the dots!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ginger23
Sempre ubi sub ubi.
02:44 PM on 02/22/2012
One nation, under lock and key.....
11:31 PM on 02/21/2012
In reading the essay “The Caging of America†by Adam Gopnik, our group had an overall response of concern to the commercialization of America’s prison system. Through the essay, the for-profit private company Corrections Corporation of America (CCA) was brought to our attention. CCA is paid by each state to manage assigned prisons, and increases their profits by maximizing prison space and minimizing funds spent per prisoner. While Gopnik touches on this in the essay, further research introduced the contract CCA recently proposed to 48 states to purchase and manage their prisons. This proposal outlined a 20-year management contract, on the premise that states would maintain a minimum occupancy of 90%, thus turning incarceration into a mere business transaction.

Gopnik’s essay made an excellent case for concern over the current structure of America’s prison system. The issue of CCA’s involvement leads us to also question the shift in methods of imprisonment. The substandard quality of life brought on by CCA’s severe cost cuts strongly reflects the shift to what Gopnik described as a “Southern†approach to punishment as opposed to the reform-based methods traditional of the “Northern†penitentiaries. It is in this Southern approach that Gopnik suggests that our current prison system is a direct reflection of the structuralist oppression that was previously demonstrated through slavery and is now hidden within our methods of incarceration.

The article can be found here: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/02/14/private-prisons-buying-state-prisons_n_1272143.html
04:48 PM on 02/21/2012
Without reading other comments first, I bet that few will recognized the inherent danger from judges and law enforcement official sending innocence people to jail to keep up the census. I believe two judges have already been tried for sending young people too long sentences for misdemeanors. This is prime breeding grounds for corruption. Peoples Civil Rights are going to be stumped on as never before. The inmates, yes some are criminals, and should be incarcerated for their original crimes but not perceived charges by prison officials to keep up the populations. In the south, they had chain gangs that were loan out to farmers for cash to the Warden. OIC this is the way Back to the Future Antebellum South.
GBA
BHO 2012
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mary Keefe
08:26 PM on 03/14/2012
bunch of godamn corrupted crooks
03:53 PM on 02/21/2012
Do you mean to tell me that our government can actually sign a contract that says it will supply a set number of "prisoners" !!!??? That must be illegal somehow .. if not, get ready for the return of "debtors' prisons" .. If you owe money that you can't pay dear debt slave, we will put you into our corporate greed grinder (remember Soylent Green?) .. How else will they supply these horror houses with bodies ?? More and more things will become "illegal" and subject to prison time .. Just recently the indefinite detention bill NDAA was signed into law .. It allows Americans to be sent to prison without trial and held indefinitely .. We must stand up people .. We cannot let this happen !!