California set to end private prisons and immigrant detention camps
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[October 10, 2019]
By Steve Gorman
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - America's largest
state prison system is moving to quit the practice of farming out
inmates to lockups run under contract by private companies, following a
nationwide decline in the for-profit incarceration business.
California Governor Gavin Newsom is expected to sign legislation this
week designed to effectively ban private, for-profit corporations from
running prisons or immigration detention facilities.
Sponsors of the measure say it will end a brief but hapless experiment
in privately outsourced incarceration begun as a means to ease
overcrowding - an endeavor Newsom branded an outrage when he took office
in January.
Bill supporters say private prisons, driven to maximize shareholder
profits, lack proper oversight or incentives to rehabilitate inmates,
and have contributed to a culture of mass incarceration by making it
cheaper to lock up people.
They point to research cited in a 2016 U.S. Justice Department Office of
Inspector General report that found private prisons spend less on
personnel, and are less safe, than public institutions.
"This is a total and complete failure, and it's hurting and abusing
Californians," said state Assemblyman Rob Bonta, a chief author of the
bill.
The facilities at stake are low-security lockups operated by one of two
leading U.S. private prison companies, Florida-headquartered GEO Group <GEO.N>
or Tennessee-based CoreCivic <CXW.N>.
Defending their business model, the companies say they provided a vital
service when detentions in California's prisons more than doubled the
system's capacity, sparking lawsuits that led to court-ordered cuts to
inmate populations.
"For 10 years, we provided safe, secure housing and life-changing
re-entry programing for inmates that had faced extreme overcrowding,"
CoreCivic spokeswoman Amanda Gilchrist said.
Separately, GEO Group cited its record as "an innovator in the field of
rehabilitative services" and said the bill worked against the state's
goal of lowering inmate recidivism.
SIGNIFICANT LOOPHOLES
Inmate advocacy groups say the legislation does not go far enough,
pointing to what they call significant loopholes, including an exemption
for facilities that provide "educational, vocational, medical or other
ancillary services" to inmates.
"I cannot think of any prison that does not provide those services,"
said Kara Gotsch, director of strategic initiatives for the Sentencing
Project, a criminal justice reform group.
Several states, including New York, Illinois and Nevada, have adopted
similar bans on private prisons, and nearly half of all states have no
such facilities, Gotsch said.
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ICE detainees are seen at the Adelanto immigration detention center,
which is run by the Geo Group Inc (GEO.N), in Adelanto, California,
U.S., April 13, 2017. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
The bill sets the stage for the three remaining private prisons in
California, collectively housing about 1,400 inmates, to close four
years from now, when their contracts with the state Department of
Corrections and Rehabilitation expire.
Perhaps more significantly, the federal Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE) agency stands to lose four privately-run detention
facilities in California next year that hold roughly 4,000 people,
unless the ban is challenged in court.
ICE has not taken a public position on the bill. But assuming the
measure were adopted, detainees would simply be transferred to
facilities outside California, the agency said in a statement.
The impact "would be felt almost exclusively by residents of
California, who would be forced to travel greater distances to visit
friends and family in custody," ICE said.
The average daily population at issue in those facilities accounts
for less than a tenth of the 52,000 ICE holds nationwide, it said.
SMALL FRACTION
The bill, which secured its final passage by the state legislature
last month, bans any new or renewed California contracts with
private, for-profit prisons, starting in January.
Four detention facilities privately operated for ICE would be put
out of business even sooner, when their contracts with the federal
government expire next year, Bonta said.
California had already been moving in this direction, terminating in
June its contact with a privately-run correctional center in Arizona
- the last of several such out-of-state facilities - followed by
last month's closure of a 700-bed facility in McFarland, California,
near Bakersfield.
The state's share of inmates in private facilities is a small
fraction of its total prison population of nearly 126,000.
By comparison, Texas, which became the first state to outsource
incarceration to private companies in 1985, had far more inmates
than any other state in for-profit facilities in 2017, nearly
13,000, or 7.8 percent of its total, said Gotsch of the Sentencing
Project.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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