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CDCR To Transfer Inmates To Oklahoma: Report

April 8th, 2009
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cca_north-folk-sayre-okOklahoma prison officials say as many as 1,000 California inmates soon could be arriving at a private prison in Sayre, OK.  Report from NewsOnSix.

Oklahoma Department of Corrections officials say the mostly medium-security inmates will begin arriving at the North Fork Correctional Facility April 16. The private prison in Beckham County has a capacity of 2,400 beds but currently houses a little more than 1,400 inmates.   Officials from Tennessee-based Corrections Corporation of America, which owns the Sayre facility, and the California Department of Corrections would not confirm the transfer of inmates from California to Oklahoma.

About 470 of the inmates at Sayre are from Wyoming and Idaho, and both of those states plan to return those offenders to their home states later this year. The rest of the inmates at the Sayre facility are from California. DOC private prisoner administrator Renee Watkins says none of the out-of-state prisoners held at Sayre will be maximum-security inmates.

vericatrajkova CCA, California, Oklahoma, Private Prisons

CCA Gets New BOP Contract

April 2nd, 2009
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Corrections Corp. of America said Wednesday it has won a 4-year contract worth up to $226.4 million to house federal inmates at a new prison in Mississippi.

Under the 4-year contract with the federal Bureau of Prisons, the company would house up to 2,567 inmates the company’s recently completed 2,232-bed Adams County Correctional Center … The contract carries up to three 2-year renewal options and a guarantee of 50 percent occupancy at the beginning and eventually 90 percent.

The Nashville-based company houses more than 8,500 Bureau of Prisons inmates at several facilities and expects to begin taking inmates at the new prison during the third quarter of this year.

vericatrajkova CCA, Federal Systems, Private Prisons

CCA Expands In Arizona

March 17th, 2009
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cca-logoReport from the Nashville Post:

Corrections Corp. of America has been awarded a 750-inmate management contract by the state of Arizona that will boost the number of prisoners under its care by about 1 percent.   Nashville-based CCA will house the prisoners at one of its facilities in Colorado. The agreement is for one year and comes with four possible one-year extensions. Based on CCA’s average daily revenue for 2008, the contract is worth about $15.6 million at full capacity.  The deal is CCA’s second with the state of Arizona. In May 2007, the state awarded the company a contract to manage up to 2,160 of its prisoners.

vericatrajkova Arizona, CCA, Private Prisons

Problems With Florida’s Private Prisons

March 13th, 2009
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fl-doc-logoThe agency that oversees Florida’s six privately run prisons needs to ensure that problems found during audits – such as broken alarms and unsanitary infirmaries – are quickly fixed, lawmakers were told Thursday as part of a report reviewing the agency, according to this report by Associated Press:

Audits of private prisons by the Florida Department of Corrections had previously found broken escape sensors and buildings that had not been checked for any attempts by inmates to tunnel out. Audits also found delays in medical care and problems involving contraband.  “Some of these problems were repeated year after year at the same prisons,” said analyst Vic Williams, who summarized the report for lawmakers in testimony before the Senate Committee on Criminal and Civil Justice Appropriations …

An official with the Department of Management Services, the agency that oversees the private prisons, told lawmakers that his agency has already begun to address some of the issues raised by the report.  “We’ve already started the process to implement a lot of these recommendations,” Department of Management Services’ J.D. Solie told the panel …

The state has six private prisons housing approximately 8,000 inmates or about 8 percent of the state’s inmates. The facilities cost the state about $133 million a  year, or some 6 percent of the Department of Corrections’ $2.2 billion budget. The state currently contracts with two private prison companies: Nashville-based Corrections Corp. of America and Boca Raton-based GEO Group Inc ..

Among recommendations, the report also said private prisons should be required to track the percentage of inmates who successfully complete substance abuse and education programs.   It also noted that phone calls made from private prisons are more expensive than calls from prisons run by the Department of Corrections. A 15 minute phone call from a private prison costs around $6 while the same call costs 50 cents in a state-run prison, lawmakers were told.   And while families can visit state-run prisons on Saturdays and Sundays, private facilities allow visits either every other weekend or only one of the two weekend days, the report found.

vericatrajkova CCA, Florida, GEO, Private Prisons

CCA Reports Earnings, Puts New Prison On Hold

February 11th, 2009
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cca-logoTrousdale County may have to wait longer to reap the benefits of new jobs from a 2,000-bed prison that Corrections Corporation of America started building in Hartsville TN.

While reporting a 16 percent increase in fourth-quarter net income on Tuesday, the Nashville-based prison operator said it has temporarily suspended construction work until it figures out how soon it could fill those 2,040 beds planned for Trousdale …

CCA began building the Trousdale prison at an industrial park in Hartsville last summer with completion set for early next year. The company had bet that various clients, including the state of Tennessee, federal agencies or other states, would use the additional space to house prisoners.  But in a conference call with analysts Tuesday, CCA executives said budget difficulties faced by many states makes it difficult to forecast how states will proceed.“A lot of states are taking the approach that until they understand what their long-term revenues will be, and what assistance they would be realizing from the federal stimulus package, they’re delaying decisions on contracts for additional space from companies like CCA,” said Tony Grande, chief development officer. The $143 million Hartsville prison was expected to employ 350 people …

For the fourth quarter, CCA earned $40.5 million, or 32 cents a share, vs. $34.9 million, or 28 cents a share, last year. Revenues rose 8.8 percent to $414 million.   Occupancy declined to 92.9 percent from 98 percent in the fourth quarter of 2007, primarily as the result of a 9.9 percent increase in the average number of available beds. For all of 2008, CCA earned $150.9 million, or $1.20 a share, vs. $133.4 million, or $1.06 a share, for all of 2007. Revenue rose 9.8 percent to $1.6 billion, the company said.

vericatrajkova CCA, Economic Issues, Prison and Jail Construction, Private Prisons, TN Trousdale County, Tennessee

Idaho DOC Looks To Private Solution

February 3rd, 2009
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Two out of every five prison beds in Idaho would be privately run if the Idaho Correctional Institution-Orofino is privatized, Idaho Department of Correction Director Brent Reinke told lawmakers Monday.

Idaho currently has only one private prison _ the Idaho Correctional Center south of Boise, which is run by the Tenn.-based Corrections Corporation of America. ICC operates about 27 percent of the state’s prison beds.   But that percentage will steadily grow over the coming two years. The state expects to open another 628 beds at ICC by July, boosting the percentage of private beds in Idaho to 33 percent. Another 400 private beds are slated to open a year later at the new Correctional Alternative Placement Program. That would bring Idaho’s total private bed percentage to 37 percent. Idaho has more than 7,200 inmates.

Idaho Department of Correction officials announced this month they were preparing a formal request for information to see if any private prison companies would be interested in taking over the 500-bed Idaho Correctional Institution-Orofino. The effort is just research at this point, not a request for companies to actually bid on the contract, said Reinke. But if the switch were made, 43 percent of the states prison beds would be privately operated.  That could make Idaho second only to New Mexico (with 44 percent) in the ratio of privatized beds, according to the most recent Department of Justice numbers, collected in 2007 …

Just under 8 percent of prison beds are run by private facilities nationwide, according to 2007 statistics from the U.S. Department of Justice. The practice appears to be most prevalent in the West, with Montana privatizing more than 38 percent of its prison beds and Wyoming privatizing more than 30 percent.  It costs about $48 a day to house Idaho inmates in state-run prisons, compared to $40 a day at the new private beds at the Idaho Correctional Center, according to the department. Housing prisoners out-of-state at private facilities is more expensive, reaching nearly $62 per inmate per day.

vericatrajkova CCA, Idaho, Private Prisons

Judge Declines To Stop Nye County Prison

January 23rd, 2009
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A federal judge has refused to stop Nye County NV from moving forward with plans for a federal prison in Pahrump, despite neighbors’ claims that they were not properly notified and that required environmental reviews were not completed.

U.S. District Court Judge Kent Dawson declined Wednesday to issue a temporary restraining order against the Correctional Corporation of America Inc. plan, saying he saw no evidence of wrongdoing on the part of Nye County officials.   “The fact that neighbors don’t want it … is not good enough,” Dawson said … Attorney Josh Aicklen, representing Correctional Corporation of America, said the county and company “dotted every ‘i’ and crossed every ‘t’” in efforts to build the prison.

vericatrajkova CCA, NV Nye County, Private Prisons

Larger Inmate Populations Are A Boon To Private Prisons

November 21st, 2008
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The following analysis is from the Wall Street Journal:

Prison companies are preparing for a wave of new business as the economic downturn makes it increasingly difficult for federal and state government officials to build and operate their own jails.  The Federal Bureau of Prisons and several state governments have sent thousands of inmates in recent months to prisons and detention centers run by Corrections Corp. of America, Geo Group Inc. and other private operators, as a crackdown on illegal immigration, a lengthening of mandatory sentences for certain crimes and other factors have overcrowded many government facilities.

Prison-policy experts expect inmate populations in 10 states to have increased by 25% or more between 2006 and 2011, according to a report by the nonprofit Pew Charitable Trusts. Private prisons housed 7.4% of the country’s 1.59 million incarcerated adults in federal and state prisons as of the middle of 2007, up from 1.57 million in 2006, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, a crime-data-gathering arm of the U.S. Department of Justice.

Corrections Corp., the largest private-prison operator in the U.S., with 64 facilities, has built two prisons this year and expanded nine facilities, and it plans to finish two more in 2009. The Nashville, Tenn., company put 1,680 new prison beds into service in its third quarter, helping boost net income 14% to $37.9 million. “There is going to be a larger opportunity for us in the future,” said Damon Hininger, Corrections Corp.’s president and chief operations officer, in a recent interview.  California has shipped more than 5,100 inmates to private prisons run by Corrections Corp. in Arizona, Mississippi and other states since late 2006, when Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger ordered emergency measures to control a ballooning state-prison population. Prisons were so overcrowded that hundreds of inmates were sleeping in gyms, according to one report. An additional 2,900 prisoners are scheduled to be transferred to private prisons outside the state by the end of next year, according to the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.   “Private prisons are a short-term solution while we work on long-term solutions, rehabilitation programs and recidivism strategies,” said Terry Thornton, spokeswoman for the state’s corrections department.

Geo Group, of Boca Raton, Fla., the second-largest prison company, has built or expanded eight facilities this year in Georgia, Texas, Mississippi and other states, and it plans seven more expansions or new prisons by 2010. Last month, Geo Group was awarded a contract by Florida’s Department of Management Services to design and build a 2,000-bed special-needs prison in that state. Cornell Cos., the nation’s third-largest prison company, recently broke ground on a 1,250-bed private prison for men in Hudson, Colo.

The Federal Bureau of Prisons, the government agency that operates all federal prisons and manages the handling of inmates convicted of federal crimes, has awarded 13 contracts since 1997 to prison companies to build prisons and detention centers that house low-security inmates, primarily “low security criminal aliens,” says Felicia Ponce, a spokeswoman for the agency. The contracts give the bureau “flexibility to manage a rapidly growing inmate population and to help control overcrowding,” Ms. Ponce says.

Outsourcing incarceration to prison companies can reduce a government’s cost of housing those prisoners by as much as 15%, according to a study by the Reason Foundation, a research organization in Los Angeles. Private operators say they can build prisons more quickly and operate them less expensively than governments because their payroll costs are lower and they can consolidate prisoners from many far-flung jurisdictions into facilities located in areas where land and building costs are very low.

Some groups accuse the private prisons of neglecting inmates or of putting them in bad conditions. “Profit is still a motive and it’s structured into the way these prisons are operated,” says Judy Greene, a justice-policy analyst for Justice Strategies, a nonprofit studying prison-sentencing issues and problems. “Just because the system has expanded doesn’t mean there is evidence that conditions have improved.”  The American Civil Liberties Union has filed lawsuits involving several prison companies over the past decade alleging poor treatment of inmates. Last year, the organization and other parties filed a lawsuit against Corrections Corp. and the Department of Homeland Security’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement arm in federal court in San Diego, alleging that the company was operating an overcrowded, unsafe immigrant-detention center in that city. Detainees were routinely assigned in groups of three to sleep in two-room cells — meaning one had to sleep on the floor near the toilet — or to temporary beds in recreation rooms and other common spaces, according to the complaint. The suit also alleged that detainees had little access to mental-health care. “We have serious concerns about for-profit prison companies because they are notorious for cutting essential costs that need to be provided to maintain a safe and constitutional environment for prisoners,” says Jody Kent, a public-policy coordinator for the ACLU’s National Prison Project.

The lawsuit was settled in June, with Corrections Corp. and Homeland Security agreeing to limit immigrant detainees to the number of inmates the facility was designed for. Louise Grant, a Corrections Corp. spokeswoman, says the company’s prison practices complied with federal standards and that it regularly discloses capacity levels and other information in federal filings. “Our government partners monitor us daily,” Ms. Grant says. “There is no cutting corners.”

vericatrajkova CCA, California, Federal Systems, GEO, Inmate Lawsuits, Private Prisons

Bay County Takes Jail Back From CCA

October 10th, 2008
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Today, the Bay County FL Jail will be under new management.

Sheriff Frank McKeithen is set to take over the jail, after Corrections Corporation of America, or CCA, notified the county it would no longer operate the facility.“We’ve worked just 24 hours a day for the last four months trying to get prepared and trying to be ready,” says Sheriff McKeithen.

McKeithen says he thinks he can run the jail with a staff of 250. The employees already have their uniforms, designed with the same color scheme as the sheriff’s office uniforms.  Sheriff McKeithen says employee morale is high.  “They’re beginning to transition to sheriff’s office uniforms so they look like the sheriffs office. They’re all excited. We even heard the inmates were excited, not sure about that. We’ll find out,” says McKeithen.

The sheriff’s office will operate the jail with a $17 million budget. Bay County Commission Chairman Jerry Girvin says it might cost more than CCA, but he believes this a good move for the county. “It may be well worth that to have a higher comfort level on the idea that it’s being run competently and the chances of any issues are much less,” says Girvin.  The sheriff says one major change has to do with visitation.  “People are having to wait for hours to visit someone, and they may still have to do that for a period of time, but that’s one of the first things… we’re already working on that,” says the sheriff.

The sheriff’s office hired about 150 of the former CCA employees. Many of the others were offered other positions with the company.  You’ll also notice a change in what the inmates wear. “There will be no problem recognizing the inmates at the Bay County jail. They will be the traditional black and white stripes, and they’ll have to love them,” he says.

Bay County’s jail was one of the first jails in the country to be privately operated.

vericatrajkova CCA, FL Bay County, Private Prisons

Daily Sweep 9/1

September 1st, 2008
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vericatrajkova CCA, California, Florida, Inmate Health, LA Orleans Parish, Louisiana, Private Prisons, TX Dallas County, Washington