Thought I put this up when I found it a couple of days ago, but it appears as if I didn't. There are already more articles on this now to post. Arizona's going to be booming with more prisons soon, and it won't mean growth for the corrections officers' unions - though they will no doubt be exploited to support this kind of development. The threat to privatize the existing state prison system looks like just a ruse to distract the unions from the real strategy for decimating them; I think the ADC's just going to keep doing rfps for new prisons as we continue to exceed capacity, and as old facilities decay they'll just stop creating new jobs and phase out state employees..
This is all pretty troubling. Look at Winslow, Wickenburg, the Tohono O'odham Nation and now Prescott Valley...tens of thousands of new prisoners are being planned for the state with talks about contracts stretching 20 years into the future...what kind of vision do Arizona's economic development leaders have, anyway? What kind of vision do those who comprise our legal system have, for that matter?
We are so entrenched in this cycle of violence and retribution that we aren't even considering meaningful alternatives; we appear resigned to this fate, which means we've condemned our children to it. How can anyone consider a prison to be a gift to future generations? Once dependent on the prison industrial complex for their survival, they will have no reason to celebrate the day when institutionalized racism, classism, misogyny, and homophobia, among other things, no longer fill jails and prisons with society's misfits and malcontents.
The private prison industry is seeking out communities where they can be the main employer so they depend on perpetuating this system we have of punishment for poverty and color in America, regardless of whether or not it's just, effective, or humane. They don't want to reduce crime rates: if we really succeed in reducing crime because we finally begin to get to the roots of it, we'll put them out of business and these little prison towns under.
Think about the implications of that. If the practice of mass incarceration was ever really threatened - which I hope it will be - townspeople in places like Winslow and Wickenburg would be pushed into advocating for the continuance of a system which destroys other communities in order to save their own.
The industry knows all this – their job is to market and justify incarceration as punishment for a whole range of “crimes”, some of which are yet to be invented. They fund a huge part of the wall of opposition to criminal justice reforms that would decrease incarceration rates. That's precisely why
So, here's the article that just triggered all that: more of the same from CCA.
I hope people in
So, organize and register your resistance, folks, before it's too late. Once the prison is planted, CCA has moved in and their warden becomes the mayor, you can be sure that resistance to mass incarceration will be harder to mount, no matter how visible its negative consequences to the community may be.
More to follow shortly. I’m still catching up here.
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Marks says it's different from 2 years ago
By Ken Hedler
The Daily Courier
Thursday, December 17, 2009
PRESCOTT VALLEY - A proposal for a private prison drew support from elected and business officials who attended an invitation-only meeting Thursday morning.
"We need the jobs," Mayor Harvey Skoog said in a prepared statement that the Prescott Valley Economic Development Foundation issued Thursday afternoon. "I support this 100 percent."
Skoog and more than 60 others who attended the meeting at the StoneRidge country club listened to a presentation from Brad Wiggins, senior director for site acquisition for Corrections Corporation of America. Wiggins discussed a capital investment of $200 million as well as 300 to 400 construction jobs and 400 full-time jobs a prison would create.
CCA, which is based in Nashville, Tenn., is considering a site off Fain Road for the potential prison, foundation Executive Director Gary Marks said.
Reminded of opposition more than two years ago to plans by Management & Training Corp. of Centerville, Utah, to build a private prison at the site, Marks said, "It is a different project. This is just a response and a discussion and waiting for the RFP to come out."
Marks was referring to a request for proposals that the Arizona Department of Corrections plans to issue to recruit a contractor, or contractors, to house 5,000 inmates.
The RFP process faced a setback Thursday because the Joint Legislative Budget Committee canceled a meeting that included an agenda item for reviewing for RFP. The committee canceled the meeting because the state Legislature met in special session, and has not rescheduled the meeting.
The Criminal Justice Budget Reconciliation Bill authorizes the Department of Corrections to issue an RFP for 5,000 new private prison beds, according to the website for the budget committee. The RFP will allow awarding one or more contracts; permit the private sector to bid on all or a portion of the beds; allow the beds to be located at new, existing or expanded facilities; and specify a maximum contract period of 20 years.
The Department of Corrections has a deadline of June 30, 2010, for awarding all contracts.
The RFP does not indicate whether the prisons will house minimum-medium or maximum-security inmates, according to a staffer for the committee.
Support for the private prison could come from other communities in the state, Marks acknowledged. He added other prison companies besides CCA could be vying for contracts as well.
CCA states on its website that it was founded more than 25 years ago, and houses approximately 75,000 offenders and detainees in more than 60 sites. It has partnerships with the Federal Bureau of Prisons, the U.S. Marshals Service, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, nearly half of the states and more than a dozen municipalities.
This article was first posted at 4:40 p.m. Thursday. Watch dCourier.com for updates as this story develops.
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