Ted Lieu: The Blackwater Solution to California Prisons is Unacceptable

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One of the key right-wing priorities is to outsource government functions and privatize whatever they can. We've seen the trend from the early '80's with allowing the healtcare industry to become a for-profit based industry (and how they have profited!), to deregulation of the airlines, charter schools, water systems, war (hence the title Blackwater for the infamous private army that has wreacked havoc on the people of Iraq and elsewhere) to establishment of private prisons to house our criminal population.
 
There are reasons that we have government-run services and programs. Those reasons have been glossed-over or forgotten, but shouldn't be. First, the government, unlike the private sector, is answerable and responsible to the people. Second, there is accountability and "sunshine" or transparency with how these government run entities operate.
 
With none of the above, and with private profit the singular purpose, we lose our ability to control how these programs are run and the impact they have on us as a society. Plain and simple, this is bad for democracy and bad for our communities.
 
Regardless of how it's couched, privatizing our prisons as an excuse to improve our public universities is dishonest at best, and destructive to the fabric of our nation at worst. Assemblyman Ted Lieu provides a look at this as our guest blogger of the day. -- HBJ

The Blackwater Solution to California Prisons is Unacceptable
By Ted Lieu
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I agree with the Governor that we need to increase higher education spending so that California spends more on higher education than prisons. However, there are smart ways to reform our prison system, shortsighted ways, and outright dangerous reforms. The Governor's proposal to hand over our corrections system to for-profit corporations is dangerous. We should reform our prison system by better rehabilitating prisoners and reducing California's sky-high recidivism rate. Contracting out government's core responsibility of public safety will not reform our prisons; instead we will endanger the public and cause inhumane consequences.

Religious institutions across the board condemn private prisons as both inhumane and ineffective. The Presbyterian Church USA stated, "Since the goal of for-profit private prisons is earning a profit for their shareholders, there is a basic and fundamental conflict with the concept of rehabilitation as the ultimate goal of the prison system...for-profit private prisons should be abolished." The Catholic Bishops in a resolution stated, "We bishops question whether private, for-profit corporations can effectively run prisons. The profit motive may lead to reduced efforts to change behavior, treat substance abuse, and offer skills necessary for reintegration into the community."

Private prisons are also dangerous, both to prisoners and to the public. In 2003 a report by Grassroots Leadership detailed a range of failures by CCA, a for-profit private prison company, including: failure to provide adequate medical care to prisoners; failure to control violence in its prisons; and escapes.

I voted no last year on the corrections budget bill because it was cutting rehabilitation programs and parole supervision, both of which will result in increased recidivism. The Governor's current proposal is even worse. Abandoning government's core responsibility of public safety by contracting out and injecting a profit motive will result in disastrous consequences. Our nation has already been burned by our experience with Blackwater. California cannot afford to have its own Blackwater problem.


Assemblymember Ted W. Lieu, candidate for Attorney General, represents the 53rd Assembly District, which stretches from Venice and parts of Los Angeles to Torrance and Lomita along the coast. He was elected in September 2005, re-elected in November 2006, and re-elected again in November 2008.

Assemblymember Lieu has led the fight in California against Wall Street's excesses and fought to reform the subprime mortgage system and reduce home foreclosures. As an activist legislator, he has taken on special interests and successfully authored laws in the areas of public safety, child sex offenders, domestic violence, the environment, education, health care, veterans issues, and transportation. Numerous law enforcement, civic, and community groups have recognized Ted for his accomplishments.

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This page contains a single entry by Guest published on January 8, 2010 10:22 AM.

What "Cut Taxes And Cut Spending" Means For You was the previous entry in this blog.

CA Cons Still Trying To Live Off What We Built In The 60s & 70s is the next entry in this blog.

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