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» Intro [.pdf]
» Authors [.pdf]
» Letter from the Editor [.pdf | html]
» Table of Contents [.pdf]
» Federal Update [.pdf | html]
» State Privatization Update [.pdf | html]
» Tax and Spending Limitations [.pdf | html]
» Emerging Issues
» Social Security Reform [.pdf | html]
» Arctic National Wildlife Refuge [.pdf | html]
» Offshore Outsourcing [.pdf | html]
» Improving Parks Funding and Services with User Fees [.pdf | html]
» Contract Management and Performance [.pdf | html]
» Privatization Going Postal in Japan [.pdf | html]
» Military Housing Privatization [.pdf | html]
» Housing and Land Use [.pdf | html]
» Air Transportation [.pdf | html]
» Surface Transportation [.pdf | html]
» Rail Transportation [.pdf | html]
» Space Travel [.pdf | html]
» Health Care [.pdf | html]
» Water / Wastewater [.pdf | html]
» Corrections [.pdf | html]
» Education [.pdf | html]
» Insurance [.pdf | html]
» Developing Nations [.pdf | html]
» Endnotes [.pdf]
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» Annual Privatization Report 2005
Corrections
According
to the Association of Private Corrections and Treatment Organizations
there are 213 private facilities operating in the United States with
a rated capacity of 131,037 beds. One hundred and six of those
facilities have achieved American Correctional Association
accreditationmany as a stipulation of their contract.
Each
level of government uses private facilities, however, the largest
individual customer is the federal government with 45 facilities and
bed space of 38,685slightly up from 42 and 34,775 last year.
State
government, when grouped together, total 112 different facilities
with a capacity of 80,882. This reflects an increase of 8.7 percent
in bed space and 6.7 percent in the number of facilities over last
year (105 and 74,413 respectively)representing the largest
growth in several years. Fifty-nine facilities cater to local units
of government (city and county) with a capacity of 19,423up
slightly from 57 and 18,259 a year ago.
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Table 10: Capacity By Security Type
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Security
type
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Male
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Female
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Either
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Total
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Maximum
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10,336
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1,384
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7,994
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19,714
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Medium
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72,550
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2,266
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5,133
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79,949
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Minimum
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18,279
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1,133
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1,057
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20,469
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Residential
- Secure
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2,453
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419
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1,399
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4,271
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Residential
- Open
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1,071
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267
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1,779
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3,117
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Non-Residential
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50
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39
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3,428
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3,517
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Total
- All Types
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104,739
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5,508
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20,790
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131,037
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In addition, countries like Canada,
Australia and the United Kingdom operate 11 facilities with 9,597
beds. There was not any growth from last year.
» return to top
Mangos to Mangos
Late last year the Texas Criminal
Justice Policy Council issued its latest biannual review of the costs
of incarceration in Texas per legislative decree. The review is
longest standing public vs. private operational cost comparison
providing the best historical and trend data. The average daily cost
of operation in a government-run facility was $42.28 and $44.01 in
2001 and 2002 respectively. Costs in private facilities under
contract in Texas were only $37.87 and $38.57 representing savings of
10.4 and 12.4 percent. Savings are even more dramatic when the
operational costs of jails are compared. Savings with private
contracts was 17.4 and 19.3 percent in 2001 and 2002 respectively.
» return to top
Private Prisoner Care in Michigan
The state of
Michigan has substantial prison-related privatization experience. It
has privatized operation of the Lake County-based juvenile correction
facility in a contract with the GEO Group. Since 1997, it has also
competitively contracted for medical services in the remainder of
Michigan's correctional system. Indeed, the state's
extension of that contract through 2007 suggests that competitive
contracting has proved to be a valuable management tool one
that could be employed in all aspects of the prison system.
The state of
Michigan contracts for prison medical services with St. Louis-based
Correctional Medical Services Inc. CMS provides medical services to
225,000 local jail inmates and state and federal prisoners in 27
states. The Michigan Department of Corrections estimates the
contract's projected cost over its first six (of 10) years at
$347 million.
The state
originally hired another vendor in 1997 to provide many of the
services now provided by CMS. Early in this contract, however, the
state became concerned about the vendor's ability to provide
the performance quality it had promised. After some negotiation, the
contract was reassigned to CMS in March 1998. In April 2004 the state
extended the CMS contract three years, through April 2007.
According to Rich
Russell, administrator of the Bureau of Health Care Services for the
Michigan Department of Corrections, the state of Michigan has enjoyed
both qualitative successes and financial savings as a result of its
relationship with CMS and the firm's elaborate system for
demonstrating accountability. "We have had a good, cooperative
relationship with CMS, and together we look for ways to save money
without lowering the quality of care," said Russell.
For instance, CMS
has worked with the state to implement an electronic medical
record-keeping system, which will be operational statewide by the end
of 2004. Both parties hope that the system will improve efficiency
and the flow of information about inmates' medical histories.
CMS has also increased staffing levels by adding more physicians and
physicians' assistants, and it has helped the state maintain
its accreditation with the Joint Commission on Accreditation of
Healthcare Organizations, a private, nonprofit outfit that ensures
that health facilities maintain acceptable standards of care.
While CMS
provides the prison system's medical services, a state chief
medical officer and four regional medical officers are the system's
gatekeepers, and they determine the level of treatment CMS and its
subcontractors should provide to prison patients. If CMS does not
think a certain treatment is necessary for an inmate, but the state's
regional medical officer does, the dispute is resolved by submitting
it to a committee that includes representatives from both the state
and CMS.
A summer 2004
telephone survey of state corrections departments by the Mackinac
Center for Public Policy found that 32 states contract with private
firms for some degree of health services for their prisoners, and
that another state, South Carolina, is in the process of doing so.
Some states have contracted for health services across their entire
prison system, while others target a single prison. Still other
states split health delivery contracts by service: One vendor
provides physical health services, for instance, while another
provides mental health services. The state of Texas has contracts
with University of Texas Medical Branch and Texas Tech Health Science
Center, both public entities. Contracting solutions are as diverse as
the states themselves.
One company,
America Service Group Inc. of Tennessee, estimates that the national
health market for prison and jail inmates is $7 billion annually.
With health-care costs and the number of prisoners expected to
increase, the country may see more inmate health-care privatization
by states and counties.
State governments
nationwide are trusting some of their most important and expensive
prison spending to private firms, and there are bolder steps for
Michigan to consider. The Mackinac Center for Public Policy has
recommended that the state examine the privatization of its entire
system that is, outsourcing management of its corrections
department to a for-profit firm. In 1998, the state of Tennessee
almost did so, and savings were then estimated at 22 percent. Similar
reductions in Michigan would shave nearly $350 million from the
state's general fund appropriation for state prisons, which,
given the state's chronic structural deficits, would certainly
be a welcomed development.
By Michael D. LaFaive, director of
fiscal policy, Mackinac Center for Public Policy
This article
appeared in Michigan Privatization Report: mackinac.org/pubs/mpr/
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