Pubdate: Tue, 03 Feb 2004 Source: Enterprise-Journal, The (MS) Copyright: 2004 The Enterprise-Journal Contact: http://www.enterprise-journal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/917 Author: Tim Kalich Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/corrections+corporation PRISONS A BAD WAY TO CREATE JOBS When people are desperate, they do dumb things. Such is the case with what's going at the Tallahatchie County Correctional Facility in Tutwiler. Western Tallahatchie County is one of the most impoverished areas of the Delta. With no manufacturing and with farm jobs displaced by mechanization, the people there are so desperate for work that they will take anything that comes their way - including guarding criminal cast-offs from half a continent away. When Corrections Corporation of America wanted to build a "spec prison" in Mississippi, the Nashville-based company had to find a place such as Tallahatchie County, where the local populace and their elected representatives aren't likely to be too choosy. CCA didn't pick Tallahatchie County because of the quality of its work force. At first, the private prison company had trouble finding enough potential guards who had a high school diploma and who could pass the drug-screening test. The Legislature, busy with a prison-building program of its own in the 1990s, said to CCA, "If you can make a buck and provide some jobs, build away. But don't look for Mississippi to keep you in business. Oh, and another thing, we're a little suspicious of what kind of folks other states might be exporting our way. Thus, we don't want anything worse than medium security." All that history is quickly being forgotten in a desperate attempt to hold on to about 250 modestly-paid jobs in an area where unemployment rates chronically stay in the double digits. The original business plan of CCA, teetering on bankruptcy a few years ago, was obviously flawed. It miscalculated the demand for medium-security space, or the capacity of states to pay for housing these inmates outside their borders. Wisconsin, the first customer, never sent as many prisoners as anticipated and pulled them out a year after arrival. Alabama has for the last few months filled the void, but its cash-strapped treasury can't afford to keep making the payments. With apparently no other medium-security prisoners in the pipeline, the Legislature hurriedly passed a bill this month to allow the Tutwiler prison to start housing maximum-security inmates. CCA, according to reports, wants to transfer Hawaiian inmates from its facilities in Oklahoma and Arizona. The governing authorities in Tallahatchie County say they want local control over the decision of who is housed at the prison. They argue that if they're comfortable with maximum-security inmates as neighbors, why should the Legislature care? Why? Because if there's a prison riot or escape, neither CCA nor Tallahatchie County is going to fix the problem. They'll both be crying to the state for help. Should Hawaii agree to the transfer, it's a safe bet that Tallahatchie County won't be getting model prisoners among the murderers, rapists and child molesters who are shipped in. Why would any state keep its incorrigibles, if someone else is willing to house them? Maximum-security inmates from other states are supposed to keep afloat CCA's operation in Tutwiler. If they don't, though, Gov. Haley Barbour is offering a fall-back. He's asked the Legislature's permission to house state inmates in Tutwiler. Barbour is already committed to reopening Delta Correctional Facility, the Greenwood private prison that CCA is likely to get the contract to operate. The Republican says utilizing Tutwiler too would be cheaper than using state facilities, but his motivations are somewhat suspect. CCA has been a major contributor to the Republican Governors Association, giving at least $110,000 last year. In turn, the governors' group funneled $4.25 million to Barbour's record-smashing campaign war chest. Conveniently, Barbour's prison strategy is also beneficial to a corporate donor's bottom line. If Barbour were truly looking for a cheaper approach to corrections, he would be trying to convince lawmakers and the public that locking up the preponderance of lawbreakers is a costly and ultimately counterproductive approach to crime. He'd be advocating house arrest and statewide implementation of drug courts. He'd be supporting relaxing the state's truth-in-sentencing law, which has fueled the prison inmate explosion. As Barbour, however, said in his State of the State address, job creation is his No. 1 priority. Even, apparently, if it means going whole hog into the people warehousing business. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin