Pubdate: Tue, 07 Jun 2011 Source: Ledger, The (Lakeland, FL) Copyright: 2011 The Ledger Contact: http://www.theledger.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/795 FLORIDA PRISONS: CUTS COULD OPEN GATES The U.S. Supreme Court has ordered California to release 30,000 inmates, ruling that conditions at its overcrowded prisons amounted to cruel-and-unusual punishment. Can the same thing happen in Florida? Probably. With 102,000 inmates, Florida has the third-largest penal system in America. Florida locks up inmates at a rate of 559 per 100,000 residents. That's actually higher than California's 457 inmates per 100,000 population. Gov. Rick Scott and state lawmakers seem to think the solution to overcrowded prisons is privatization -- one of the largest prison-privatization programs in U.S. history. The new budget eliminates more than 1,700 state corrections positions while counting on private prisons to incarcerate inmates more cheaply (this after the private prison industry gave nearly $1 million to Florida campaigns). Privatization: False Premise It is unlikely that privatization will either save the state much money or immunize it from California-style liability. The problem isn't that the state doesn't have enough prisons, public or private. The problem is that it locks up too many people because of unnecessarily draconian sentencing laws. Even some prominent Republicans are not convinced. "It's unprecedented in the United States," said state Sen. Mike Fasano, R-New Port Richey, reported Reuters last month. Fasano is chair of the Budget Subcommittee on Criminal and Civil Justice Appropriations. Fasano tried to block the privatization plan. He said he failed, Reuters reported, because of strong lobbying efforts by influential companies such as the GEO Group. The Boca Raton-based is the second-largest U.S. private prison company "I'm a conservative Republican that believes in privatizing certain parts of government services, but we should never privatize public safety," Fasano said. Florida officials need to get serious about sentencing reform, just in case the expected privatization miracle doesn't come to pass. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.