Take for example Florida's efforts to privatize both prisons and care of juvenile offenders/delinquents and the like. The Palm Beach Post has done several pieces on the problems (as have other Florida papers), recently focusing on the juvenile justice aspect. Check out this quote from a couple of weeks ago:
When the state shut down its failed prison for teenage girls in suburban West Palm Beach, it moved inmates to a new program that soon had many of the same problems....The state shut that program down, too, only 17 months after opening it.
...
The 18 state-run residential programs, which pay youth-care workers thousands more a year on average than private companies, were less likely to be cited for incidents such as abuse and excessive force, according to rankings in the Department of Juvenile Justice's 2006 Residential Program Report Cards.
Among the many problems, apart physical abuse of the adults and children held in custody by order of the state, is the fact that the private prisons and youth facilities sign contracts specifying how many employees the private firms will maintain to do their jobs. They are paid based on the expectation that they will, in fact, hire those people.
You saw this one coming, right? Why hire all those people when you can skimp by with fewer workers and make more money (while doing a less than stellar job).
The source linked above also offers up this:
Florida Department of Juvenile Justice inspectors also found that the academy's for-profit management company, Diversified Behavioral Health Solutions Inc., had failed to fill dozens of positions required in its $5.4 million annual contract.
...
A monitor calculated in March 2006 that the state was paying at least $689,761 a year for positions the company had not filled.
Not all under staffing is deliberate--the for-profit facilities simply have a hell of a turnover problem and you don't have to be a genius to figure out why:
In 2005, private for-profit programs paid workers a median wage of $17,906 a year, compared with $19,881 at programs for teens managed by nonprofit contractors, the study found. State workers in comparable state-run residential programs made a median of $22,762 that year.
I'm guessing that benefits, including retirement, would also we way better for the state employees.
In another piece a week later, the same newspaper explicitly urged Make public the ripoffs from taking state private. That piece revealed that the state's contracts with private firms for such services as running prisons were so poorly written that the state often has no recourse when the private firm fails to live up to its obligations.
Did I mention that the privatization efforts have been undertaken largely under Jeb Bush's reign as Florida's Governor? Did I mention that?
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