Saturday

Why Part of Corporate America Hates Amnesty...

In this midst of the great immigration debate, it makes sense to pause for a moment to consider some the interests arrayed against relaxed enforcement of our labyrinthine immigration policies. Who, after all, stands to benefit from stepped up enforcement? How about the Prison-Industrial complex and it's web of for-profit prison companies like the Corrections Corporation of America?


A Friendly CCA Facility...

In the grotesque calculus of the CCA world-view, more enforcement means more detention and more detention means more money. And, thanks to increasingly draconian policies enacted by the Bush administration which seek to detain more and more foreigners despite studies that show that almost 90 percent of those released to non-for-profit organizations (rather than being detained) actually show up for their hearings, CCA is likely to get it's windfall.

Right now, despite the fact that we continue to incarcerate people at an ever expanding rate, CCA has about 5,000 beds available. To fill them, they are aggressively bidding for a contracts to house 1,200 non-citizens in criminal cases, a 2,800 incarcerated guests of the US marshall's service and several others.

According to Getahn Ward a writer for the Tennesssean, "CCA generates nearly 40% of its annual revenue from federal contracts — 16% from the Bureau of Prisons, 15% from the U.S. Marshal Service and 8% from ICE. CCA's ties with ICE date back to the company's early days in 1983, when it was hired to build and run the Houston Processing Center for the agency that was then called INS.

Last year, the company housed 1,200 ICE inmates who had to be moved out of Florida because of Hurricane Wilma.
"They're our largest single customer with needs south of the border," said Damon Hininger, vice president of federal customer relations at CCA. "With all the national emphasis on enforcement on the Southwest border and more resources available for patrol, that's going to have direct correlation with the need for detention."

Quick George, shovel some more bodies into the system, the shareholders are getting anxious.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

great post. why'd ariana take it down so soon?

Anonymous said...

I suggest Angela Y. Davis' "Are Prisons Obsolete?" for a detailed account of the Prison Industrial Complex and the historical racism that it perpetuates.

May I also suggest that corporate America also loves this immigration debate and the argument that undocumented migrants are stealing jobs because it diverts attention from the constant outsourcing and era of globalization that is truly responsibe for Americans losing their jobs.

Anonymous said...

What? Ariana took it down? There were some great comments on that one.