by Steve Bousquet,
Times/Herald Tallahassee
Bureau
"Actions taken to date
are declared illegal without authority in violation of law," Leon County
Circuit Judge Jackie Fulford wrote in a strongly-worded, six-page decision that
faulted lawmakers for a lack of transparency.
Fulford said the Legislature
trampled on existing privatization law by ordering the Department of
Corrections to seek proposals from private vendors to run 29 prisons and work
camps. She also found that the project violated state law because the agency
failed to do a business-case study of the pros and cons of privatization before
seeking proposals from vendors.
Fulford emphasized that
privatizing state prisons is allowed by law, but that the Legislature went
about it the wrong way.
"Under existing
substantive law, a specific legislative appropriation must be made for a
proposed privatization contract," the judge wrote. "If it is the will
of the Legislature to itself initiate privatization of Florida prisons, as
opposed to DOC, the Legislature must do so by general law, rather than 'using
the hidden recesses of the General Appropriations Act.' "
The "hidden
recesses" quotation is from a 1971 Florida Supreme Court case, Dickinson
v. Stone, in which then-Comptroller Bud Dickinson successfully challenged
legislative language because it dealt with more than one subject. The court
said that shifting data-processing responsibilities among state agencies should
have been enacted by law, not through budget language.
The state is considering
whether to appeal Fulford's decision to the First District Court of Appeal.
"We are reviewing the
order and determining our options," prison spokeswoman Gretl Plessinger
said.
The decision was a victory
for the Florida Police Benevolent Association, the union for correctional
officers, which filed the suit in hopes of saving the jobs of several thousand
correctional officers.
"We believe justice has
been served for the 4,000 men and women who faced the prospect of
privatization," PBA executive director Matt Puckett said. "It
validates what the PBA has been saying all along — the Legislature is not above
the law."
The nation's third-largest
prison system, still adjusting to the August dismissal of Corrections Secretary
Edwin Buss, was required by the Legislature to choose a vendor to run South
Florida prisons by Dec. 1, to give the Legislative Budget Commission time to
act on the decision.
But Friday's ruling threw
all of that into disarray. The Department of Corrections suspended the opening
of vendors' proposals, scheduled for 2 p.m. Tuesday. And all references to the
project vanished from the agency's website.
Three private prison
operators were considering offering to run the largest outsourcing of
corrections ever undertaken at one time: Corrections Corp. of America , based in Nashville ;
the GEO Group, in Boca Raton ; and MTC, of Centerville , Utah .
The vendors had posed more
than 400 questions to corrections officials in recent weeks, seeking to
comprehend the complexity of what the Legislature had directed.
Fulford's ruling noted that
the Legislature's action violated Article III, sections 6 and 12 of the state
Constitution. The provisions require that any law and any budget line item must
be limited to one subject.
The language at issue in the
case is known as proviso, in which the Legislature specifies how an agency must
spend tax dollars. The privatization language was largely the work of Sen. JD
Alexander, a Lake Wales Republican who directed the budget-writing of the
Senate.
Alexander did not respond to
a request for comment Friday.
Celebrating the decision was
Sen. Mike Fasano, R-New Port Richey, chairman of the Senate budget subcommittee
in charge of prison spending.
"This is a perfect
example of why we should not be making major policy changes in proviso language
that did not go through substantive committees, debated and taken testimony and
pro and con," Fasano said.
The proposal was never
discussed at length in any legislative hearings and first surfaced in its final
form in the final budget document in the closing days of the 2011 legislative
session.
Some legislators said the
privatization venture wasn't proposed as a law because it wouldn't have passed
on a floor vote.
By law, proviso language in
the final budget cannot be altered or amended and is subject to a yes-or-no
vote by all lawmakers. Gov. Rick Scott could have vetoed the language, but he
chose to let it become law when he signed the budget in May.
Fulford, 46, was chief
assistant state attorney for North Florida 's
Second Judicial Circuit since 1998 when Gov. Charlie Crist appointed her to the
bench in 2009. She's a graduate of Stetson
Law School
in St. Petersburg
and a registered Republican, according to public records.
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