by Aviva Shen
Florida will be
allowed to outsource
its prison health care system to a private
contractor, the First District Court of Appeals ruled on Wednesday. The
privatization plan was blocked by a judge last
year, after a lower court found that the state Department of Corrections had
circumvented the legislative process. Another judge killed the plan in 2011
because some state lawmakers had tried to sneak privatization through a budget
rather than attempt to pass a bill explicitly about prison health care.
It’s no wonder
Florida officials have tried to downplay the privatization plan. Private prison
contractors have become popular with many Republican lawmakers across the
country because of their promises to cut costs. But these companies also often
cut corners to increase their own profits, leading to abysmal
conditions, inmate abuse, and frequent riots.
Private health
care companies have especially bad records on inmate treatment. Nightmarish
stories of inmates dying from treatable diseases because they were refused care
are frighteningly common in prisons that have
outsourced their healthcare. One of the largest prison health care providers,
Correctional Medical Care, is under criminal
investigation in New York after its negligence led to nine deaths.
Other states with
private prison health care can forecast the conditions Florida inmates will now
face. A Kaiser report on these systems found “inhumane”
conditions, with terminally ill inmates left in soiled linens
without food or water for days. One Arizona man with lung cancer begged for
treatment, only to be told by medical staff that he should drink energy shakes
to cure his symptoms. Others who have begged for medical aid have been told
they were simply making it up or that they should “pray to be cured.”
Florida has
already privatized several prisons entirely, with terrible consequences. One
prisoner, Robert Boggon, was sent to
jail after suffering a mental episode in a Dollar Tree store.
Boggon never received a psychiatric evaluation even though he was rocking on
the floor of his cell and urinating on himself. After 11 days in jail, Boggon
was found dead, naked, and strapped to an emergency restraint chair with a
towel around his head in his cell in the jail infirmary. The death was ruled a
homicide, but the medical examiner placed the blame on no one.
Moreover, Gov.
Rick Scott’s claims that privatization
saves the state money have not lived up to their promise. However, private
prison companies have donated heavily to Florida lawmakers to ensure they
continue to back privatization. The industry donated nearly $1
million to mostly Republican campaigns in 2010, and have already
padded Scott’s re-election campaign with more than $100,000.
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