| Topic: |
Religions > Atheism |
| User: |
"_ G O D _" |
| Date: |
05 Nov 2005 01:06:49 AM |
| Object: |
State Fiscal Woes Padlock Much-Criticized Youth Prison |
Blank
State Fiscal Woes Padlock Much-Criticized Youth Prison
by David Milne
http://pn.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/short/40/21/2
After a watchdog group sues a Michigan private youth
prison over inadequate care for inmates, the prison is
closed due to budget reasons. Despite opposition from
Republicans, Michigan's youth prison was closed last
month when Gov. Jennifer Granholm (D) announced the
first budget bills for the 2005-06 fiscal year. The move
helped trim a projected deficit of $770 million. The prison
closing was one of the most hotly contested items in the
budget. "This costly facility is not needed and was originally
constructed to house violent young offenders, but the need
for this facility never materialized," the governor said.
Her office noted that the legislative auditor general said
less-expensive beds can be used to house the teen
offenders, saving the state $17.8 million a year.
Earlier this year the Michigan Protection and Advocacy
Service Inc. filed a lawsuit against State Department of
Corrections Director Patricia Casuso, Michigan Youth
Correction Facility Warden Frank Elo, and the GEO
Group Inc., a Florida-based, prison-management company
that owns and runs the state's private prison at Baldwin,
claiming the prison was mismanaged.
After the state had given the company a 60-day notice that it was terminating the
lease, the GEO Group made a last-minute offer to cut the cost of the state's $18.8
million four-year contract by at least $2 million a year, an indication of how
profitable private prisons are. Now the state faces a lawsuit over the lease for the
privately built facility, and prison supporters say the fight is not over.
The Michigan Youth Correctional Facility was built in 1999 under former Gov. John
Engler (R), who promised good-paying jobs to residents in the poverty-stricken Lake
County region; it was the state's first privately run, for-profit prison. Soon after
it opened, parents of teenaged boys convicted as adults alleged that their children
had suffered physical, mental, and sexual abuse at the maximum-security prison. Their
allegations were backed up by a watchdog group.
"Even though we anticipated that the facility was to be closed regardless, we went
ahead and filed the suit because [staff] were not providing the proper services to
the kids," Tom Masseau, public policy specialist with the Michigan Protection and
Advocacy Service, told Psychiatric News. The suit accused the prison of neglecting
inmates' physical and mental health and failing to provide enough trained counselors
for those suffering from mental illnesses and developmental disabilities.
Masseau said there was only one full-time social worker for 483 inmates. He added
that low-level offenders were housed with convicted rapists and murderers. Many
inmates were kept in isolation for days at a time without recreation and as
punishment for minor offenses were limited to a few showers a week.
"Sixty-one suicide attempts were reported between October 2004 and March 2005,"
Masseau said. "This is a significant increase, because for all of 2003, there were
only 18 suicide attempts," he added.
Masseau attributed the suicide attempts to the lack of proper treatment for inmates,
many of whom suffered from mental illness and developmental disabilities. "Now that
the facility is closed, we will be monitoring what happens to these kids to make sure
that the state provides the appropriate services for them," he said.
The GEO Group said it will vigorously contest the allegations and questioned the
plaintiffs' motivation and timing. It warned it will pursue and enforce any remedies
under the law against the Michigan Advocacy and Protection Service.
Management and Budget Department spokesperson Bridget Medina had no immediate comment
on the lease issue and what options the state was reviewing.
Many people in the mental health and human service communities agreed that it was
time Michigan dissolved its relationship with the GEO Group, a worldwide operation
that runs prisons in the United States, Canada, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand,
and the United Kingdom.
"I fully expected Gov. Granholm to end the contract, and that was sound public
policy," Mark Reinstein, Ph.D., CEO, and president of the Mental Health Association
in Michigan, told Psychiatric News. "The mental health and human service communities
had serious concerns about the efficacy and performance of this facility."
Psychiatrist Michele Reid, M.D., medical director of the Detroit-Wayne County
Community Mental Health Agency and a corresponding member of APA's Council on Member
and District Branch Relations, noted that the Mental Health Commission had received
testimony from many families and deliberated extensively on mental health services to
persons in correctional settings for both juveniles and adults.
"We are elated that the youth prison is closed. It's a scandal that it was ever
opened and continued to be run in such a way that could do so much damage to so many
children," Susan McParland, director of the Michigan Association for Children With
Emotional Disorders, told Psychiatric News. "Our organization had urged that the
Baldwin facility, or so-called `punk prison,' be closed.... There was no purpose for
this facility. As advocates for kids, we know that detention in general does a lot of
harm to children who have emotional disorders, and this facility was the `belly of
the beast' so to speak."
State Sen. Michelle McManus (R), whose Lake Leelanau district includes the prison,
claims the suit sucker-punched residents of a county that often leads the state in
unemployment and poverty.
"Just when it seems things can't get any darker for residents of Lake County, the
groups that are against the prison found one more stunt to pull," she said. "This
suit was clearly timed for maximum political impact."
Republican legislators who favor privatization wanted the funding for the prison to
continue and disputed the claims that adult prisons have enough beds to accommodate
the youthful inmates who were shipped to adult prisons beginning October 1.
Corrections spokesperson Leo Lalonde said 320 prisoners would be transferred to the
Thumb Correctional Facility, with others scattered throughout the system. Sexual
assaults at juvenile prisons occur 10 times more often than at adult prisons,
according to information released by the Bureau of Justice Statistics in July.
--
_____________________________________________________
I intend to last long enough to put out of business all *****-suckers
and other beneficiaries of the institutionalized slavery and genocide.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"The army that will defeat terrorism doesn't wear uniforms, or drive
Humvees, or calls in air-strikes. It doesn't have a high command, or
high security, or a high budget. The army that can defeat terrorism
does battle quietly, clearing minefields and vaccinating children. It
undermines military dictatorships and military lobbyists. It subverts
sweatshops and special interests.Where people feel powerless, it
helps them organize for change, and where people are powerful, it
reminds them of their responsibility." ~~~~ Author Unknown ~~~~
___________________________________________________
--
.
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| User: "_ G O D _" |
|
| Title: PRISONERS REDEEM THEMSELVES THROUGH EXECUTION ==> State Fiscal Woes Padlock Much-Criticized Youth Prison |
05 Nov 2005 08:33:23 AM |
|
|
On Fri, 4 Nov 2005 17:06:49 -0800, "_ G O D _" <demigod1@sprint.ca>
wrote:
Blank
State Fiscal Woes Padlock Much-Criticized Youth Prison
by David Milne
http://pn.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/short/40/21/2
After a watchdog group sues a Michigan private youth
prison over inadequate care for inmates, the prison is
closed due to budget reasons. Despite opposition from
Republicans, Michigan's youth prison was closed last
month when Gov. Jennifer Granholm (D) announced the
first budget bills for the 2005-06 fiscal year. The move
helped trim a projected deficit of $770 million. The prison
closing was one of the most hotly contested items in the
budget. "This costly facility is not needed and was originally
constructed to house violent young offenders, but the need
for this facility never materialized," the governor said.
Her office noted that the legislative auditor general said
less-expensive beds can be used to house the teen
offenders, saving the state $17.8 million a year.
Earlier this year the Michigan Protection and Advocacy
Service Inc. filed a lawsuit against State Department of
Corrections Director Patricia Casuso, Michigan Youth
Correction Facility Warden Frank Elo, and the GEO
Group Inc., a Florida-based, prison-management company
that owns and runs the state's private prison at Baldwin,
claiming the prison was mismanaged.
After the state had given the company a 60-day notice that it was terminating the
lease, the GEO Group made a last-minute offer to cut the cost of the state's $18.8
million four-year contract by at least $2 million a year, an indication of how
profitable private prisons are. Now the state faces a lawsuit over the lease for the
privately built facility, and prison supporters say the fight is not over.
The Michigan Youth Correctional Facility was built in 1999 under former Gov. John
Engler (R), who promised good-paying jobs to residents in the poverty-stricken Lake
County region; it was the state's first privately run, for-profit prison. Soon after
it opened, parents of teenaged boys convicted as adults alleged that their children
had suffered physical, mental, and sexual abuse at the maximum-security prison. Their
allegations were backed up by a watchdog group.
"Even though we anticipated that the facility was to be closed regardless, we went
ahead and filed the suit because [staff] were not providing the proper services to
the kids," Tom Masseau, public policy specialist with the Michigan Protection and
Advocacy Service, told Psychiatric News. The suit accused the prison of neglecting
inmates' physical and mental health and failing to provide enough trained counselors
for those suffering from mental illnesses and developmental disabilities.
Masseau said there was only one full-time social worker for 483 inmates. He added
that low-level offenders were housed with convicted rapists and murderers. Many
inmates were kept in isolation for days at a time without recreation and as
punishment for minor offenses were limited to a few showers a week.
"Sixty-one suicide attempts were reported between October 2004 and March 2005,"
Masseau said. "This is a significant increase, because for all of 2003, there were
only 18 suicide attempts," he added.
Masseau attributed the suicide attempts to the lack of proper treatment for inmates,
many of whom suffered from mental illness and developmental disabilities. "Now that
the facility is closed, we will be monitoring what happens to these kids to make sure
that the state provides the appropriate services for them," he said.
The GEO Group said it will vigorously contest the allegations and questioned the
plaintiffs' motivation and timing. It warned it will pursue and enforce any remedies
under the law against the Michigan Advocacy and Protection Service.
Management and Budget Department spokesperson Bridget Medina had no immediate comment
on the lease issue and what options the state was reviewing.
Many people in the mental health and human service communities agreed that it was
time Michigan dissolved its relationship with the GEO Group, a worldwide operation
that runs prisons in the United States, Canada, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand,
and the United Kingdom.
"I fully expected Gov. Granholm to end the contract, and that was sound public
policy," Mark Reinstein, Ph.D., CEO, and president of the Mental Health Association
in Michigan, told Psychiatric News. "The mental health and human service communities
had serious concerns about the efficacy and performance of this facility."
Psychiatrist Michele Reid, M.D., medical director of the Detroit-Wayne County
Community Mental Health Agency and a corresponding member of APA's Council on Member
and District Branch Relations, noted that the Mental Health Commission had received
testimony from many families and deliberated extensively on mental health services to
persons in correctional settings for both juveniles and adults.
"We are elated that the youth prison is closed. It's a scandal that it was ever
opened and continued to be run in such a way that could do so much damage to so many
children," Susan McParland, director of the Michigan Association for Children With
Emotional Disorders, told Psychiatric News. "Our organization had urged that the
Baldwin facility, or so-called `punk prison,' be closed.... There was no purpose for
this facility. As advocates for kids, we know that detention in general does a lot of
harm to children who have emotional disorders, and this facility was the `belly of
the beast' so to speak."
State Sen. Michelle McManus (R), whose Lake Leelanau district includes the prison,
claims the suit sucker-punched residents of a county that often leads the state in
unemployment and poverty.
"Just when it seems things can't get any darker for residents of Lake County, the
groups that are against the prison found one more stunt to pull," she said. "This
suit was clearly timed for maximum political impact."
Republican legislators who favor privatization wanted the funding for the prison to
continue and disputed the claims that adult prisons have enough beds to accommodate
the youthful inmates who were shipped to adult prisons beginning October 1.
Corrections spokesperson Leo Lalonde said 320 prisoners would be transferred to the
Thumb Correctional Facility, with others scattered throughout the system. Sexual
assaults at juvenile prisons occur 10 times more often than at adult prisons,
according to information released by the Bureau of Justice Statistics in July.
--
_____________________________________________________
I intend to last long enough to put out of business all *****-suckers
and other beneficiaries of the institutionalized slavery and genocide.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"The army that will defeat terrorism doesn't wear uniforms, or drive
Humvees, or calls in air-strikes. It doesn't have a high command, or
high security, or a high budget. The army that can defeat terrorism
does battle quietly, clearing minefields and vaccinating children. It
undermines military dictatorships and military lobbyists. It subverts
sweatshops and special interests.Where people feel powerless, it
helps them organize for change, and where people are powerful, it
reminds them of their responsibility." ~~~~ Author Unknown ~~~~
___________________________________________________
.
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