Senate President Pro Tem Don Perata, D-Oakland, center, answers a question concerning the agreement reached by legislative leaders to ease the overcrowding in California prisons, while talking with reporters at the Capitol in Sacramento, Calif., Wednesday, April 25, 2007. Perata; Assembly Speaker Fabian Nunez, D-Los Angeles, left; Assembly Minority Leader Mike Villines, R-Clovis, right; and Senate Minority Leader Dick Ackerman, R-Tustin, not shown, met for almost an hour before announcing the agreement that includes adding beds at state prisons and county jails, as well as improving rehabilitation programs to help inmates transition back to society. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)
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The Feds made us do it.
What are they going to use for money? Whose $7 billion is it? I know! Bonds, bonds, letâs sell bonds! (and pay them back when California freezes over)
Ta-daaaaaH!
$137,735.85 per bed
Wouldn't it me cheaper to offer each criminal $10k a year for 15 years so long as they are not arrested?
No property purchase.
No maintenance.
No interest on an outrageous future liability for current expenses...
No staffing or support expenses (including retirement and bennies...)
Just saying.
What ever happened to deporting them? How about implanting them with a tracking chip, and giving them a tattoo to identify them and send them home to Mexico (or wherever they come from).
No reason in the world why they can’t do what Sheriff Joe Arpaio has done in Arizona. Put inmates in large military tents, with field kitchens, latrines, chain link and barbed wire fences, etc. Put them out in the middle of the desert.
The inmates that have to be in the rear for high security, medical reasons, court appearances, etc., you put in the brick prisons. But most of them can be out in the boonies.
International law is clear that military field garrison conditions do not violate any human rights.
Ironically, being out there is not a punishment, it is a reward, because they get fresh air and sunshine, and are not crowded together like they are in brick prisons. And by being out there, the brick prisons are better, as they are not as crowded.
7.3 Billion more in borrowing..
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Details of the prison reform plan approved by lawmakers
http://www.bakersfield.com/119/story/128871.html
Assembly Bill 900, approved by state legislators Thursday, allows the construction of 53,000 new prison and jail beds in two phases.
Total state spending amounts to $7.75 billion, including more than $6.1 billion in borrowing for state prison construction, more than $1.2 billion in borrowing for county jail construction, $300 million in general tax money for prison infrastructure improvements and $50 million for rehabilitation programs.
Counties would have to contribute 25 percent matching funds if they want the state’s help in building more jail cells, for another $300 million in local money.
Construction would be in two phases. The second phase is contingent on the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation improving education, job training and other rehabilitation programs. The state must have started building half of the Phase I beds before it can begin Phase II.
The bill lets the state transfer 8,000 inmates out of state for up to four years. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is appealing a state judge’s ruling that the transfers are illegal under existing law. Officials could not immediately say how the new law would affect the appeal. Among the details:
Phase I
- State borrows $3.6 billion to build 12,000 beds in new cell blocks at existing prisons; 6,000 beds in smaller regional prisons for parole violators and inmates nearing release; and 6,000 medical beds.
- State pays $750 million and counties contribute 25 percent of the cost to build 8,000 county jail beds.
- The department gets $300 million to improve water, sewer and other infrastructure at prisons where new cell houses are to be built.
- The department gets an additional $50 million to improve rehabilitation programs, drug treatment and vocational education.
Phase II
- State borrows $2.5 billion to add 4,000 more beds at existing prisons; 10,000 more beds at regional prisons; and 2,000 more medical beds.
- State pays $470 million and counties contribute 25 percent of the cost for an additional 5,000 county jail beds.
The borrowing is through lease-revenue bonds, which do not require voter approval.
Just watch. They will vote to turn down the inmates top sheets before bedtime, place a chocolate mint on the pillow, ask them what time they’d like a wake-up call and deliver USA Today to their cells every morning.
Conjugal visits to each male cellmate by Rep. Bawney Fwank also included on a daily basis.