www.newsandletters.org












NEWS & LETTERS, March-April 2005

Jail privatizing threat

Memphis, Tenn.--Approximately 70 people gathered outside the Shelby County building on Feb. 14 to protest the County Commission’s efforts to privatize the Shelby County prison system. We chanted and heard talks by unionized prison workers and community activists. At least 35 people stayed afterward to participate in the County Commission meeting.

The prison issue was supposed to be discussed at length, but the commissioners deferred the issue at the last minute. We were not permitted to speak until the end of the meeting, contrary to the commission’s own policy, because of an "unfortunate oversight" by chairman Michael Hooks.

County Commissioner Bruce Thompson, chair of the subcommittee on matters of "criminal justice," is leading the effort to turn Shelby County’s public prison facilities into the largest private county prison system in America. The Shelby County facilities (the city jail and the county prison) can house fewer than 2,000 inmates, and are occupied at roughly 70% of capacity.

Commissioner Thompson and his cohorts made a request for proposals from private prison companies late last year, with promises of "possibly" expanding the facilities to 5,000 beds. We worry that the only way to fill those beds would be by cracking down on immigrants in a way not done here before. 

The Shelby County Commission made this offer in spite of the fact that the private prison industry has had massive scandals involving financial impropriety and prisoner abuse  in recent years. One municipality even reclaimed its prison as a public prison.

The private prison industry has been notoriously hostile to its employees. Wages, benefits, and training of prison personnel are always slashed in their efforts to maximize profits. The corrections officers who work in the Shelby County prison system now are unionized. This would surely be nullified by a private corporation in this right-to-work state.

 The Mid-South Peace and Justice Center, the Mid-South Interfaith Network, the Women’s Action Coalition, the Memphis local of News and Letters Committees, Memphis-based AFSCME Local 1736, and other community and faith-based organizations are demanding the Shelby County Commissioners reject any proposal for privatization.

--Amy

Return to top


Home l News & Letters Newspaper l Back issues l News and Letters Committees l Dialogues l Raya Dunayevskaya l Contact us l Search

Subscribe to News & Letters

Published by News and Letters Committees
Designed and maintained by  Internet Horizons