Facing fiscal pressure and changing demographics, the Gov. Bobby
Jindal Administration went for Plan B concerning correctional institutions,
probably leading a number of state and local policy-makers bemoaning that they
got what they wished for.
This past
legislation session, and in
the previous one, Jindal had budgeted to privatize some state prisons
beyond the two already permitted in state law, as well as this past session planned
to close two others. As occurred the year before, no further privatization
occurred, but the closures happened despite an attempt to make an end
run around Jindal’s authority on the matter.
Apparently, the numbers indicated that this was not enough, so last
week the Administration announced the closure in two months of the C.
Paul Phelps facility in southwestern Louisiana that would save an estimated
$12 million a year. Demographic and
local capacity trends such as they are, that space has turned surplus.
Naturally, the decision left some state legislators and city officials whining
about how a few local residents will lose jobs and a few businesses will lose
subsidized inmate labor.
Ironically, one of those local officials hoped the future would hold a
private firm taking over the facility, an outcome area legislators undoubtedly
would find helpful as they tend to place more primacy on whether they get
blamed for job losses in these cases than on the actual economics and needs of
the state as a whole. Besides the usual
selfish populist ranting, some of those legislators also complained they
got very short notice of the closing even though they have no formal role in
this decision-making process – betraying the understanding by all parties involved
that, if given more lead time, local special interests could try to prevent
something in the interest of the entire state from its implementation.
One of them, state Rep. Brett Geymann,
might well have gotten hoisted on his own petard. Geymann has created a persona for himself as a “budget hawk”
because he opposes the use of monies derived from excess special recurring revenue
sources dedicated for certain purposes, called “one-time money,” from being
pooled with unencumbered funds to pay for general state services – such as
prison operations. Maybe the use of more one-time money might have kept the
Phelps Center open? Or maybe this event will lead Geymann to drop the hypocrisy
of this approach, because one-time money are revenues whose only difference
from any other kind is that the Legislature locked them away, meaning they would
cease to be so if Geymann and the rest of the Legislature got rid of some of
the hundreds of dedications and the false distinction between monies that comes
with that.
But he’s not the only one finding getting what he wants unpleasant.
Repeated attempts by the Administration to privatize Avoyelles
Correctional Center have failed in the face of intense local and
ideological opposition – but opposition that could have been overcome by a
display of political courage from legislators from other areas of the state and
those committed to right-sized government, and from lobbying by the local
officials they represent. Maybe if that had gone off, again there could have
been enough money left to keep Phelps going.
3 comments:
SUBTLY, I strongly submit, has no role whatsoever in this Administration's dealings and relations with anyone.
Why don't you write about Speaker Chuck Kleckly and Senate Finance Chairman Jack Donahue, who have blindly been carrying water for Jindal, and how they now must feel about the Governor's loyalty (or, more correctly, the total lack of loyalty)and being literally blasted in the communities they represent?
Instead of about good people, who have been blindsided (by the Governor and him minions) and who are good people trying to represent their constituents?
For a much better report and view on this matter, read Jim Beam's article in today's Lake Charles American Press at americanpress.com
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