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Lawmakers tour private prison in Lawton
State Rep. Randy Terrill (R-Moore)
By SEAN MURPHY Associated Press Writer
Published:
8/11/2009 4:29 PM
Last Modified: 8/11/2009 9:44 PM
LAWTON — Members of an Oklahoma House committee that allocates money to the state prisons toured a 2,500-bed private prison in Lawton on Tuesday as they search for ways to house Oklahoma's growing inmate population and replace crumbling state buildings.
A sprawling facility tucked amid rural farmland on Lawton's far southeast side, the prison operated by Florida-based GEO Group, Inc. is the largest in the state, housing about 2,400 medium-security Oklahoma inmates.
Committee Chairman Rep. Randy Terrill said private facilities are one way to replace state prisons that, in some cases, are 100 years old.
"Nobody is talking about building an Embassy Suites or a Hilton for these guys to live in," said Terrill, R-Moore. "But we do have some very legitimate prison infrastructure needs that adversely impact public safety."
A private study commissioned by the Legislature earlier this year recommended about $220 million in renovations to Oklahoma's 17 state prisons and another $292 million to add 2,600 beds.
The study also urges the Legislature to consider demolishing and replacing at least three prisons — the Oklahoma State Penitentiary in McAlester, the Oklahoma State Reformatory in Granite and the William S. Key Correctional Center at Fort Supply.
The Lawton Correctional Facility is one of six private prisons in Oklahoma, four of which house only Oklahoma inmates. The Lawton prison, which has about 450 employees, charges the state $45.73 per inmate per day, which is the lowest rate of all the private prisons in Oklahoma, said Renee Watkins, the Department of Corrections' private prison administrator.
Not all members of the committee were eager to endorse private prisons as part of a solution to the state's overcrowded prison system.
"I have concerns with privates — they're in the business of profiteering over other people's misery," said state Rep. Richard Morrissette, D-Oklahoma City. "Their motive is to lock up more people."
Morrissette and other lawmakers on the tour said they were impressed with the 11-year-old prison, where inmates are housed in pods overseen by guards in neat, pressed uniforms. But Morrissette argued state workers could monitor inmates just as efficiently in a new state prisons.
"Incarcerating people is a government function that should be run by government, not by private entities," he said.
Terrill said no decisions have been made about how large a role private prisons will play in Oklahoma's system and the committee plans to tour other private and state facilities in the upcoming months.
Meanwhile, GEO officials say they are considering building a new 1,600-bed facility next to the Lawton prison.
GEO consultant Don Houston told lawmakers the company bought 244 acres of land, completed designs and received approval from the county.
By SEAN MURPHY Associated Press Writer
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comments have been made on this story so far. Tell us what you think below!
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im4osu
, Broken Arrow (8/11/2009 4:33:43 PM)
Please don't tell me that this is a possible site for the cons in Cuba?
Report Comment
H.
, (8/11/2009 4:35:49 PM)
Why wasn't the headline "Randy Terrill goes to prison?" You would have gotten a lot more clicks and comments by now, to be sure.
Report Comment
I'm Reliable
, (8/11/2009 4:38:03 PM)
I'd like to know how much cash (yeah cash in brown paper envelopes) is being given to Chairman Randy Terrill and other Republican committee members?
Report Comment
Thunder196
, Tulsa (8/11/2009 4:48:19 PM)
im4osu
That's what I thought when I first read this.
...
I'm Reliable
Are you trying to say our politicians could be persuaded with monetary gains?
Report Comment
Jacky
, small town Oklahoma (8/11/2009 4:49:03 PM)
I'm Reliable - I'd like to know the same. No matter how many studies we, as tax payers, pay for - they refuse to take any of the suggestions given and use them. Instead they continue to go back to the private prison well time and again.
Where are the rest of our lawmakers and why are they continuing to allow this to happen?
Report Comment
I'm Reliable
, (8/11/2009 5:03:50 PM)
Its no wonder St. Rep. Rand Terrill (R-Moore) is smiling so broadly in his picture, he's probably got a big bag of cash from GEO group!!
Report Comment
I'm Reliable
, (8/11/2009 5:07:44 PM)
Its something how all these Republicans after a few years in the state legislature seem so wealthy and have nice fine homes and fancy cars to drive and take those exotic vacations!!
Report Comment
Woofenburger
, Hominy (8/11/2009 9:43:44 PM)
The republicans just keep on trying to make business for private prisons.
Right now there are 4,356 medium security inmates in private prisons. That is around eighty-nine million two-hundred thousand dollars per year taking numbers from the Department of Corrections website. That is about 23% or the Department's annual budget.
Add to that that private prisons won't take most problem inmates or chronically ill inmates and that leaves a greater number of the inmates costing more to keep in State facilities.
But that's ok, you reps & senators just make sure you pay back the private prison folks for all the support they have shown you in the past.
Report Comment
okie ridgerunner
, Small Country Town State Line (8/11/2009 10:49:02 PM)
Criminals convicts and prisons have always been big buisness in the state of okla.and believe me there is a lot of money being made off of the state owned prisons.sheriffs and state officals are cleaning up in okla.state owned or private it is a money making buisness regardless of what they say or how they try to cover it up.
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