Today's Louisville paper, The Courier-Journal, ran an article discussing whether or not it would save money if Kentucky were to increase its use of reliance on privately run prisons. Many of you may not know that the State does not run/manage all the prisons. According to this article, there are 3 privately run prisons in Kentucky housing about 6 percent of the 21,386 member prison population across the Commonwealth. The case for privatization, according to the article, is that privately run prisons cost Kentucky $2,500 less per inmate than the average cost in the 13 facilities operated by the state.
On the face of it, any reduced costs sound like a good thing. I have to throw my hat in with Sen. Robert Stivers, R-Manchester, and Rep. John Tilley, D-Hopkinsville, who said they didn't know enough about the matter to form an opinion. What I do know is that article failed to address the larger issue, which is, what is the purpose of our prisons? And secondarily, what are we willing to pay for in order to fulfill that purpose?
I want to know what you think. Are our prisons intended to be merely detainment facilities? Places where those individuals we all want to forget about are housed until they have served their sentence, after which we plan to toss them out onto society to sink or swim? Or do we truly believe them to be "Correctional" facilities where inmates receive training for life, not just for job skills and are released into an environment of mentoring and accountability that allows them to succeed and become productive citizens outside the razor wire fence?
If a inmate truely wants to be reformed, and a productive member of society then I think the work and money is worth it.. These are the people I think broke the law out of desperation. But then I believe there are people in the system who want the 'easy' way, and those people need to be kept 'detained'.. Which this brings to question, why where they arrested to begin with ??? ..
ReplyDeleteposted by Chad 8/10/09
I read the article in the C-J this morning. I agree the big question is not being asked. When I listen to the men at LLCC, I realize the enormous error we make when we do not demand that our prisons be places of rehabilitation and transformation. posted by Rev. Diane
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