WHEREAS:
AFSCME International has formally opposed the private prison industry in resolutions in the past; and
WHEREAS:
Today, the national crime rate is about half of what it was at its height in 1991, violent crime has fallen by 51 percent since 1991, property crime by 43 percent, and in 2013 the violent crime rate was the lowest since 1970; and
WHEREAS:
The U.S. has the highest number of people in prison out of every country in the world, with more than 20 percent of the world’s prison population but only 5 percent of the overall population; and
WHEREAS:
Companies such as Corrections Corporation of America (CCA) and GEO Group (formerly known as Wackenhut Corrections Corporation), the two largest private prison companies in the United States, continue profiting from the separations of families, violations of human rights, and the general pain caused by these prisons is inhumane and unacceptable; and
WHEREAS:
Companies that operate private prisons such as Corrections Corporation of America (CCA), GEO Group, and Management and Training Corp. have spent at least $45 million combined on campaign donations and lobbyists at the state and federal level in the last decade; and
WHEREAS:
CCA, the leading private prison company, has long provided major support to, and had close ties with, the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), an organization of state legislators that has advocated harsh sentencing and detention laws, such as mandatory minimum sentencing statutes; and
WHEREAS:
Private prisons can impose costs on local communities by obtaining subsidies, enjoying property tax exemptions, and receiving municipal services (such as water and sewer services) that cost taxpayer money; and
WHEREAS:
Wells Fargo and 28 other major financial institutions, dubbed the Million Shares Club, hold over one million shares in CCA and GEO Group combined, as well as providing loans and sharing lobbyists with these prison corporations; and
WHEREAS:
In order to maintain a profitable industry, private prisons cut corners with indisputably devastating results, private prisons routinely experience more inmate escapes and higher rates of violence due to chronically lax security and poorly trained, minimally paid staff; and
WHEREAS:
Private prisons profit from incarceration (an average of $78.88 per inmate per day) and use their political influence to lobby for harsher penalties and antiimmigrant legislation like Arizona’s SB 1070; and
WHEREAS:
In 2015, 62 percent of all Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) immigration detention beds in the United States were operated by for-profit prison corporations, up from 49 percent in 2009, and nine of the ten largest ICE detention centers are private at a rate of $122 per inmate per day; and
WHEREAS:
The Bureau of Justice Assistance reported that private prisons experienced 49 percent more assaults on staff and 65 percent more inmatetoinmate assaults than public prisons.
THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED:
That AFSCME submit a recommendation from the membership at our 42nd International Convention to our representatives on our respective pension boards, committees, plan managers, retirement systems and/or associations on public pension boards across the U.S. to divest from
private prisons, and instead explore investing in low carbon technologies, coop development funds and community investment funds; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED:
That AFSCME introduce this idea to other public employee unions to pressure these pension boards to leave the private prison industry in favor of building a more just and sustainable tomorrow; and
BE IT FINALLY RESOLVED:
That we call on all our representatives on our respective pension boards, committees, plan managers, retirement systems, and/or associations on public pension boards and likeminded supporters in other public employee unions to rethink our strategy of investing in these private prison corporations.
SUBMITTED BY: Jason Heilbrun, President and Delegate
Korie Erickson, Secretary and Delegate
AFSCME Local 88, Council 75
Oregon