These questions and others like them
betray a misunderstanding of the nature of a service company
and its relationship to its customers, as well as a flawed
concept of how a service company makes money.
Paying employees in a labor-intensive service industry such
as corrections less than competitive wages and benefits
inevitably results in a dissatisfied workforce and a high
rate of attrition.
Each correctional officer represents a significant investment
of time and money by a private operator; a high rate of
staff turnover means substantial operating losses, as well
as operational inefficiency associated with lack of employee
continuity and loss of experience-linked productivity.
Similarly, the delivery of low-quality food would prove
disastrous in a prison, where the maintenance of order is
often dependent upon the quality and portions of daily meals.
No prison operator, public or private, ever saved money
two days in a row by cutting down on the quality or portion
size of prison meals.
The quality of offender rehabilitation programs is
frequently the means by which the private operator distinguishes
its service from that of the public sector. Professional
and effective offender programs result in a safe, secure
and ordered routine, the foundation of cost-effectiveness
in any prison.
So where are the savings?
Quite significant savings of approximately 20 - 30
percent are achieved by the private sector in the design
and construction of a prison. The traditional governmental
method of linear and time-consuming contracts for the design
and then the construction of a facility is thrown out in
favor of a fast-track, design-build approach backed by a
fully guaranteed, firm, fixed-fee contract.
By designing out staffing redundancies, a private company
is able to save significant costs over the long term. We
estimate that the operating costs of a prison over its lifecycle
are at least 80 percent of its total costs and that labor
costs represent approximately 70 percent of that total;
any reduction of redundant staffing costs will obviously
generate huge efficiencies and savings over time. A single
post can cost an operator between $150,000 and $250,000
a year in wages and benefits.
A prison designed by its private sector operator is the
best guarantee of a prison designed to maximize safety,
security and cost-efficiency. The GEO Group, Inc. (GEO)
employs five in-house architects to guarantee the safety,
security and cost-efficiency of all of its facility conceptual
designs.
In operations, the private sector is able to save money,
generally estimated as equal to at least 10 -20 percent
of the public sector's cost for operating a similar facility,
by the development of an efficient, operator-driven design,
and through the application of private sector management
methods primarily focused on employee productivity and performance,
and efficient procurement of supplies.
Examples of such effective management methods include the
daily management and elimination of employee sick time and
overtime abuses, as well as the introduction of private
sector procurement methods that reduce 'red tape' and bureaucratic
inefficiencies. GEO employs the latest human resource and
procurement management tools to track its bottom line daily,
and to ensure the quality of its service.
How do we know that a company will do
all that it promised to do when it signed a contract?

This is really a question directed to the critical issue
of accountability. In a very real sense, private operators
are more accountable to the government than their public
sector counterparts. At least seven factors contribute to
this enhanced level of accountability:
(1) Contract Terms
The terms of every private operational contract require
the operator to meet, and in some cases exceed, all performance
standards, laws, regulations and rules applicable to the
public sector. Breach of these standards can result in contractual
sanctions, including termination.
(2) Government Monitor
Most contracts call for the provision of space to accommodate
an on-site public sector monitor who has complete and unrestricted
access, at all times, to all facility employees, offenders,
records and information. This is almost never true of a
public facility.
(3) Annual Government Audits
It is common for the government to perform an annual audit
of contract performance. Some contracts today tie performance
to remuneration through a system of performance-linked bonuses.
(4) In-House Audits
Private companies employ in-house corporate personnel to
monitor and audit all aspects of operational performance.
GEO's corporate and regional personnel monitor such matters
as security incident reports, health services, overtime
and sick time, and facility purchases on a daily, weekly
and monthly basis.
(5) Accreditation
In addition to government and in-house monitors and auditors,
most contracts call for accreditation of operations within
one or two years of opening by such third-party accreditation
agencies as the American Correctional Association (ACA),
the National Commission of Correctional Health Care (NCCHC),
and the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare
Organizations (JCAHO). These accreditation systems serve
as an outside and objective Quality Assurance program. GEO
has achieved or is in the process of obtaining ACA, NCCHC
and/or JCAHO accreditation for its facilities where such
accreditations are required by the client.
(6) Competition
There is a healthy competition among the handful of serious
private correctional service providers that results in the
need for each to maintain a standard of performance consistent
with a marketable reputation and something as fundamental
and perhaps quaint as the notion of "pride." At
GEO we consider our reputation to be our single most important
marketing asset; the word "adequate" is never
used in-house as a synonym for "satisfactory."
(7) Media Scrutiny
We are all familiar with most of our public institutions
- we have all spent time in schools, libraries, and hospitals.
But for most of us, our prisons remain hidden behind a shroud
of movie images and sensational news stories, and we are
naturally curious about an institution that is financed
by all but seen by few. Add to this natural curiosity the
fact that the operation of a prison by a private company
is still a relatively novel idea and you readily appreciate
the media's heightened focus on privately operated prisons.
Private operators have come to understand and to expect
that an otherwise uneventful incident in a publicly operated
prison will generate significant media interest and coverage
when occurring in a privately operated facility. A healthy
respect for a vigilant media is a powerful guarantee of
private operator accountability.
Isn't it wrong for the government to contract
out a core governmental responsibility?

It is important to remember that the government is not contracting
away its responsibility for the safe, secure and humane
incarceration of offenders; that responsibility always remains
with the government. Rather, it is contracting out to a
private company the performance of those tasks that comprise
that responsibility.
Many of the individual tasks within a prison have long been
contracted out to the private sector - health services,
food services, maintenance, to name a few. Contracting out
the 'complete package' is a difference of degree, not of
kind.
For many years, the United States contracted out the operation
of its incoming missile defense system, NORAD, to the private
sector. It is hard to conceive of a more 'core governmental
responsibility' than the alerting of one's citizens to the
imminent and calamitous attack of a hostile foreign government.
Won't a company 'lowball' its bid for
the first couple of years in order to raise its fees later
when the government is dependent upon the service?

Prison operating contracts are generally for an initial
term of not more than three to five years. Few company executives
can offer their shareholders 'loss leaders' for very long
without reaching in the old back drawer and dusting off
their resumes.
As already discussed, competition among private operators
remains keen. Any operator who believes that today's losses
can be made up at tomorrow's negotiating table forgets that
the competition is eager to take a seat at that table.
Since a company gets paid a fee for each offender
it keeps, won't it try to increase the amount of time offenders
stay in prison?

It is inconceivable that anyone could pick up a newspaper
or watch a television today and believe that private prison
operators need to work at increasing demand for their services.
It is an unfortunate fact that the "market" continues
to develop and grow despite all best efforts to address
the causes and symptoms of crime.
Private prison operators do not legislate, consider, nor
impose the sentences served by offenders. We are contractually
prohibited from adding or subtracting one day to an offenders's
sentence.
How can an out-of-state company possibly
understand the cultural and community needs of this state's
offenders?

This is an important question for anyone considering the
private operation of a correctional facility. Cultural and
community ties are often one of the most critical factors
in the success of any rehabilitation program, and it is
vital that offender programs are tailored to meet the peculiar
needs of the offenders they are designed to assist.
One must remember that a private company is not going to
import either its programs or its employees from some other
state or jurisdiction.
GEO employs nearly every facility employee from the immediate
local region. We hold a "job fair" several months
prior to the opening of a facility to allow local residents
the opportunity to learn about the qualifications, pay and
benefits associated with each employment position in the
facility. A "first right of refusal" will be given
to local residents who are qualified for the jobs.
Similarly, offender programs are carefully designed to reflect
not only local cultural characteristics, but also to "track"
with the established program objectives of the host correctional
system.
GEO is primarily a service company with acquired expertise
and experience in the design, financing, construction and
operation of prisons.
There is no single GEO prison design, no fixed method of
financing, no one system of construction, no single set
of operating rules. We are not a franchise company. Each
of our prisons represents a comprehensive and creative response
to the unique requirements of each client.
What GEO offers to our clients is knowledge - proprietary
information - in the form of a transfer of technology. We
bring our insights and experience gained from around the
world to a collective, local effort, and we adopt and adapt
until we have achieved a local solution that represents
world-best standards.
In short, our Texas and our Australian prisons have far
more in common with their local public sector facilities
than they do with each other - except insofar as each, and
all, represent our commitment to professionalism, integrity,
and quality, client-based service.
How do we know a company won't buy all
of its daily operational supplies from central wholesalers
located outside of the state?

It is a top priority of our Company to demonstrate our commitment
to a long-term relationship with our public sector client.
One of the primary ways this is achieved is by being a good
corporate citizen.
In addition to our "job fair," GEO holds a "vendor
fair" prior to the opening of the facility where we
provide local vendors with comprehensive lists of the goods
and services we require on a regular basis for the operation
of the facility. Local vendors are given every opportunity
to meet our needs with a strong bias in favor of local purchases.
In addition, GEO forms a community liaison committee in
the host community comprised of community leaders, both
elected and non-elected. This committee begins to meet regularly
prior to and during the construction of the facility in
order to fully involve the community in the "life"
of the prison and to address any questions or concerns community
groups or citizens may have regarding the facility's mission
or operation.
Isn't it wrong for a company to make
a profit from the suffering of others?

First, it must be said that "the suffering of others"
is hardly how corrections professionals, including GEO,
would characterize the conditions under which our offenders
are held.
GEO knows that the loss of freedom, and not the conditions
of confinement, is the only punishment that an offender
should face. Our offender regimes are strict and well organized,
but they are not punitive or demeaning. Offenders are addressed
by their last name. They are shown, and they are expected
to return, simple courtesies and respect.
If some persist in seeing imprisonment for the commission
of crime as "suffering," it is hard to appreciate
how the simple lack of profit by the public sector somehow
ennobles the enterprise.
One final word about the "profit" issue. As noted
above, the public sector does indeed profit through its
efforts. The expenditure of those profits upon increased
bureaucracies, line staff and supplies, while less visible
than shareholder dividends, is nevertheless real, capable
of measure, and worthy of note.
The privatization of prisons is a public-private partnership,
and this relationship is no less true in the area of profit
sharing. Public officials who promote privatization may
take justifiable pride that every dollar of taxpayer funds
saved can be spent on otherwise neglected competing public
services such as schools, hospitals, roads, airports and
waste management facilities.