Next week, Governor Rick Snyder will deliver a budget plan that his own Lt. Governor has described as an ‘atomic bomb’ of spending cuts. Michigan’s Corrections Department is expected to be a prime target.
Michigan is facing a state budget deficit next year estimated at $1.8 billion.
Michigan spends nearly $2 billion a year housing more than 44,000 inmates. The number of inmates has declined by more than 7,000 during the past five years. And the number of prison employees has shrunk by nearly 4 thousand in the past decade.
Still, conservative groups say more savings can be wrung out of the Corrections Department with privatization.
Mel Greishaber is with the prison guards union. He warns privatizing some prison jobs might save money, but it will increase security problems.
“Often...civilians who come in and work are not as sensitive to the safety issues and security issues that they need to be.”
Greishaber is also worried about the level of experience state lawmakers have with Michigan's prison system. A large percentage of state lawmakers are new to the job. Greishaber notes that few members of the largely first term legislature have ever even visited a state prison.
“Everyone comes in with preconceived notions. They’ve watched movies which almost always are not the real life situation."