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WATCH NOW [Sponsored] Rehab Plus Sports Performance Injury Rehabilitation Rehab Plus Sports Performance Injury Rehabilitation4730 E. Warner Road, Ste. 5Phoenix, AZ 85044 SUBMIT AN OBITUARY CONNECT WITH US Contact Us About Us Advertise Work For AFN E-Editions Newsletter Signup Welcome! Login Signup | 30 UPDATES TODAY 67° CLEAR Featured Links State Championship: DV vs Westview girls basketball Basketball: DV vs Dobson Girls state basketball: Thunder erases deficit to head to championship game Girls state basketball: Westview next up for Thunder Basketball: DV vs MP Best Of 2013 results Wrestling State Championships Home News Valley And State Story Comments Image (1) Share Print Font Size: McClellan: A parallel between private prisons and vouchers for private schools Posted: Sunday, February 23, 2014 1:01 pm Guest commentary by Mike McClellan The private sector can always do a better job. That is the belief of many Republicans in our state, which might help explain the number of private prisons we contract with. Currently, those prisons house about one-sixth of our inmate population. It’s a nice business -- here in Arizona, we even guarantee the private prisons a certain number of prisoners, which, of course, ups their profits. In fact, according to a recent Arizona Republic article, one corporation, CCA, has an operating margin of about 30 percent, the difference between what we pay them and what it costs them. Not bad. But some believe that maybe, just maybe, the privately-run prisons don’t do a very good job. State-mandated audits showed just that. Corrections Department studies from 2008 - 2010 reveal that it was cheaper to house inmates in state-run medium correction facilities than it was to put them up in private prisons. So maybe, just maybe, at least with prisons here in Arizona, the private sector -- motivated by profit -- doesn’t do a better job. But going forward, we won’t know that. Because two years ago, the Republican legislature passed a bill, signed into law by Jan Brewer, that “repealed a statutory requirement to compare costs.” Voila! Problem solved. Today, there’s another public sector that these same Republicans are attempting to privatize: public education. The voucher system has been with us for several years, a plan that allows students to access tuition vouchers to attend private schools. Advertised as a way to help poorer students, instead it’s turned out to be mostly a subsidy for middle and upper class students’ private school costs. And made a nice living for the folks whose companies dole out the money for the vouchers. In the last few years, public money for private schools has expanded through what’s called an Empowerment Scholarship Account. Again, taxpayer money is used by students to attend private schools, along with a variety of other uses the ESA’s allow. Our private sector fans want even more, though. In this session alone, there are three bills that Let the community know about your loss. Please click here to contact us. Submit MOST POPULAR MOST COMMENTED ON FACEBOOK Stories Photos Videos Mike McClellan is a Gilbert resident and former English teacher at Dobson High School in Mesa. Advanced Search GO News Community Main Street Opinion Arts & Life Sports Special Sections Jobs Marketplace

A Parallel Between Private Prisons and Vouchers for Private Schools

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McClellan: A parallel between privateprisons and vouchers for private schools

Posted: Sunday, February 23, 2014 1:01 pm

Guest commentary by Mike McClellan

The private sector can always do a better job.

That is the belief of many Republicans in ourstate, which might help explain the number ofprivate prisons we contract with. Currently,those prisons house about one-sixth of ourinmate population.

It’s a nice business -- here in Arizona, we even guarantee the private prisons a certain number ofprisoners, which, of course, ups their profits. In fact, according to a recent Arizona Republicarticle, one corporation, CCA, has an operating margin of about 30 percent, the differencebetween what we pay them and what it costs them.

Not bad.

But some believe that maybe, just maybe, the privately-run prisons don’t do a very good job.

State-mandated audits showed just that. Corrections Department studies from 2008 - 2010reveal that it was cheaper to house inmates in state-run medium correction facilities than it wasto put them up in private prisons.

So maybe, just maybe, at least with prisons here in Arizona, the private sector -- motivated byprofit -- doesn’t do a better job.

But going forward, we won’t know that. Because two years ago, the Republican legislaturepassed a bill, signed into law by Jan Brewer, that “repealed a statutory requirement to comparecosts.”

Voila! Problem solved.

Today, there’s another public sector that these same Republicans are attempting to privatize:public education.

The voucher system has been with us for several years, a plan that allows students to accesstuition vouchers to attend private schools. Advertised as a way to help poorer students, insteadit’s turned out to be mostly a subsidy for middle and upper class students’ private school costs.And made a nice living for the folks whose companies dole out the money for the vouchers.

In the last few years, public money for private schools has expanded through what’s called anEmpowerment Scholarship Account. Again, taxpayer money is used by students to attend privateschools, along with a variety of other uses the ESA’s allow.

Our private sector fans want even more, though. In this session alone, there are three bills that

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would continue the expansion of the ESA program, one even allowing individual school districtsto create their own plans.

But just like with the private prisons, our private schools are unaccountable.

And that’s just the biggest of ironies with Republican support for private school vouchers.

These same Republicans tout themselves as fiscal conservatives, public-money penny pinchers,defenders of our tax money. They rightly want public agencies to be under the microscope whenspending our hard-earned money.

But curiously, they don’t have that same fervor when sending millions of dollars off to privateschools.

Of course, private schools can’t be forced to account for that money -- they’re private, after all.We have no clue, though, if we are getting a bang for our taxpayer bucks.

And our Republicans don’t seem to mind.

Nope, these schools get the money with no strings attached, not even academic accountability.

We don’t know how the kids getting the vouchers test in private schools; no state testing isrequired of them.

We don’t know where that money goes when it is sent to private schools; no auditing is requiredof them.

But the Republicans, enamored with privatizing, continue on their merry way.

Which begs the question: Are they that dumb, or do they simply want to dismantle publiceducation in our state?

• Mike McClellan is a Gilbert resident and former English teacher at Dobson High Schoolin Mesa.

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