December 14, 2012

News

OH: Gov Kasich decides against leasing or selling Ohio Turnpike

Gov. John Kasich has dumped a controversial idea of privatizing the Ohio Turnpike as a way to raise money for needed highway and bridge projects. The Republican governor instead unveiled a plan Thursday to generate up to $3 billion by borrowing against future tolls on the 241-mile highway that runs across northern Ohio…. The state might have given up some money by keeping control of the turnpike, Kasich said, but it’s too valuable of an asset to lease. Many elected officials who serve areas along the turnpike, including Summit County Executive Russ Pry, had panned the prospect of privatization. They predicted higher tolls and motorists abandoning the highway to use local roads.  Beacon Journal

WV: Opinion: Privitization is not optimal for government

Privatization of government functions is held as the gold standard of efficiency and economy even though there is little evidence to support this pernicious myth. Indeed as the cost of public services becomes more expensive, one can look at the record of advocates ignoring the corporate overhead and profits and the inefficiencies in corporate America when touting privatization as the answer to all government service problems.  Martinsburg Journal

CA: OC Officials Angry Over Toll Road Audit

Orange County toll road supporters lashed out at environmentalists Wednesday, accusing them of trying to block expansion of Orange County toll roads by convincing state officials to review the health of the projects’ bonds.  VoiceofOC

PA: EDITORIAL: Why the rush to privatize state lotteries?

Privatizing the marketing and management of the lotteries may prove to be a good investment for the states, but there are red flags flapping in the breeze. Lehighvalleylive.com

NH: Discovery center layoffs mark change to privatization

The staff of nine full-time workers and 25 part-timers at the McAuliffe-Shepard Discovery Center have been told they will be laid off at the start of the new year, with a chance for some to return once the facility switches from a state-run attraction to one that is privately funded.…Built 23 years ago as a tribute to Christa McAuliffe, the Concord High School teacher killed when the space shuttle Challenger exploded in 1986, it had received an annual $800,000 payment toward its $1.9 million budget. Concord Monitor

2012 policy report card: Transportation forecast

House Republicans in particular are expected to take another run at privatizing Amtrak, likely as part of the reauthorization – even though they had to pull back from an earlier attempt after a significant backlash. Politico

Eugene Robinson: A cliff and a GOP asleep at wheel

A smart GOP would acknowledge the fact that Americans simply don’t want to privatize everything, which means we need new ideas about how to pay for what we want. San Gabriel Valley Tribune

 

December 13, 2012

News

NJ: Bill would require Legislature approval of lottery privatization

“The proposal to privatize, without public explanation, one of our most profitable and well-run assets is troubling,” said Assembly Budget Chair Vincent Prieto (D-Secaucus), who introduced the legislation, in a statement. “The Christie administration appears ready to forfeit substantial long-term revenue for a one-shot payment that will also hurt small-business owners and risk vital programs for our students, veterans and the disabled. More oversight is clearly needed.”  NJBIZ

CA: Council votes to seek private Convention Center manager

Opposing the privatization were council members Richard Alarcon and Paul Koretz, who wants to see if the new governance structure will bring about positive changes to the center. Los Angeles Times

CA: San Francisco Parks: Supervisor Wants More Transparency

In recent years, there’s been a growing outcry among some San Francisco residents about the expanding number of private events being held in the city’s public parks. Enter Supervisor John Avalos, who is now taking steps to potentially put a curb on this practice. At Tuesday’s Board of Supervisors meeting, Avalos introduced a bill that would require the city’s Recreation and Parks Department to hold a public informational hearing for any event that occupies more than 25 percent of a given park and runs for longer than 48 hours.  Huffington Post

NY: Officials consider privatization of LIPA

State officials examining how to restructure the Long Island Power Authority in the wake of superstorm Sandy are considering options that include selling the local electric grid to a private company and greatly reducing LIPA’s role. Newsday

NH: Prison Privatization Proposal Seems Doomed in New Hampshire

A long-discussed proposal to privatize prisons in New Hampshire appears to be on its last legs due to changes in the state’s political landscape after November’s election.  Correctional News

MT: Guest column: School privatization reduces choice

In recent public policy discussions regarding the use of public funds to pay for private education in Montana, there are critical facts that are lost in the details. Using public funds for private education essentially makes “private” education now “public,” only without the accountability, rights and choices made available to the public when interacting with their existing public schools.  The Bozeman Daily Chronicle

NC: Wake planners seek green light on ‘red route’ study for toll road           

Wake County officials voted Wednesday to ask state legislators to repeal a law that prohibits transportation planners from even studying a potential toll road path through Garner. WRAL.com

How Sandy Might Tweak Today’s High-Speed Rail Privatization Hearing

The hearing continues a series of grillings GOP lawmakers have been giving to Amtrak in a push to reduce the subsidies the national rail network relies on each year. Other witnesses on the docket include a DOT rep, an American Enterprise Institute Scholar and a Morgan Stanley managing director. The 15 word hearing title obscures the topic, so it’s pasted way down below in this post, but rest assured the conversation will cover privatization of high-speed rail along the Northeast Corridor. Transportation Nation

December 12, 2012

News

CA: New UC logo: A sad sign for higher education

The University of California’s rebranding shows the institution as a start-up hub not a place of learning. U.C. recently unveiled their new logo.…But as Bady notes, the intentions behind the image update had little to do with pleasing university students and staff, but rather aimed to appeal to the California governor and big tech corporations for funding by presenting the academic institution as a hub for the area’s start-up scene. “They really are trying to rebrand the university to resemble a flavor-of-the-month startup,” wrote Bady.   Salon.com

CA: Orange County toll roads under review by California

When it opened during the 1990s, Orange County’s $2.4-billion tollway system was touted as an innovative way to build public highways without taxpayer money…. But far fewer people are using the turnpikes than officials predicted, which means the highways generate far less revenue than expected to retire their debts.  There have long been questions about the long-term financial viability of the San Joaquin Hills and Foothill-Eastern corridors. But those concerns have now heightened, and a government oversight panel chaired by state Treasurer Bill Lockyer has launched a formal inquiry into whether the roads can cover mounting interest payments to private investors who purchased tollway bonds. Los Angeles Times

PA: When Foundations Go Bad

Money talks. And sometimes money buys contracts with companies that have an agenda to privatize our public schools. That appears to be the case with Philadelphia’s prominent William Penn Foundation: last week parents in that city accused the venerable foundation of contracting with the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) to develop a plan to close dozens of public schools while opening many more charter schools. They charge the foundation and consulting company with essentially acting as lobbyists to influence policy decisions in the School District of Philadelphia. Here’s why we should care in the rest of Pennsylvania when good foundations go bad. Yinzencation.com

IN: Editorial: Just how good was that Indiana Toll Road deal?

Indiana has gotten a lot of infrastructure work done with the $3.8 billion it got for leasing the Indiana Toll Road to a private concessionaire, so it has to be conceded there were big benefits to the deal. But did those benefits outweigh the costs in lost revenues to Hoosiers? News Sentinel

OH: State Officials Approve $142,000 For Marketing Controversial Ohio Turnpike Privatization Plan

State officials have approved $2.85 million to study a controversial proposal to lease the Ohio Turnpike. Now, Watchdog 10 has discovered that a chunk of that money will be used for marketing. According to a state contract with consultant KMPG, its subcontractor, Columbus-based Fahlgren-Mortine is approved 5 percent of the total contract. That comes to about  $142,500 for marketing. Watchdog 10 attended a meeting the Governor had with reporters to ask the spending is a wise use of tax dollars. A spokeswoman for Gov. John Kasich answered instead. Connie Wehrkamp said that the money is an appropriate use of tax dollars.  10TV.com

OH: PG Giving Out Parking “Tickets” To Try To Kill Parking Privatization

Councilman P.G. Sittenfeld, who gave out bananas to try to get Chiquita to stay in Cincinnati, tomorrow plans a press conference in Clifton to urge residents to contact City Hall and express their displeasure with City Manager Milton Dohoney’s parking proposal. The manager wants to contract the parking system out to a private company for at least $40 million up front plus annual lease payments for 30 years. He used $21 million of the parking money to help fill the $34 million deficit. Sittenfeld, with community leaders, will pass out “tickets” to put on cars that tell drivers how to let City Hall know they don’t like Dohoney’s plan.  Cincinnati.com

Lawmaker calls for suspending privatization of airport screening operations

The top Democrat on the House Homeland Security Committee wants the Obama administration to halt privatization of airport security screening operations until the costs and any benefits can be determined.  Washington Post

When government does things better than private enterprise

The government’s scale and ability to look beyond narrow self-interest make its involvement in many programs the smart choice. Medicare is a prime example.Los Angeles Times

 

December 11, 2012

News

IN: New study says Indiana Toll Road lease bad deal

The Indiana Toll Road lease may have paid off in the short term, but a new study concludes it’s a bad deal for taxpayers in the long run….John Gilmour, a government professor at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Va., says the state took an upfront payment at the cost of millions of dollars in revenue from rising toll rates that would have gone into the state treasury in later years.  Daily Reporter

WI: Wisconsin Study: Report Cards Favor Advantaged, Publics Outperform Charters

A new study by Wisconsin Forward Institute finds that the state report cards reflect the economic advantage and disadvantage of students. Schools that serve the poorest students get lowest grades. Schools that serve the most advantaged students get highest grades. The study also concluded that students in Wisconsin’s public schools out-perform students in Wisconsin charter schools. DianeRavitch

NJ: Questioning privatization of state lottery – editorial

The Christie administration seems to be in a rush to privatize the management of the New Jersey Lottery. We say — not so fast. There are still many unanswered questions and the whole process needs to be more transparent. Why make the switch? As some state lawmakers and lottery experts have said, a state could consider monetizing its lottery if the government wasn’t performing the operation efficiently. But by all accounts, the New Jersey lottery is profitable and well-run. Vineland Daily Journal

OH: Parking Wars: Neighborhoods fight parking privatization plan

Cincinnati’s plan to lease some of its garages, lots and all of its 57-hundred meters is meeting resistance and outright opposition. Detractors of the plan said it could also mean no more free nights and weekends and could affect more than just downtown. Hyde Park Square proprietors are also getting edgy about the move. They said they don’t want jacked-up rates ruining their holiday motto of “Don’t get Malled, Free Valet Parking.” “If these things are so profitable that a private company wants this whole thing, then why aren’t we properly managing these and taking advantage of the profits that are right there?” Rogers said.   WLWT

NE: Video: Privatizing child welfare: Is it working?

Three years into an overhaul of Nebraska’s child welfare system, an agency in charge of privatizing services is urging lawmakers to allow them to continue serving the state’s most vulnerable children.  KETV TV

MI: Detroit Tries To Stave Off State Takeover Of Finances

If the mayor and City Council cannot agree on a plan to reduce the city’s budget deficit, state officials are poised to take away their power and assume total control over Detroit’s finances…. At a recent council meeting, Marine Corps veteran David Malikun-Muqaribu is among an overflow crowd in the hallway outside chambers, shut out from discussions over privatizing 80 percent of Detroit’s water department. “I spent a year in Iraq and I did tours overseas in other theaters, and I’m genuinely blown away to see that I wasted four years of my life to defend democracy only to come back to the city that I’m from to see democracy totally eviscerated,” he says. No matter who ultimately controls the city’s finances, one thing all sides agree on is that massive cuts to Detroit’s programs and services are coming — even if the city eventually files for bankruptcy protection.  NPR

TX: Possible Toll Road for Hunt County

North Texas residents may soon travel between Hunt County and the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex via a new toll road. The Greenville City Council is being asked to back the creation of the private toll road, which would initially stretch from Greenville to Lavon and eventually to the President George Bush Turnpike. The Council is scheduled to consider approving a resolution in support of the project during Tuesday’s regular session, starting at 6 p.m. in the Municipal Building.  KETR

 

 

December 10, 2012

News

WA: Thurston County: Spike in teenagers shoplift booze now available at grocery stores

Since private stores started selling hard liquor in June, more teenagers in Thurston county are shoplifting booze that’s now available at grocery stores.  The Republic

CA: Los Angeles Schools Win Key Court Battle with Charters

Los Angeles school district officials won a key legal battle with charter schools this week, when an appeals court struck down a ruling that could have opened up vast numbers of classrooms for charters, while also creating potential hardships for traditional neighborhood schools.   Governing

PA: Privatizing lottery not a winning proposition, Pa. Dems say

The state s auditor general elect has joined Democratic colleagues in protesting Gov Tom Corbett s effort to put a private company in charge of the Pennsylvania Lottery. NewsWorks

VA: State public-private protocols faulty

Gov. Bob McDonnell has made frequent use of the law, which grants the executive branch broad authority to bypass the legislature when it comes to negotiating public-private partnerships. The results have been uniformly bad, particularly for the residents of Hampton Roads, who will start paying tolls in 2014 to cross the Elizabeth River between Norfolk and Portsmouth. But a recent report on the PPTA, commissioned by the Southern Environmental Law Center and authored by a longtime Virginia policy analyst, underscores its shortcomings, and how its inconsistent and opaque application can provide counterproductive results for taxpayers.   The Virginian-Pilot

FL: State Drops Bid to Privatize Tag Services

Backing away from a possible court fight, the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles announced Friday that it will halt its attempt to bid license tag services to private vendors. Tax collectors — who distribute state tags — and two manufacturing groups tried to block the change by lobbying elected officials and filing legal action against the department.  The Ledger

OH: City, Union Reach Deal Over Parking Privatization

In order to win the support of the largest city employees union for the leasing of Cincinnati’s parking facilities, the city administration has agreed to pay raises and no layoffs for three years. There’s a catch — municipal employees only get the raises and job security if the city’s parking meters, garages and surface lots are leased to a private company for 30 years.   Cincinnati CityBeat

OH: Ohio Awaits Turnpike Study

Many Ohioans are eagerly awaiting the results of a yearlong study on the future of the Ohio Turnpike, but almost everybody, it seems, assumes that the study will call for privatization of the 241-mile-long toll road. The study, which cost the state $3.4 million, is due by the end of the month. Governor John Kasich, a Republican, has raised the idea of privatizing the toll road or rest stops, but he says he will rely on the report before making any final decisions.   Stateline

GA: Price for I-85 toll lanes soars to record high

The cost to use interstate toll roads in metro Atlanta, which has been steadily rising in recent months, has hit a new record. WTVC

TSA screener privatization program needs better guidelines, says GAO

The program that has seen 16 airports around the nation move to private screeners at security checkpoints in lieu of TSA agents needs better guidance and a formal process to measure performance before it is more widely implemented, said a study released by the government’s watdog agency. Government Security News

 

 

December 7, 2012

News

IN: Indiana privatization consultant heads Ohio Turnpike study

According to his resume, KPMG employee Tim Wilschetz was paid to advise the “private consortia” bidding on the Indiana Toll Road in 2005.   The following year the road was leased to foreign investors who, after doubling tolls on the road, are now on track to default on their loans to finance the deal. The project didn’t work out too well for Indiana either.  Plunderbund

PA: Pennsylvania Legislators Oppose Privatizing State Lottery

One state lawmaker maintains that the process of outsourcing lottery management is shrouded in secrecy and could result in the diversion of hundreds of millions of dollars from vital state services.  NACSonline

WV: Fight against toll road helps trucker get elected in West Virginia

Scott Cadle, a professional trucker and small-business owner from Leitart, WV, says his battle against a toll road in his district resonated with voters and helped get him elected to a seat in the West Virginia House of Delegates.   Land Line

FL: Ruling shows how legislative shortcut misused – opinion

Rather than proposing a bill to authorize the health care privatization for the rest of the state for fear that it might meet the same fate as their effort to privatize 30 prisons, persistent and undeterred legislators tried another tactic — to have the Legislative Budget Commission authorize the change for the rest of the state for Corizon Health Caree…Circuit Court Judge John Cooper in Tallahassee said “the attempt of the Legislative Budget Commission to provide funding for this contract is void and ineffective as it violates Article III, Section 19(c)(3) of the Florida Constitution.” The state of Florida plans to appeal this ruling, further eroding adherence to rules and procedures and at an additional cost to taxpayers. So it seems no lessons have been learned. The state should immediately drop any costly plans to appeal and should make the case for this policy change directly to lawmakers through the legislative process.   Hernando Today

Stephen Goldstein: Jeb a moderate? Don’t believe it

By the late 1990’s, Republicans doubled down on extremism but perverted Goldwater’s words into a message he would have disavowed: “extremism in the defense of privatization is no vice” and “moderation in the pursuit of injustice is a virtue. And one of its most ardent advocates was and is Jeb Bush. Elected Florida governor in 1998, he spent his two terms consolidating executive power and turning over government functions to crony, for-profit companies with little or no accountability.  Sun-Sentinel

Hospital privatization plan deferred

Employees of the University Medical Center in Las Vegas held placards and protest signs Wednesday as Clark County commissioners pondered the future of the hospital. The issue is whether to turn UMC into a private hospital as commissioners look for a way to keep the hospital from going bankrupt. A final vote was expected Wednesday, but commissioners decided to seek other options and submit legislation to the state’s capital in Carson City to solve the financial problem. The union opposes the privatization plan. On its website, www.seiunv.org, it says that UMC, the state’s only public hospital, is the community’s only safety net.  Examiner

 

December 6, 2012

News

PA: State’s financial adviser doesn’t hide connection to only bidder for Pennsylvania lottery

A firm hired to advise Gov. Tom Corbett’s administration in its pursuit of privatizing the Pennsylvania Lottery management is no stranger to the company interested in taking over the lottery. The state’s financial adviser, Greenhill & Co., worked on the $576 million sale of the Camelot Group to its present owner, the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan, in 2010. One of Camelot’s companies, Camelot Global Services PA, was the only firm to submit a bid to take over running the state’s $3 billion-plus lottery enterprise for the next 20 to 30 years. Now both Greenhill, which has a financial incentive in its contract if the lottery’s management goes private, and Camelot stand to make millions if Corbett signs the privatization deal.  The Patriot-News

FL: Judge: Florida’s Attempt to Privatize Prison Health Care Violated Law

For the second time in over a year, a state judge has ruled that the Florida Legislature violated the law when it tried to privatize the state’s role in operating prisons. Leon County Circuit Court Judge John Cooper on Tuesday struck down an attempt by the Florida Legislature to privatize prison health care by using a budgetary process instead of making the change through a full vote of lawmakers. Gov. Rick Scott and the Department of Corrections said they will appeal the ruling, warning that the state now faces a $90 million deficit because they had counted saving that much over the next two years by having private contractors provide prison health care.  Governing

NE: Report: Child Welfare Privatization Went Too Fast

A new report says Nebraska’s effort to privatize child welfare services wasn’t necessarily bad — it just went too fast. The report to Nebraska lawmakers says the push to privatize in a three-month period created “an extraordinary level of upheaval” among organizations that worked with the government to help children. The privatization experiment has faced problems since it began in 2009. Four of Nebraska’s five service providers have ended or lost their contracts with the state, citing a lack of funding and an overwhelming number of abused, neglected and troubled children. 1011Now

NJ: Assembly panel to examine lottery privatization proposal this morning

The Christie administration has put out a request looking for a private company to manage the New Jersey Lottery. But Democrats in the Legislature, along with a coalition of small businesses and union members, are questioning the proposal, worried it could reduce revenue to the state and block small businesses from selling tickets.  NorthJersey.com

NH: Privatizing N.H. prisons in for a cooler reception

The Executive Council voted yesterday to continue studying privatizing the state’s prisons, but going private has lost its biggest supporters at the State House. Incoming governor Maggie Hassan opposes putting inmate care in private hands, as does a majority of the next Executive Council. And Democrats, who have taken control of the House, haven’t shared their Republican counterparts’ appetite for privatization. But partial privatization – allowing a private company to build a prison the state would run – may have support in at least the corner office.   Concord Monitor

Charter Schools Under-Enroll Students With Special Needs, New Review Finds

Several recent reports, including one from the U.S. Government Accountability Office, have found that charter schools generally under-enroll special education students when compared to conventional public schools. A new report from the Center on Reinventing Public Education, however, asserts that charter schools’ special education rates are much closer to those of district public schools than is described by these other recent reports.  National Education Policy Center

Editorial: Race to the Bottom

An investigation by The Times found that state and local governments are giving out $80 billion a year in tax breaks and other subsidies in a foolhardy, shortsighted race to attract companies. That money could go a long way to improving education, transportation and other public services that would have a far better shot at promoting real economic growth.  New York Times

 

December 5, 2012

News

FL: Fla. prison medical outsourcing mostly rejected

A judge on Tuesday blocked plans to privatize health care services in three of Florida’s four prison system regions, but the state said it would appeal. Circuit Judge John Cooper ruled that funding for such major policy changes must be approved by the full Legislature rather than a panel of just 14 lawmakers.  San Francisco Chronicle

FL: Federal government has 90 days to decide if Florida can privatize Medicaid

…A “90-day clock” was triggered in late November, meaning the federal government has to make a decision by the end of February on one portion of the managed care proposal pertaining to senior citizens requiring long-term care. The HHS department still hasn’t indicated when it will rule on the wider proposal to move nearly all of Medicaid patients to managed care, the News Service of Florida said. The decision to convert Medicaid to a managed care system was a controversial one. Miami Herald

IL: Will public works decisions be made in private?

They were appointed last summer to be the gatekeepers in Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s program to build public works projects with billions of dollars in private investment…. But as the board moves closer to being asked to sign off on plans to improve the city’s infrastructure with private dollars, questions still remain about how transparent and open to the public those decisions will be. At the crux of the debate is Emanuel’s insistence that the board be a nonprofit organization and not a city agency. The board is applying for federal approval to become what’s known as a 501(c)(3) charitable organization under Internal Revenue Service rules. The ramifications for the public have less to do with federal tax laws than with how the board figures in Emanuel’s selection of private business partners hoping to see a healthy profit on an investment in Chicago government.  Chicago Tribune

MD: Montgomery official wants state to halve ICC tolls

County Councilmember Phil Andrews, a long-time ICC opponent, said in a letter Monday to the MdTA that the 18-mile, all-electronic toll road between Gaithersburg and Interstate 95 has had little effect on relieving congestion on other roads since pening one year ago. An end-to-end ride during rush hour costs $4 for a car. “MdTA foolishly assumed ‘price was no object’ for the general public when it set its toll rates for the ICC,” Andrews wrote. “Many people, whose tax dollars helped [pay] for this road, are unable to afford the tolls or are deterred by the high tolls.” Baltimore Sun

CA: Final tally shows Fresno County privatization ballot measure fails

The effort to fast-track the privatization of public services in Fresno County has failed. Supporters of the privatization initiative, Measure O — including its author, Supervisor Debbie Poochigian — had been holding out hope that the initiative’s narrow defeat on Election Day would be reversed by the thousands of absentee ballots counted since. But the final vote count released Tuesday shows the countywide measure losing 51% to 49%. Tuesday was the state deadline to finalize election results.  Fresno Bee

OpEd: The People’s Beach

By increasing the value of shoreline property and encouraging rampant development, the trend toward privatizing formerly public space has contributed in no small measure to the damage storms like Hurricane Sandy inflict. Tidal lands that soaked up floodwaters were drained and developed. Jetties, bulkheads and sea walls were erected, hastening erosion. And sand dunes — which block rising waters but also profitable ocean views — were bulldozed.   New York Times

December 4, 2012

News

LA: Judge Deals a Setback to Louisiana’s Voucher Program

Judge Timothy Kelley of State District Court ruled that the way in which the state finances its new voucher program violates the state Constitution, as it relies on money intended in “plain and unambiguous” terms solely for public schools. In a statement, Governor Jindal called the decision “wrongheaded and a travesty for parents across Louisiana” and vowed to appeal. But it was not the crippling setback it could have been.  New York Times

CA: California Court of Appeal Shoots Down Traffic Camera Company

The second highest court in California on Thursday issued an order summarily denying a traffic camera company’s attempt to overturn election results from last month. American Traffic Solutions (ATS) was upset when 15,682 voters approved Measure N, requiring city officials to remove red light cameras once it is certified in the next two weeks.  TheNewspaper

TX: Toll roads calling it quits on cash

You won’t find yourself digging around for change in the car much longer.  Starting January 1, 2013, toll ways in Central Texas will no longer accept cash as payment. Cash only lanes will be a thing of the past. For some drivers, not having the option isn’t a welcome change. “It’s just real inconvenient,” says Zach Fletcher,  “I always have change in my car, so it’s real inconvenient for me, so I don’t really like it.” Purchasing a TxTag account isn’t appealing to some drivers. “Now we’ve got to go with the TxTag and the credit card and all that stuff,” says Marvin Massingill. KXAN.com

MS: Hinds Looks at Jail Privatization

After a series of high-profile incidents at Hinds County’s Raymond Detention Center that sometimes bordered on comical, the county will look at the possibility of privatizing some or all of the jail’s operations.  Jackson Free Press

PA: Pa. House Democratic lawmakers blast away at Gov. Tom Corbett’s lottery House Democratic leaders teamed up on Monday to blast Gov. Tom Corbett and his exploration of the idea of outsourcing management of the Pennsylvania Lottery to a foreign corporation. Calling the administration’s pursuit of this potential deal “too secretive,” House DemocraticHouse Democratic Leader Frank Dermody says Gov. Tom Corbett’s consideration of privatizing the Pennsylvania Lottery “stinks.”

PennLive

OH: Budget Hearing Raises Questions About Parking Privatization

Cincinnati City Council members today focused a lot of attention on a contentious plan to lease city parking assets during a Monday committee presentation on the 2013 budget. Cincinnati CityBeat

NE: UHC review committee recommends moving forward with health service privatization

The University Health Center Request For Proposal (RFP) Evaluation Committee has recommended the University of Nebraska-Lincoln go forward with plans for Bryan Health to construct and operate a new health center. “The next step would be for the university to go into negotiations with Bryan Health and iron out the details to see if a contract could be resolved of the negotiations,” said UHC director Dr. James Guest, who was one of the committee members. Daily Nebraskan

T.S.A. Skips a Hearing on Terminating the T.S.A.

The director of the Transportation Security Administration, John S. Pistole, had declined to testify before this particular subcommittee on two previous occasions, despite angry criticism from some members who are longtime agency critics…. On the other hand, the hearing last Thursday seemed to have an agenda, which was that the T.S.A. should be replaced by private security companies — you know, like the ones that were accused of hiring poorly trained, underpaid screeners at airports before Sept. 11 brought a somewhat more intense focus to checkpoint security.  New York Times

 

December 3, 2012

News

NE: Foster care still reeling from privatization

Nebraska’s child welfare system is still suffering from the instability caused by the state’s privatization experiment, according to a report released Friday. Omaha World-Herald

IL: City Hall: Parking-meter firm’s math is off by more than $22 million

The private company in charge of Chicago’s parking-meter system is demanding more money from the city, saying revenue it’s lost from City Hall taking meters out of service and for having to provide free disability parking now comes to $61 million. But Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s administration says the company’s math is way off. City officials claim to have found more than $22 million in errors.  Chicago Sun-Times           

IL: Emanuel close to reviving Midway privatization — with key changes

Facing a Dec. 31 federal deadline, Mayor Rahm Emanuel has all but decided to test the privatization market for Midway Airport, but do it in a way dramatically different from the 99-year, $2.5 billion deal that collapsed for lack of financing. Chicago Sun-Times

OH: Ohio Farm Bureau opposes privatizing turnpike, tax hikes

The state’s largest agricultural group is not supporting the privatization of the Ohio Turnpike… Ohio Farm Bureau delegates representing all 88 counties voted to take the opposition stances during the group’s annual meeting in Columbus this week — a meeting that included an appearance from Kasich, who urged the bureau to support the proposals. Youngstown Vindicator

TX: Toll roads becoming bigger part of Texas highway plans

The state of Texas is relying more on the use of toll roads for its major transportation projects because the state’s transportation financing system lacks the resources to meet Texans’ needs. Bizjournals.com

OH: Higher fees predicted from privatizing city parking

Cincinnati city officials are considering a proposal to lease the city’s parking meters, garages and lots to a private company, but the plan is coming under fire by critics who say it could greatly increase parking prices.  Fox19

PA: Plan to privatize Pa. Lottery still in the works

After months of behind the scenes work, Gov. Tom Corbett’s office is still reviewing one British company’s bid on the Pennsylvania Lottery. Newsworks.org

PA: Sen. Richard Kasunic : More questions on lottery privatization

This lack of competition raises serious issues about the model the Corbett Administration has chosen to solicit privatization proposals and begs the question of whether Camelot’s bid reflects the best deal we can get if we are going to continue down this misguided path. The Tribune-Democrat

MI: Push-back on school privatization

Parents, teachers and school administrators are pushing back, fighting a package of education bills that they say will privatize schools in Michigan. WXYZ

CA: Council moves forward on waste privatization

The Fresno City Council voted to turn the city’s residential solid waste collection over to a private contractor late Thursday. Fresno Business Journal

FL: Judge Expects To Rule Quickly Over Prison Health Care Privatization Dispute

The jobs of about the three-thousand correctional employees’ jobs hang in the balance as a Leon Circuit Judge decides whether the state can privatize its prison health care services. WFSU

VA: Board to vote on rates increases for Dulles Toll Road

The board of the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority is expected to vote to raise fees on the Dulles Toll Road. The toll increases are needed, in part, to fund construction of the Dulles Rail extension, the 23.1-mile project to extend Metro from Falls Church to Tysons, Dulles International Airport and Loudoun County. Washington Post