Florida's Bloated Prison System Will Cost Billions To Maintain
Florida's mandatory minimum sentences created a large, elderly prison population. Now the bill is coming due.

Florida's crumbling prison system and aging prison population will cost the state billions to maintain, according to a newly released report commissioned by the state.
A report presented to Florida state lawmakers on Wednesday by the firm KPMG says that Florida will have to pay somewhere between $6 billion and $12 billion over the next 20 years to keep its troubled Department of Corrections (DOC) afloat.
KPMG presented lawmakers with three different options, from most-expensive to least-expensive, to "modernize," "manage," or "mitigate" its prison system. According to the report, the Florida prison population is projected to swell from nearly 89,000 people to at least 107,000 by 2042. As it stands, KPMG found that 25 DOC facilities were in "poor" condition, and 16 were in "critical" condition.
Regardless of which option legislators choose, the price tag includes over $580 million for new air conditioning systems (75 percent of Florida state prisons do not have air conditioning), $2.2 billion for immediate repairs, and $200 million to $700 million a year to increase staffing. All three of the proposals include building at least one new prison and two new prison hospitals.
"The findings in the report confirm what lawmakers in both parties and Department of Corrections leadership have been saying for years, which is that the state prison system is in crisis and unsustainable," says Greg Newburn, the director of criminal justice at the Niskanen Center, says.
The Florida Legislature is now tasked with solving a problem of its own making. In the 1990s and early 2000s, Florida passed tough mandatory minimum sentencing laws that resulted in thousands of low-level and first-time offenders being sentenced to decades in prison. That prison population is now getting older and much more expensive to care for. Nearly a third of incarcerated people in Florida prisons are 50 or older.
This leads not only to ballooning health care costs but horrific medical neglect. In August, Reason reported on the case of Elmer Williams, a former Florida inmate. Florida prison officials and medical staff allowed Williams' prostate cancer to spread untreated until he was left paralyzed, terminally ill, and afflicted with infected bed sores that rotted to the bone.
At the same time, low pay, high turnover, and chronic understaffing led to a culture of violence, cover-ups, and corruption in prisons across the state. In 2020, the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division released a scathing report finding that Florida's Lowell Correctional Institution, the largest women's prison in the country, subjects incarcerated women to pervasive and frequent sexual assaults, violating their Eighth Amendment rights.
Florida officials have been well aware of the problem for a long time now. "This isn't rocket science," former Republican state Sen. Jeff Brandes told Reason in 2019. "We are a prison system that's overstuffed and under-guarded, and that is a lethal combination of policies."
Brandes and a group of bipartisan lawmakers attempted to pass moderate sentencing reform bills that would give judges more discretion to avoid imposing mandatory minimum sentences, but the Republican-dominated Florida Legislature balked at most of those proposals.
Of course, there are other options to increase bed space besides building new prisons. Newburn suggests improving law enforcement funding and clearance rates, funding evidence-based substance abuse accountability programs, and experimenting with home confinement and electronic monitoring.
The state could also instead expand the use of medical release for offenders who are elderly, infirm, and no longer pose a risk to society. It could restore parole, which it abolished in 1983. It could roll back mandatory minimum sentences and provide retroactive relief for those currently serving sentences.
For example, in 2021, Reason received a letter from Theresa Mathis, an incarcerated Florida grandmother who was serving a 25-year mandatory sentence for a first-time drug offense. The Legislature had rolled back the sentencing law that sent her to prison in 2014, but bills to make those changes retroactive never passed, leaving her and hundreds of others to continue serving sentences that the Legislature acknowledged were a mistake. She died while her letter was in transit.
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Seems like this periodical has a disproportionate amount of stories regarding Florida. Maybe I’m just imagining this.
Florida and Florida Man get a disproportionate amount of stories in lots of periodicals.
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I live in Florida and this is a good use of my tax dollars.
We have the 10, 20 life law for first, second and third gun crimes.
Putting criminals in jail for a long time after repeated crimes is a good idea.
I just don’t understand the blue cities allowing crime to run rampant
I will say that putting a/c in the prisons is a good idea.
The guards work there and should have a workplace without danger of heat stroke.
Florida has a fairly robust and good freedom of information (FOIA or sunshine) law. What this means is that on a slow news day, all reporters need do is contact a police department there for stories. It's easier in Florida than most other states.
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/OnlyInFlorida
"Florida has a fairly robust and good freedom of information (FOIA or sunshine) law."
Unless the governor is running for President and has a Republican majority in both houses. In that case they will pass a law specifically designed to hide how much has been spent on said governor's Presidential campaign by Florida taxpayers.
And that's how the guy who's less shady than the GOP frontrunner acts.
Most publishers devote more attention to trainwrecks than to successful train trips.
Cite?
Every newspaper ever?
If a plane crashes, it dominates the news cycle for days or weeks. Doubly so if most or all of the passengers are killed. Even once it fades, any new discovery can boost it back into the headlines.
OTOH, when was the last time you heard a story about the thousands of flights that arrived safely and more-or-less on time in a given day? Or the fact that only about 1 person in every 20 gets killed even when planes do crash?
As for trains, stories about millions of tons of freight arriving safely every day? Not many headlines. Any major accident? Wall to wall coverage. Even the most minor accident makes at least the local news. The other favorite headline bemoans our scandalous lack of high speed rail and promises how wonderful it would be if only we'd "invest" more.
Well, in that case, Artie, most of their articles should be about California and Illinois, the country's two biggest train wrecks.
Insane... says it all. But go ahead and argue with girl-bullying mystics.
Insane
Yep, that describes your comments to a "T", Hank.
At least Hihn had the good grace to drop dead. Not so with Hank.
No, you're not imagining this. Illinois has a prison system just as bad (if not worse due to budget), yet is getting zero traction here. Then there's the little issue that my state (IL) just killed its one and only school choice program. Yet, nary a peep out of Reason.
Jabba the Pritzker is just so dreamy.
OK, that was funny. If I had been on yesterday I would have voted you the winner.
This publication has a tag for both Florida and Illinois. Going back to the start of October, so about 6 weeks.
4 stories tagged "Illinois."
13 stories tagged "Florida."
To be fair, there's like 18 stories tagged "California," and there's other tags specific to California like "Newsome," "San Francisco," "Los Angeles," and "Misinformation."
I guess so many people get shot in Chicago they got bored of reporting it.
Florida has one of the most open Sunshine laws in the country. It is why their stuff is reported on so heavily...unlike IL, they do not cover up anywhere near as much.
Only until DeSantis drops out of the republican primary.
Is $12 billion enough to keep an old guy in solitary at Mar A Lago?
The money could be better spent executing prominent Marxists.
Whutabout cocaine negroes? LSD attics? The killer weed? The Black Tuna Gang? The God's Own Prohibitionist platform says to prosecute pot laws if it kills every man, woman and child in christian Amerika. BIDEN and JOHN KERRY eagerly supported Reagan, Mitchell, BushBush, Wright, the Army of God, and the rest of the looter Kleptocracy in wrecking the US economy and all of Latin America via asset-forfeiture prohibitionism. With THIS much invested in christianofascist sumptuary legislation, surely we can't turn back NOW!
I really think the nurses should take away your Tiger Beat magazines.
I’ve seriously considered tracking down his relatives to see if they can be pushed into helping put him away in some nursing home for dementia patients. I mean, we know ho he is.
Florida could always try the California plan. It's way cheaper and more fair to just not arrest and prosecute anyone. There may be some side effects, but they are easily hidden if some foreign head of state visits.
Or just send convicts to California.
Florida's crime rate dropped to a 50 year low in 2021. Seems their crime policies are working with fewer and fewer crime victims. As Baretta said " if you don't have the time don't do the crime." Realizes that the purpose of policies on crime is to reduce crime and protect the innocent.
And paying for the cost of keeping these criminals in jail is one of the things honest, honorable people don't mind doing.
Only idiots think it is better to let them roam the streets, just to save money.
Exactly. There are things that most people support and incarceration of serious criminals is one of them. Furthermore there is a cost to society when criminals are allowed to roam free and that cost goes beyond mere money. There are lives lost, people injured and businesses closed. It isn't simply taxes that must be considered.
You're going to have to look long and hard to find anyone who's actually opposed to locking up dangerous violent criminals. The debate is over just how many of the people currently incarcerated actually pose any significant danger to public safety. Some of us also think putting a little more emphasis on rehabilitation instead of merely warehousing people might reduce recidivism, contributing to both lower costs and greater public safety.
Yeah El Salvador’s new prison system has an over 80 percent approval rating. I call it Restorative justice for victims!
In related news, how many people knew that Illinois has thugs in the suburbs running over pregnant women and throwing toddlers out of cars. According to the article (WaPo) the car company is responsible. Seems like Illinois is a real Colombian-Brazil style shit hole.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/a-toddler-was-taken-in-a-carjacking-vw-wanted-150-for-gps-coordinates-lawsuit-says/ar-AA1k4TSZ
That made the news precisely because it's a fluke. Crime in Chicago is depressingly common in certain parts of the city, but most of the city is actually fairly safe.
And yet FL still has a higher violent crime rate than that deep blue hellhole NYC.
State to state comparison
New York violent crime rate 429.3 violent crimes per 100,000 population
Florida violent crime rate 258.9 violent crimes per 100,000 population
https://www.statista.com/statistics/200445/reported-violent-crime-rate-in-the-us-states/
Florida is clearly superior in that regard.
Cheaper alternative to prison: exile under pain of death. Perhaps more libertarian, too.
Two words: Phantom Zone
Yeah, that place is only marginally more secure than Arkham Asylum.
Just exile criminals to other states. Well, that's probably hard to do under the US Constitution; but you can make life miserable for criminals in Florida so that they are "motivated" to move to other states.
You should watch/rewatch Escape From New York. This could be applied to any metropolitan democrat shithole.
Meanwhile back in the real world, the states with the highest violent crime rates trend strongly red. Also, please feel free to drop the horseshit about cities. Crime rates are consistently higher in rural areas.
Not that I actually expect you to let anything as minor as facts get in your way.
Between six and 12 billion over the next 20 years. That equates to worst case 60 million per year in the fastest growing state in the nation (33 on the low end, and we’re talking millions here, not billions). I think we can handle it. Much less than the 100s of billions the Federal government is handing out monthly to the newest needs of foreign governments. Should it be stepped up a notch, sure. But let’s keep our eyes on the real issues.
600 millions by year, not 60.
12000/20 = 600
Florida state budget for FY 2023-2024 is 116.5 billion.
Prison is a legitimate government function.
We can handle it.
True, sorry! Or $300M on the low side, But I’m an idiot.
Even if you think the spending is worth it, there's still tremendous room for debate about how to make the spending most effective. There's considerable evidence that our current hyper-punitive approach isn't the best approach to actually improving public safety. Other countries place more priority on rehabilitation rather than mere punishment, and they typically have lower rates of recidivism and crime overall.
Every effort to implement anything like this in the US is routinely smeared as "soft on crime". So we keep locking up even low level offenders where they can be abused by more violent offenders, not to mention prison staff. When we do turn them loose, they often have limited skills and face extensive barriers to getting a job that will let them earn an honest living. Too many of them end up back in prison not because they actually committed further crimes but just for minor status violations. This continues despite a lack of evidence that any of this is actually making ordinary people any safer.
We need to decide what's more important: punishing people as harshly as possible or promoting public safety. Too many people seem to think the two are synonymous. The evidence suggests otherwise.
So it seems like they could instantly release a third of their prison population without parole, without monitoring, and it would still cost billions them billions. Maybe they just need to bite the bullet and spend more money on prisons; that’s actually a legitimate expenditure for the state, imo.
Random idea: private prisons, but they get to garnish, say, 10% of inmates’ wages/salary post release. So they’re incentivized to educate inmates and help them get job placements on release. Surely someone has come up with this before me.
I’d say that those that served their time don’t need any additional roadblocks to reintegration.
I am a huge advocate for prison reform, but everything about this article is nonsense.
$580 million for new air conditioning systems
This is a waste.
$2.2 billion for immediate repairs
Show me the allocations.
$200 million to $700 million a year to increase staffing
No. That's stupid. We're not talking about yesteryear with the folksy prisons stylized in Shawshank (which, I might add, didn't come with AC). The "more walls, more bars, more guards" mentality is obsolete.
Modernize the prisons, keep the inmates in their cells, keep them under video surveillance, chip them with vital monitors, utilize video communication for visitation and court appearances, build digital libraries accessible within cells - whatever you can implement to minimize the need for (negligence/abuse-prone) staff.
That prison population is now getting older and much more expensive to care for.
Then don't. They don't need cadillac health care. All you have to do is not let them get murdered while they're guests of the State. DNR the suicide attempts and the drug ODs. No extraordinary measures.
For everyone else - rural health care facilities get good at improvising. Learn from them. Their patients' rights aren't being violated because the practice of medicine is frustrated by location, resources, and access, so don't bother with any 8A claims on that line.
If it's truly neglect/abuse by prison staff, yea absolutely there's a problem there. But indifference isn't the same as deliberate indifference. And, again - technology. "So, you got cancer? Tough break. Bet you wish you hadn't committed those crimes right about now, don't you. Well, unfortunately prisons don't keep oncologists on staff. We'll set you up with Teladoc, but otherwise you'll have to do the best you can with the prison doc. Tell your kids not to commit crime - you never know how far reaching the consequences may be!"
Adequate care. Not optimal.
You make it sound like its their choice when it is not. The State has no choice in the matter. The courts (Florida Supreme, Federal Appeals, and USSC) have ruled a certain level of care is required for prisoners just like they ruled about the AC systems. There is a reason there are no longer chain gains, the courts said no. Just like they all require 20-30 years of appeals before you can execute someone on death row. Doesn’t matter whether or not you agree with it, that is what has been decided.
As I said - adequate care. Not optimal care. Again, there's no rights violations nor laws defied because a rural hospital loses power during a storm or washes out a road that affects their ability to meaningfully practice emergency or preventative medicine. They do the best they can with what they've got to work with.
There's no reason to hold prisons to any other standard but the lowest.
I think the true crime here is exactly what is being done to those whom are still human. Actually in a florida prison just this summer was 111 degrees to be exact on several days back to back.Also on a boil water alert so there for inmates were limited on water intake. Crimes will continue and will get worse as the years go on, but taking everything away from inmates to include resources for studies, jobs ect. has become a complete crisis in there for most. Explain how and when rehabilitation happens? How many of them die daily? Is it truly deserved maybe, no , yes? We all say that would never be us but in reality you never know. It's just not a murder, child molester, it's somebody's mother,father,daughter,son who made a bad decision and not only are they serving the time given to them but it complete filth, disrespect and inhuman fashion. What if it was your luck of the draw with your family, you might not be seeing it through your own eyes from in there but through their's. So yes they do deserve air conditioning.
Explain how and when rehabilitation happens?
What makes you think that the point of prison is rehabilitation?
Rehabilitation is a choice. If they choose to go that route, great. If they don’t, they repeat offend and we put them back in prison.
it’s somebody’s mother,father,daughter,son who made a bad decision
Bad decisions usually have bad consequences. Do you think that should not be the case?
and not only are they serving the time given to them but it complete filth, disrespect and inhuman fashion.
Hence my call for modernized prisons. Clean cells, private bathing facilities, access to the minimum adequate health care and nutrition, and use of tech to allow for monitoring, communication, and rehabilitative tools if that’s the path they choose.
And then we leave them in the cell.
So yes they do deserve air conditioning.
There are many Americans - to say nothing of those worldwide - who don't have the privilege of air conditioning. Why should inmates be afforded comforts greater than the rest of society?
Clearly the old guys are Medicaid eligible, handcuff them to beds in real hospitals at Biden's expense and hire a guard for every ten or so to walk around and make sure the democrats are not bring them bolt cutters.
Then there will be enough room for the other bad guys.
I have seen first hand inmates in the FDOC who did not even know where they were. What punishment is prison to an inmate that doesn't even know they are in prison.
Florida's abolishment of the parole system in 1983 has to be one of the dumbest legislative moves ever made followed closely in 1995 by capping gain time at 85%, especially for first time offenders.
The problem with legislators of all parties is, they are willing to do anything to get re-elected now, no matter the consequences later.
If a person doesn’t know where they are when they are in prison they definitely don’t belong on the streets. We can have an argument about mental health resources, and I agree, but I’m glad that a person that committed a crime heinous enough that they were imprisoned is not out on the streets.
It's easy to misunderstand air conditioning. A target heat index of 88 is not comfortable but it prevents the deaths Texas has had. Also worth remembering that the corrections officers are in the same place and have a right to a safe workplace. No reason to cook someone making a living.
These are prisons, not hotels. They don't need air conditioning. And prisons which have air conditioning should have them disabled.
Also, there are other ways of keeping people in jail. Tall, thick, strong walls are one. Also, having a roof would help, so no matter how strong you are, you can't climb out. Then use high security doors. No need for guards. Just put prisoners who committed different crimes in different prisons, so the more violent prisoners don't attack the less violent ones. Only the deserving are beaten up.
...and if DeFascist and his toadies in the legislature had their way, Florida prisons would be packed full of gays, women, drag queens, non-whites... basically anyone who doesn't support the right-wing regime currently in place. The government criticizes countries who jail their political opponents - but Florida is setting it up right now. We must act.
Florida is not on the top in regard to incarceration rate. It's 11th in the nation. Take from that what you will.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._states_and_territories_by_incarceration_and_correctional_supervision_rate