Labor & Economy
Fighting Justice Inc.

California voters passed a groundbreaking ballot measure this month that reduces penalties and sentences for nonviolent, “nonserious” crimes. Now, the private industry is responding to these changes in public attitudes and declining prison populations by opening up new lines of business.
A new report released by American Friends Service Committee (AFSC), Grassroots Leadership and the Southern Center for Human Rights, highlights the expansion of the private prison industry into other profitable and growing areas in the criminal justice system: prison and jail subcontracted medical care; forensic mental hospitals and civil commitment centers, as well as “community corrections” programs such as probation and halfway houses.
The report authors have named this new expanded private corrections industry the “treatment industrial complex” via the report.
As other states follow California’s lead and pass laws reducing mandatory minimum sentences, the report urges policy makers, advocates and others to ensure that private corporations can’t profit from any part of the criminal justice system.
Please read and share the report, The Treatment Industrial Complex: How For-Profit Prison Corporations are Undermining Efforts to Treat and Rehabilitate Prisoners for Corporate Gain.

-
Column - State of InequalityJuly 10, 2025
Will Covered California Land on Life Support?
-
Beyond the BorderJuly 8, 2025
With a Jar of Blood as Evidence, Detained Man Tells Immigration Judge ‘I am Dying Little by Little’
-
Latest NewsJuly 8, 2025
When ICE Came Up Empty
-
Latest NewsJuly 9, 2025
Trump’s FEMA Proposals and Feud With Gavin Newsom Could Devastate California’s Disaster Response
-
Latest NewsJuly 11, 2025
Tortured by the Taliban, Locked Up in the U.S.
-
Striking BackJuly 30, 2025
Private Equity in Hospice Care Spurs Workers to Strike
-
Column - State of InequalityJuly 24, 2025
Reform Refill: Has Scott Wiener Convinced Gov. Newsom to Rein in Prescription Middlemen?
-
Striking BackJuly 18, 2025
Ford-Owned Battery Plant Drags Heels on Union Vote