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Politics

Scott’s Budget Staff Skips Sen. Mike Fasano’s Prisons Committee

February 14, 2011 - 6:00pm

Budget staffers from Gov. Rick Scotts office were not on speaking terms with Sen. Mike Fasano, R-New Port Richey, on Tuesday, and might not be for some time.

Fasano, who chairs the Subcommittee on Criminal and Civil Justice Appropriations, said he was notified through Senate President Mike Haridopolos office that Scotts budget staffers would not present his budget recommendations before the committee.

Scott budget aide Bonnie Rogers was harshly questioned by Fasano before the committee last week over Scotts recommendation to cut 619 corrections officers from the budget and was scheduled to make another presentation Tuesday. Fasano called it childish.

Ive been a legislator for 17 years and at times I ask some very tough questions. If those tough questions have scared off the governor and his staff from answering those questions, I have great concerns, Fasano said.

Agency heads from various departments will still come before Fasanos committee, and Fasano will still have a chance to question Scotts budget staff from his position on the full Budget Committee.

Still, Fasano isnt pleased that those helping to craft Scotts budget proposals appear to be ducking his questions.

Ive never seen a governor in my history of being a legislator -- and Ive been through Governor Chiles, Governor Bush, Governor Crist and of course now Governor Scott -- Ive never seen where a governor has told his staff not to come before an appropriations committee to present the governors budget, Fasano said.

Sunshine State News' repeated attempts to contact the governor's budget staff were not answered.

Fasanos main problem with Scotts budget for the Department of Corrections is a proposal to add more prisoners to the rolls of the states private prisons, which he says are already maxed out. Meanwhile, state-run facilities have about 10,000 extra beds.

Advocates for private prisons, however, contend that competition among private companies ensures incarceration is done more cheaply than in state-run prisons and that oversight measures like unannounced audits and contract monitoring provide accountability.

If they do a bad job, they arent going to get new jobs and thats sort of a key part of this, Leonard Gilroy, director of government reform for the Reason Foundation, a libertarian think tank, told the Budget Committee.

Where some see market forces ultimately driving savings, however, Fasano simply sees waste.

What the governor is doing is letting those private prisons expand at the expense of the taxpayers, he said.

Reach Gray Rohrer at grohrer@sunshinestatenews.com or at (850) 727-0859.

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