Mounting evidence shows failure of outsourcing public services
Sarah LazareRINF Alternative News
A new piece in The Atlantic suggests
that in cities and states across the country, more public officials are
expressing “new skepticism” towards the privatization of public goods
and services—a trend that community activists have long criticized.
In her new article, entitled “The Privatization Backlash,”
journalist Molly Ball argues the tide is at least beginning to turn
against the attitude, which has dominated for decades, in which “city
and state governments have seen contracting as a cost-saving panacea.”
Ball suggests this possible political shift
is a result of growing public skepticism towards privatization after its
repeated failure to deliver promised cost-savings or superior services.
What she hints at, but does not credit, are the numerous community
organizing efforts against privatization—from charter schools to private
prisons—that have emerged across the country.
Chicago’s privatization of its parking meters
a few years ago is a prime example of “privatization backlash,” argues
Ball. The deal was pushed through by then-Mayor Richard Daley with no
public hearings and little scrutiny, despite city-wide protests against
the move.
Yet, Ball suggests that some city officials
came to regret a move that not only hurt Chicago workers, but also dealt
a giant financial blow to the city. Ball writes,
An inspector general’s report found that the deal was worth at least $974 million more than the city had gotten for it. Not only would the city never have a chance to recoup that money or reap new meter revenue for three-quarters of a century, clauses buried in the contract required it to reimburse the company for lost meter revenue. The city was billed for allowing construction of new parking garages, for handing out disabled parking placards, for closing the streets for festivals. The current bill stands at $61 million, though Mayor Rahm Emanuel has refused to pay and taken the case to arbitration instead.
Ball writes, “Laws to rein in contractors
have been introduced in 18 states this year, and three—Maryland, Oregon,
and Nebraska—have passed legislation, according to In the Public
Interest, a group that advocates what it calls ‘responsible
contracting.’”
Yet, according to Ball’s own sources, if the
tide is turning, there is still a long way to go. Donald Cohen,
executive director for In the Public Interest, told Ball that out of the
America‘s $6 trillion in annual federal, state, and local government spending, approximately $1 trillion goes to private companies.
Sarah writes for Common Dreams.
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