tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8597101.post9034069332213182488..comments2024-03-25T20:06:39.794-05:00Comments on Grits for Breakfast: State paying bond interest on privatized forensic psych facilityGritsforbreakfasthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10152152869466958902noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8597101.post-5991388611754270562012-09-19T21:22:55.294-05:002012-09-19T21:22:55.294-05:00How much money was given to each politician mentio...How much money was given to each politician mentioned in this article by GEO? That is the most important piece of information to determine why this facility was begun. Please follow up.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8597101.post-66369373241961477652012-09-18T09:57:12.938-05:002012-09-18T09:57:12.938-05:00Most people probably don't remember this story...Most people probably don't remember this story in 2009 where a certain claim was made by Tommy Williams. Note the section of the article where Tommy Williams states it is such a great opportunity to buy services without the state having to build. This was obviously not accurate. They need to pay every dollar back.<br /><br /><br />County OKs plans for forensic mental health facility<br />Tuesday, October 27, 2009<br /><br /> Montgomery County awarded a design-build contract for a new forensic mental health facility after the state accepted a proposal to provide $15 million in funding to operate the facility.<br /><br />The secure 100-bed facility, to be located next to the Joe Corley Correction Center on Hilbig Road in Conroe, is designed to serve criminal offenders committed through the courts, including those incompetent to stand trial or those guilty by reason of insanity. It is expected to provide an alternative to the overcrowded Rusk State Hospital for counties in the region.<br /><br />“It is a great opportunity to meet the needs of Montgomery County for forensic patients,” said Precinct 3 Commissioner Ed Chance. “It will bring with it 80 new jobs and these are very high paying jobs.”<br /><br />The Texas Department of Health Services sent a letter to the county accepting its proposal to build and operate a forensic unit in Montgomery County. It is the only county that qualifies for the $15 million appropriation that was a rider to the 2010 state budget. The rider, sponsored by state Senator Tommy Williams, R-The Woodlands, was specifically designed for Montgomery County.<br /><br />“It is a great opportunity for the state to expand its services without having to build anything,” Williams said. “It is a great opportunity for the region to have a state psychiatric facility near by, instead of having deputies transport patients to Rusk, which is generally at capacity, and then they have to go to Vernon, which is almost to the Oklahoma border. The entire region will benefit from this, including Liberty, Harris and Walker counties. It can include everyone over to the Sabine Pass.”<br /><br />The county and the Department of Health Services will negotiate an interlocal agreement to comply with state regulations to operate the facility. As part of the process, the county will have to be certified by the state and the federal Joint Commission on Health Care.<br /><br />Montgomery County plans to hire GEO Cares, Inc, a subsidiary of GEO Group, which is managing the county's Joe Corley Detention Center for federal inmates and detainees from the U.S. Marshall Service and the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency. GEO Cares operates similar mental health facilities in Florida.<br /><br />To build the facility, the county expects to issue certificate of obligation bonds, a limited tax and revenue bonds, in January, said Linda Breazeale, a financial consultant to Montgomery County Commissioners Court. The debt on those bonds will be included in the cost of operating the facility.<br /><br />Alliance Development was selected to build the new facility for up to $32 million, and it must complete the project by March 2011 or face penalties. That is when the state will begin issuing payments of $7.5 million for the first six months of operations.<br /><br />To expedite construction, Alliance already has meet with GEO Cares and provided preliminary plans based on a similar GEO Cares facility in Florida. It also plans to use the same architect from the Florida project for the Montgomery County facility.<br /><br />“We are already ahead of schedule with our plans,” Breazeale said. “We've seen the facility and we think it is very appropriate for our needs.”<br /><br />In case state funding falls through, the Alliance contract includes a termination clause.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11445982606955327203noreply@blogger.com