Okay... so I'm watching "Lockup" on MSNBC, and they are talking about how death row inmates at San Quentin prison can use parts of their bedspring to construct a shank, and use it as a weapon. Now... this brought a question to my mind...
These are prisoners... on death row, mind you. So why the heck can't prisons use inflatable beds? Nobody can make a weapon out of a balloon, and if the inmate were to deflate his bed, he won't have a bed... simple as that. But you can get an inflatable bed for as little as $11.00.
Now, granted, IDK how the whole pricing of prison beds works, but the cost of beds in a single-cell prison that can house 1356 inmates in the Florida Department of Corrections is $29498.00. Compare that to the price of 1356 $11.00 inflatable beds, and you get a figure of $14916.00... that's quite a bit cheaper!
I mean, I'm really surprised at how simple things like this are not considered, to cut down on prison violence, as well as operating costs. Do I have it all wrong, or what? I'm trying to understand this.
These are prisoners... on death row, mind you. So why the heck can't prisons use inflatable beds? Nobody can make a weapon out of a balloon, and if the inmate were to deflate his bed, he won't have a bed... simple as that. But you can get an inflatable bed for as little as $11.00.
Now, granted, IDK how the whole pricing of prison beds works, but the cost of beds in a single-cell prison that can house 1356 inmates in the Florida Department of Corrections is $29498.00. Compare that to the price of 1356 $11.00 inflatable beds, and you get a figure of $14916.00... that's quite a bit cheaper!
I mean, I'm really surprised at how simple things like this are not considered, to cut down on prison violence, as well as operating costs. Do I have it all wrong, or what? I'm trying to understand this.