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Prison conditions and corrections budget draw sustained public testimony as committee previews $7.9 billion proposal

Appropriations Committee on Criminal and Civil Justice · February 18, 2026

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Summary

The committee noted a $7.9 billion criminal and civil justice budget and accepted extensive public testimony urging investments in infrastructure, air‑conditioning pilots, staffing and transparency rather than only raising starting pay for correctional officers.

Chair Garcia returned the committee to the criminal and civil justice budget, which she said totals $7,900,000,000, and opened the floor to public testimony on the proposal. Several witnesses urged the committee to prioritize infrastructure and humane conditions in correctional facilities, arguing that pay increases alone will not solve safety problems if buildings lack heat, water or working kitchens.

Amy McCord, a long‑time union steward, urged investment in training, humane working conditions and facility repairs before raising starting pay to $28 an hour for entry‑level correctional staff. Laurette Phillips and Barbara Lobello described broken infrastructure, inadequate medical care and what Lobello called a lower‑cost alternative of smart release for infirm and elderly inmates with low recidivism. Connie Edson urged an air‑conditioning pilot aimed at sleeping dorms and program areas, saying targeted units could be an energy‑efficient stopgap; she cited a pending lawsuit and prior heat‑related deaths at a Miami facility.

Chair Garcia said she would present and summarize the budget later in the full appropriations committee and on the floor and that the committee would prioritize public testimony today; she also listed a large set of waived appearance forms and committed to revisit temporarily postponed bills so speakers would have an opportunity to be heard. Senator Smith thanked the chair for facilitating public testimony. The committee adjourned at the end of the session.