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News
The Newest Population in Conneaut:
Private Prison
Aired May 18, 2000
The Lake Erie Correctional Institution is only a few
months old, but it will be filled to capacity by this summer. The state's
newest privately run medium security prison is taking great pains to distance
itself from a privately run facility in Youngstown. The legacy of that
prison is making some residents view this one with concern. More from
90.3's Yolanda Perdomo
Yolanda PerdomoIn Conneaut Ohio, near the
Ohio-Pennsylvania border, railroad lines are on the north side of the
prison facility. The complex is separated from the tracks by six strands
of razor wire....on two high fences. Lake Erie Correctional officials
won't describe their alarm systems, citing security reasons. But this
place looks more like an army barracks than a prison. Inside, ivory cement
walls house rows of beige metal bunk beds...with each inmate getting
a trunk to keep his belongings in. A beige secured chain linked fence
keeps more than one hundred at a time confined in these quarters. Captain
Anthony Court is spending opening day at the prison giving tours to state
dignitaries and others.
Captain Anthony Court These are direct pressure
cells in case we get an inmate with tuberculosis, we'll put him in this
cell or another communicable disease that's airborne. Put them in these
cells, the airflow is coming out, goes under and outside.
YPThe state of Ohio spent 39 million dollars
to build the facility. But the Management And Training Corporation is
running the operation. Neil Turner, a deputy warden says the company can
run the prison for 12 percent less than it would cost the state.
Neil TurnerWe are going to employ 269 employees
when we are full. 90% of our employees came from Ashtabula county and
approximately 40% came from the Conneaut area. It's a huge boosting economy.
When you have payroll and operating budget of 19 million dollars. You
put a lot of money in the economy.
YPMany comparisons are being made between
this facility and the private prison in Youngstown, run by another company.
In 1998, the Youngstown prison was the place where two inmates were killed
and six others escaped. Those incidents gave the prison a reputation for
being problematic. In part because of the practice of mixing prisoners
of different security levels. Turner says that the prison population of
the Conneaut facility will be much different.
NTIt's all types of crimes, violent, non-violent...drug
related crimes. Robbery, forgery, anywhere where you are trying to get
money to pay for a drug habit. About 90% of our inmates who are in today
are in because of drug related crimes - not necessarily because they were
caught drug trafficking - but because they were supporting a habit. It
could be anything.
YPBut that includes assault and murder.
Conneaut resident Martin Knowels says the townspeople were told that inmates
committing those types of crimes would not be part of this prison's population.
He doesn't have a problem with the prison per say. But says he was disappointed
that more locals weren't hired to work inside the prison.
Martin KnowelsThey told us when they put
it in here that they would have employees from the city, like your average
people. So far, there's been nothing but people from city hall, like police
officers. But the local people, no. About half way through the town here
they are selling their homes, because they are afraid of the prison. And
because of the sewer they are putting here, it's costing too much money
for the land owners.
YPFor Jim Kennedy, it's not safety...
but financial concerns that upset him when he thinks about the prison.
Kennedy says because of the prison, he's going to be paying close to $3000
in property taxes each year for the foreseeable future.
Jim KennedyThe city itself is trying to
shove the sewer down our throats. We have a city charter that said originally
that we weren't supposed to have to comply to the city of Conneat's wishes
to get a sewer put in. They are giving the free services in there. We
paid for the sewer system over here.
YPThe cost factor is also an issue with
Peter Ray. Ray's with the Ohio Civil Service Employees Association, a
union representing more than 10 thousand medical, administrative, food
service, and correctional workers across the state. He says aside from
possible problems, like that of the Youngstown facility, there's no proof
that private prisons are run better than state institutions.
Peter RayThe private prison industry, although
this version of it has been in existence for about the last 15-20 years,
they have not been able to come up with one independent study, not one
I emphasize, that shows that they do any better of a job than the publicly
operated prisons. We do a great job, and to suggest that somebody on the
outside, who's only way they
are going to make money is by cutting back
on personnel, is an insult.
YPWhile the controversy over how state run
facilities compare with privately run prisons continues...the residents
of Conneaut are bracing for a different kind of population boom. It's
expected that all the 1,380 beds at the Lake Erie Correctional Institution
will be occupied by mid July. In Conneaut, Yolanda Perdomo, 90.3 WCPN® 90.3
FM.
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