Judge orders prison officials to relocate Stateville population by Sept.
30
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[August 13, 2024]
By HANNAH MEISEL
Capitol News Illinois
hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com
A federal judge is ordering Gov. JB Pritzker’s administration to move
the vast majority of those incarcerated at Stateville Correctional
Center near Joliet out of the aging prison by the end of September,
citing health and safety concerns posed by the facility.
The Illinois Department of Corrections had previously stated its
intention to close Stateville as early as September as part of a larger
plan to rebuild it along with another prison. U.S. District Judge Andrea
Wood’s edict puts a Sept. 30 deadline on those efforts.
The judge’s order, filed Friday, is the latest in an 11-year-old legal
battle over dirty and dangerous conditions at Stateville. While
settlement talks have been ongoing since 2015, Pritzker in March
announced a plan to rebuild Stateville, along with closing and
rebuilding Logan Correctional Center in Lincoln. The decision was
sparked by a state-commissioned report published last year identified
them – along with Pontiac Correctional Center – as nearly “inoperable.”
But in June, 51-year-old Michael Broadway died inside Stateville on a
day inmates “reported excessive heat and poor ventilation,” according to
attorneys representing those incarcerated in the nearly 100-year-old
prison. And late last month, those attorneys filed a motion asking Wood
to intervene in the efforts to move the inmates.
“Right now, there’s over 420 residents at Stateville who are at risk of
dire injury due to the structural vulnerabilities, degradation and
deterioration of those buildings that put them at risk of serious
physical injury or even death,” attorney Heather Lewis Donnell of
Chicago-based firm Loevy & Loevy said at a news conference announcing
the motion last month.
“We also know that every condition at Stateville – the water, the
excessive temperatures, heat and cold, the vermin, the birds – are all
exacerbated and compounded when the structure is not secure and when it
is vulnerable,” she added
In her order Friday, Wood agreed to the motion and noted that IDOC
officials “do not dispute that those who are incarcerated at Stateville
face a risk of harm from falling concrete as a result of the
deteriorated masonry walls, ceilings, steel beams, and window lintels”
in the prison’s general housing units.
Those conditions, she wrote in her order, “will remain unrepaired for
the foreseeable future because the State has determined that its
resources would be better spent on building a new facility rather than
attempting to repair Stateville’s outdated facilities.” The order does
not apply to the roughly two-dozen residents of the facility’s medical
ward.
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The grounds of the Stateville Correctional Center in Crest Hill,
near Joliet. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Andrew Campbell)
The state budget for the fiscal year that began July 1 included $900
million for the plan to close and rebuild Stateville and Logan.
In an emailed statement, IDOC spokesperson Naomi Puzzello reiterated
that prison officials would not begin to wind down operations at
Stateville until at least mid-September. Though IDOC has not yet
provided details on the plan to transfer the roughly 550 men currently
incarcerated at Stateville, Puzzello noted the department’s “anticipated
timeline for transfers is in line with the order issued by the court.”
Pritzker’s plans to demolish and rebuild Stateville and Logan are hotly
contested by AFSCME Council 31, the state’s largest public employee
union, which represents most prison workers in Illinois. In a series of
public hearings on the proposed closures this spring, AFSCME members and
community leaders objected to IDOC’s blueprint – particularly balking at
the lack of details in the administration’s plans.
After a state oversight panel skipped an advisory vote on the prison
closure plans in June, Pritzker indicated more specific plans would be
made public in the future, though that still hasn’t happened.
It’s still unknown whether Logan Correctional Center will be rebuilt on
its current grounds in Lincoln, between Springfield and
Bloomington-Normal – or if, as the governor has floated, it will
ultimately move 141 miles northeast to Stateville’s campus in Crest Hill
near Joliet.
Either way, IDOC officials say Logan will remain open as long as
possible during the roughly three years it will take to rebuild the
facility, no matter where that may be.
But any efforts on AFSCME’s part to slow to Stateville’s closure are now
weakened by the judge’s order with just seven weeks until Sept. 30.
Still, the union indicated it wasn’t done fighting the plan.
“The closure of Stateville would cause immense disruption to the state
prison system, its employees, individuals in custody and their
families,” AFSCME Council 31 said in a statement. “We are examining all
options to prevent that disruption in response to this precipitous
ruling."
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It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert
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