Plan to rebuild Stateville, Logan prisons brings mixed reaction
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[March 19, 2024]
By Greg Bishop | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – There are differing opinions about Illinois Gov.
J.B. Pritzker’s plan to shutter the Logan Correctional Center in Lincoln
and Stateville Correctional Center in Crest Hill in an effort to build
updated facilities.
Pritzker made the announcement last week that he aims to use capital
funds to demolish and rebuild the two facilities at a projected taxpayer
cost of up to $935 million. The governor’s office said the investments
over three to five years will save taxpayers hundreds of millions of
dollars in deferred maintenance costs after years of neglect.
“Long-term, the projects are expected to save the state an average of
$34 million in annual operations savings, over the long term, by
lowering overtime, maintenance, and utility costs on the facilities,” a
statement from the governor’s office said.
Monday, Pritzker said the move is possible because there are fewer
prisoners in the state’s system.
“It’s been decompressed, I would argue, and so there is the ability for
us to move people to other facilities,” Pritzker said. “How that will
take place, obviously there is some complexity to it.”
Prison watchdog group The John Howard Association praised the plan,
saying it’s “long past time that Logan and Stateville be depopulated and
demolished.”
“However, this announcement does not address the fact that the Illinois
prisons are currently well under capacity, with close to 12,000 excess
prison beds throughout the system; we can and should also permanently
close some of our worst prisons,” the group said. “This makes good sense
financially and morally.”
The John Howard Association provided examples of an inmate survey they
conducted describing poor conditions at the two facilities.
The AFSCME union condemned Pritzker’s plan.
“The department did not seek or consider the input of frontline
employees or the union in the development of this plan,” the union said.
“While there is no question that state prisons are in dire need of tens
of millions of dollars of deferred maintenance, the information released
so far raises many more questions than it answers.”
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A screengrab of Google Street View for Stateville Correctional
Center in Lockport, Illinois. Image Capture: Oct. 2022 ©Google 2024
Some of the questions the union raised were about where offenders,
including women, would be relocated.
“Logan is one of only two facilities that house women and the only
facility for medium- and maximum-security female offenders; placing this
population at other facilities that currently house male offenders – or
overcrowding the only other women’s facility – poses logistical and
safety concerns,” the union said.
They also had concerns about potential impacts to prison workers.
Pritzker said the state will keep all prison guards on the job.
“They’ll be working either at Stateville as we’re building the new
facility on that same site, or at another facility where prisoners would
be moving to, and the same with Logan,” Pritzker said.
State Sen. Terri Bryant, R-Murphysboro, said the governor can’t be
trusted that the site closures would be temporary.
“The Governor previously used the line of temporary closures when it
came to both the DuQuion and Dixon Springs Structured Impact Programs in
order to avoid the closure process laid out under the State Facilities
Closure Act,” Bryant said in a statement. “To this day, neither site has
been reopened despite line items within the budget … The Pritzker
Administration doesn’t care about these facilities, their employees or
even their residents. They only care about their own public perception.”
The Illinois Department of Corrections will work with the Capital
Development Board and stakeholders to develop a timeline and next steps,
Pritzker’s office said. Construction will not begin “until all
requirements of the State Facilities Closure Act are met.”
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