Georgia governor seeks to spend hundreds of millions more on prisons
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[January 08, 2025]
By JEFF AMY
ATLANTA (AP) — Gov. Brian Kemp is proposing a big burst of new spending
on Georgia’s prisons, including planning another new correctional
facility and launching an extensive renovation program.
Legislators are seeking solutions to a wide range of problems plaguing
prisons that have sparked a federal investigation. Among them: a sharp
increase in prisoner deaths; high rates of employee turnover and arrests
for criminal activity; and a persistent problem with contraband
cellphones and drugs.
Corrections Commissioner Tyrone Oliver on Tuesday unveiled a plan to
amend the current year’s budget to spend $458 million before the end of
June, and to increase spending in the year beginning July 1 by another
$145 million.
“Public safety is the number one priority of state government, and that
is why we have taken a comprehensive and deliberate approach to
strengthening law enforcement and improving our corrections system,"
Kemp said in a statement.
The meeting itself was unusual, with Oliver making budget requests
before lawmakers are sworn in for the new two-year term on Monday and
before the Republican Kemp presents the rest of his budget later next
week.
House Appropriations Committee Chairman Matt Hatchett, a Dublin
Republican, repeatedly expressed impatience, calling on Oliver to speed
work and saying Kemp’s decision to outline his budget now showed how
seriously lawmakers are taking the problem.
“It is out of the ordinary, and I think it shows the emphasis that he
and us, collectively, are putting on this issue,” Hatchett said.
It’s part of a burst of spending on prisons across the South as
conservatives focus on securely housing prisoners and back away from
efforts to release more of them. In Georgia, that’s in part because many
nonviolent offenders are no longer in prison. Oliver told lawmakers that
three-quarters of the system’s 50,000 inmates were convicted of violent
crimes.
Alabama is building a $1.1 billion, 4,000-bed prison just north of
Montgomery whose price tag has soared. Arkansas has set aside more than
$400 million f or a new 3,000-bed prison, although the state hasn’t
given an estimate of total cost or said when work will begin on it. And
last year, Louisiana earmarked at least $100 million to upgrade
facilities, including space to separate 17-year-olds charged as adults
from older prisoners.
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Prisoners stand while being processed for intake at the Georgia
Diagnostic and Classification Prison in Jackson, Ga, Dec. 1, 2015.
(AP Photo/David Goldman, File)
Georgia is already building a 3,000-bed prison near Davisboro in
Washington County. The spending plan calls for another $47 million
to furnish that prison, atop the $451 million that lawmakers
approved last year to build the structure, which would house
offenders one to a cell. Oliver told lawmakers that the department
wants another $40 million to start planning another prison, which
Oliver indicated would likely have about 1,500 single-bed cells.
Much of the money would be one-time expenditures made out of
Georgia’s billions in surplus cash, but those one-time expenditures
would be stretched out over years. Some items, including hiring
additional prison guards and paying them more, would become
permanent parts of the state budget.
Oliver said prisons need 2,600 more employees to be fully staffed.
He proposes hiring 882 more officers to fill part of the gap, or
about 110 every three months, saying “Trying to hire 2,600 people in
a fiscal year is just not possible.”
Oliver said the department has increased the number of prison guards
for three years in a row after seeing employment numbers plummet
during the pandemic, but also proposed a 4% pay raise, saying
further boosts in salary are needed.
One big focus is renovating current prisons, particularly to install
new locks and control systems, but Oliver says Georgia must first
empty out some current prison beds so crews can work unimpeded.
“The goal of this project is to do half a facility and actually do
half the buildings at a time," Oliver said. "What’s taking so long
right now is we can do only one building at a time.”
He wants to contract for 446 additional private prison beds as well
as buy four 126-bed modular prison facilities. Some lawmakers
questioned the $93 million purchase of the modular prisons,
suggesting the state should rent more private prison space instead.
Oliver also proposed a $50 million plan to combat cell phones inside
prisons and drones dropping drugs, phones and other contraband from
the outside.
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