• Billion-dollar supersize prisons are slated to be built across the U.S.

    From demeetreeus@21:1/5 to All on Sun Oct 15 07:44:01 2023
    XPost: alt.prisons, alt.government.employees, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, sac.politics

    Deer Negroes,

    Act like human beings and you will not go to prison. Keep acting like
    niggers and you will be shot dead or thrown into prison. Your choice.

    What’s happening
    Alabama is building a new supersize prison that will cost over $1
    billion – the most expensive incarceration facility in U.S. history.

    The Alabama Corrections Institution Finance Authority late last month
    approved a final price of $1.08 billion for the 4,000-bed prison now
    under construction in Elmore County.

    And Alabama isn’t the only state moving forward with plans for larger,
    pricier prisons, with proponents of such facilities citing the need to
    address issues of overcrowding, poor sanitation conditions and a lack of
    mental health resources in the current facilities.

    Nebraska is building a new $350 million, 1,500-bed prison to replace the Nebraska State Penitentiary. Supporters say it will alleviate the
    overflow of inmates in the state’s prisons, which hold about 50% more
    people than they were designed for.

    “This investment is a key part of our community,” Rob Jeffreys, director
    of the Nebraska Department of Correctional Services, told CBS affiliate
    KOLN. “It [provides the] ability to keep people safe.”

    In Georgia, officials have been tasked by the Fulton County Board of Commissioners to find the funds for a $1.69 billion facility with 4,500
    beds to replace the current Fulton County Jail — known to locals by its address, Rice Street — which many advocates say is beyond repair.

    “It’s an obligation that we have,” Commissioner Bob Ellis told Atlanta
    News First.

    Why there’s debate
    Supporters of the prisons say the new facilities will relieve issues
    that have long plagued jails, making them more susceptible to homicides,
    virus outbreaks and abusive conditions that, in the most extreme
    instances, have prompted the Department of Justice to step in.

    “The new prison facilities being built in Alabama are critically
    important to public safety, to our criminal justice system and to
    Alabama as a whole,” Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey said in a statement.

    However, prison reform advocates say building newer prisons without
    addressing the underlying causes of the problems that plagued the old facilities will only put a temporary Band-Aid on an issue that needs a long-term solution.

    “No experts have said that newer jails will solve our prison crisis,”
    Charlotte Morrison, a senior attorney at the Equal Justice Initiative, a Montgomery, Ala.-based nonprofit that works to end mass incarceration, excessive punishment and racial injustice, told Yahoo News.

    Morrison and other advocates also argue that the lack of meaningful rehabilitation in many prisons is a contributing factor to the overall
    decline of conditions inside. They suggest that other reforms aimed at
    speeding up processing times for inmates and reducing the number of
    people incarcerated for minor infractions could also help ease
    overcrowding.

    “If you have a football team that’s losing year after year, a new
    stadium doesn’t make it better. You need new leadership,” Morrison said.

    Bianca Tylek, executive director of Worth Rises, a nonprofit dedicated
    to dismantling the prison industry, believes “the more beds there are,
    the more people will be put in them.”

    “The issue is not the building,” Tylek told Yahoo News. “It’s the system
    and the system actors in it.”

    Tylek, one of the nation’s foremost experts on the prison industry, adds
    that a lack of transparency from jails on inmate deaths and other
    serious uprisings conflated with a system that disproportionately locks
    up people of color and poor people is reason enough to take a harder
    look at the underlying issues.

    Other critics have balked at Alabama lawmakers’ willingness to spend $1
    billion on a prison when 1 out of 4 children in the state — one of the
    poorest in the country — and 17% of adults there struggle with food
    insecurity.

    “Many in Alabama don’t have access to food, running water, and health
    care,” Alabama Rep. Terri Sewell posted on X, formerly known as Twitter,
    in September.

    “It is unconscionable that state leaders would spend over $1 billion to construct the most expensive super-prison in the nation,” Sewell’s post continued. “This should outrage everyone!”

    Some have also raised questions about who will pay for the prisons in
    Alabama, Nebraska and Georgia, with opponents objecting to making
    taxpayers foot the bill.

    What’s next
    The Alabama prison is expected to be completed in May 2026, according to
    the contract terms. In Nebraska, construction is expected to begin in
    the fall of 2024. The expected opening date for the Georgia prison, once
    plans are approved, is 2029.

    At the same time, plans for additional prison construction projects,
    including a new jail to replace New York City’s notorious Rikers Island,
    are also beginning to take shape.

    Perspectives
    Real prison reform requires comprehensive change

    “Make no mistake about it, the primary purpose of this prison
    construction plan is not to efficiently build prisons that will solve
    the litany of issues that currently plague our prison system. If that
    were the goal, the plan being discussed today would be a hybrid,
    comprehensive plan that involved renovations of current facilities, new construction and upgrades to medical, mental health and job training facilities.” — Josh Moon, Alabama Political Reporter

    New prisons will be better for those living — and working — inside them

    “This is about not just creating a safer environment for the inmates.
    This is about a safer environment for our corrections officers to work
    in.” — State Rep. Rex Reynolds, chairman of the Alabama House General
    Fund Budget Committee, to the Associated Press

    The Alabama project has been “cloaked in secrecy”

    “From the beginning, this project has been cloaked in secrecy. The state
    and the firms it has hired have denied public information requests that
    could reveal what exactly tax money is buying or who is getting paid.
    They have refused to show so much as what this prison would look like,
    citing security issues. ... What seems clear now is that no one ever
    really knew how much this was going to cost.” — Kyle Whitmire, AL.com

    Jailing people in the current facilities is “inhumane”

    “At a certain point, we have an ailing correctional facility in the penitentiary. And it becomes inhumane to incarcerate people in that
    facility.” — Sen. Anna Wishart, a member of the Appropriations
    Committee, to Nebraska Public Media

    New prisons fail to address the real issues

    “Let’s begin with the key question: Why is the jail overcrowded in the
    first place?” — Fulton County Commission Chair Robb Pitts, the Georgia
    Sun

    Meaningful change should focus on rehabilitation

    “Normalizing prison environments with evidence-based programming,
    including cognitive behavioral therapy, education and personal
    development, will help incarcerated individuals lead successful lives in
    the community as family members, employees and community residents.” —
    Christy Visher and John Eason, Brookings

    https://www.yahoo.com/news/billion-dollar-prisons-built-across-us-public- safety-090001432.html

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