PA County Seeks To Delay New Jail
In January, a consultant told Lancaster County PA prison officials it would cost $169 million to build a new prison. Next week, the same consultant will discuss the financial wisdom of abandoning the current prison entirely if a new prison is built. Yet officials say that when it comes to dealing with the county’s prison overcrowding problem, they’ll be passing out thinking caps long before they break out any shovels. Reported by LancasterOnline.
At next Thursday’s prison board meeting, L. Robert Kimball & Associates will outline for the board how much cheaper it would be to operate one big, new prison than to run the current prison and a scaled-down prison to be built somewhere else. A January report prepared Kimball detailed the shortcomings of the circa-1851 prison at 625 E. King St., which has a design capacity for 658 beds, but today is home to 1,143 prisoners. That report discussed the projected need in 2025 for 2,114 prison beds, then laid out several scenarios to build a new prison. The most ambitious plan was for a new, 2,158-bed facility that would cost $169.42 million to build, an amount roughly equal to the cost of the downtown hotel/convention center. Yet most prison board members say the are now focused on how to save money, not how to spend it on a new prison …
“We’re just not going to build ourselves out of this problem right now when there’s other things we could be doing before we get to that point,” said County Commissioner Scott Martin. Martin, who chairs the seven-member prison board, said streamlining some court operations and setting up a day-reporting center are among the options that would free up space at the East King Street prison, delaying the need for a new jail …
Among the improvements, [District Attorney Craig] Stedman said, would be to streamline the court’s scheduling system to get people to trial quicker, thereby cutting down on the number of prisoners who are waiting for a trial date. In 2006, the Kimball report said the average stay in the county prison was 71 days, while adding that every day knocked off that average could reduce the daily prison population by 16 prisoners. And since about 80 percent of prisoners in the county prison that year were awaiting trial, getting them through the court system quicker could free up a lot of space …
Commissioner Craig Lehman also highlighted the benefits of a day reporting center, which could be set up apart from the prison and include drug testing and job training services. With such a center here, probation officers could send violators there instead of simply adding them to an already overcrowded prison, local officials say.
Court Delays, Drug Treatment & Diversion, Economic Issues, Jail and Prison Construction, Overcrowding, PA Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, Pre-Trial
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