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Forum: General
Thread (Discussion): Portland jail empty, despite rise in crime
Message 174533
Posted by Navigatr1
on Mar 20, 2006 02:18 PM | Also by Navigatr1
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Country: United States |
Monday, March 20, 2006 - Page updated at 12:00 AM
Portland jail empty, despite rise in crime
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2002876560_portlandjail17m.html
By Tomas Alex Tizon
Los Angeles Times
PORTLAND — It may be one of the prettiest jails ever built.
A long driveway circles past a modern-art sculpture on the front lawn. The main building looks like a manor, with pink stucco and glass tile on the outside. The interior motif leans heavily toward pastels. Vaulted ceilings and open-air corridors suggest the design principles of feng shui.
The Wapato Facility, in the city's northern outskirts, took $59 million and two years to construct. But in the nearly two years since its completion — as Portland has struggled with a crime surge — not a single inmate has set foot in the building.
Multnomah County, in charge of Portland jails, can't afford to open it.
"We held a ceremony, cut the ribbon — then locked the doors," said Sheriff Bernie Giusto, who attended the dedication in summer 2004. "We have a brand-new jail sitting here empty, and I don't have a good answer when the public asks me, 'Why was it built if there was no plan to operate it?'
I thought this was an interesting article since people talk about locking up sex offenders longer. Even though this is a brand new county jail, they can't afford to operate it. During the mean time, the value of the building depreciates. Maybe Oregon can contract out to Florida to house parole violators due to DOC's zero tolerance policy. Or maybe DOC in Multnomah County can develop a zero tolerance policy. Oh yeah, even if they did, the county still doesn't have the money to operate the jail.
I know Wisconsin had a brand new prison that sat empty for a couple of years because they didn't have the money to operate it. Mean while they were paying prisons in other states to house inmates. Now they have the new prison open.
I wonder how long it will take Multnomah County to come up with the money to operate the jail they built?
--Navigatr1
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Thread 174533, Navigatr1, Mar 20, 2006 02:18 PM
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