Politics & Government

Closing 2 Prisons Will Save Pa. $23 Million Next Year

Pennsylvania will save an estimated $23 million next fiscal year with the closure of two older state prisons and the opening of a new facility.

By Eric Boehm | PA Independent

HARRISBURG – Pennsylvania will save an estimated $23 million next fiscal year with the closure of two older state prisons and the opening of a new facility.

Secretary of Corrections John Wetzel announced Wednesday that state prisons in Cresson, Cambria County, and Greensburg, Westmoreland County, would be shuttered by the end of June. The two facilities will be replaced with a new state prison scheduled to open at Brenner Township in Centre County.

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Staff and inmates at the two prisons targeted for closure will be transferred to the other 25 existing facilities in the state system and to the new prison, Wetzel said. No layoffs are expected.

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This move isn’t just a financial move,” Wetzel said. “It’s also an improvement to the facilities and it’s a safer, more secure operation.

The Cresson facility opened in 1913 and costs an average of $103 per inmate per day to operate.  The Greensburg facility opened in 1969 and costs an average of $110 per inmate per day to operate, the highest per diem cost within the state corrections system.

By comparison, the new prison in Brenner Township will cost an estimated $85 per inmate per day.

The department recently announced 450 fewer inmates during 2012, only the third time in four decades that the system has seen a decline in population.

Wetzel said that decrease figured into the decision to close the two older facilities as the new prison was brought online.

This is a responsible, conservative plan to replace capacity at a time when our population is trending down,” Wetzel said.

Corrections Department staff was meeting on Wednesday morning with heads of the Pennsylvania State Corrections Officers Association, the union representing the 9,500 workers in the state prison system.

Roy Pinto, president of the PSCOA, said in a statement the union was ready to work with the state, but expressed concern that the closures were premature.

“This decision is based on a mammoth assumption that Pennsylvania’s prison population will steadily decline after decades of increases,” he said. “If these prisons are closed, the only thing certain is it will hurt thousands of families and devastate the local economies in those areas.”

There are roughly 2,200 inmates and 800 staff at the two facilities to be closed, while the new prison in Centre County will house about 2,000 inmates and will require about 500 staff.

There are another 700 open positions in the state system, the result of a hiring freeze implemented last year, Wetzel said, enough to reshuffle staff without requiring layoffs.

The closures are the first since the state shuttered SCI Pittsburgh in 2007. That facility was later re-opened in 2009.

The two closed facilities will cost about $5 million annually in maintenance and upkeep.


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