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Pritzker says prison facilities must be replaced: “This is not an optional issue” (Updated)

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* First, some background…

* Pritzker was asked today about how the process is going

Q: Do you have an update on the plans to rebuild the Stateville and Logan prisons?

Pritzker: I don’t think there’s any update that you’re not aware of. There there will be hearings. That’s part of the process when you’re trying to close down or rebuild these kinds of facilities.

So there will be public input in both of those communities. And then of course, the legislature itself will be weighing in on the investment in those new facilities.

But let me be clear, we have to replace those facilities. I mean, this is not an optional issue. There are lawsuits that have been brought to court in Illinois, decisions that are pending, that would require, likely, the closure or replacement of those facilities.

So we want to get ahead of that and make sure we’re doing the right thing. This should have been done frankly, many years ago, and it’s been put off because of the lack of resources. Now we have the resources to do it. But we shouldn’t have waited even this long. It’s the right thing to do now for the safety of the correctional officers and the safety of the prisoners.

(Thanks to Isabel for the transcript.)

…Adding… Sun-Times

Brian Harrington remembers the water in prison.

Sometimes it was brown, or maybe it had black particles. Sometimes it smelled bad, he said.

“You would wake up, and it smelled like a sewer,” he said.

Harrington was 14 when he was sentenced to 25 years for murder. He served just over half that time before Gov. J.B. Pritzker granted him a rare clemency in 2020.

Now Harrington advocates for more humane treatment and better conditions for those incarcerated in the state prisons.

He’s part of a coalition of groups that Monday petitioned the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, asking that officials there step in and require the Pritzker administration to provide clean water to prisoners.

The petition alleges “chronic and systemic shortcomings” within the state’s departments of corrections, public health and environmental protection.

posted by Rich Miller
Monday, Apr 15, 24 @ 11:48 am

Comments

  1. Thank you Gov for recognizing that demolishing and rebuilding is the best plan of action. I wish others in Illinois could embrace this concept instead of constantly wasting money on old, useless structures.

    Comment by Lurker Monday, Apr 15, 24 @ 12:15 pm

  2. This Governor is an honest Governor who appears to be trying to follow the process. Not sure why that process wasn’t followed two years back in relocating IDOC positions out of Sangamon County into Macon County or Green County IIP or Dixon Springs IIP closures. I guess those locations were small enough to not require hearings.

    Comment by I Love Decatur Monday, Apr 15, 24 @ 12:29 pm

  3. - So there will be public input in both of those communities. -

    I don’t see where he makes a commitment to rebuild in those same communities, am I missing something.

    Comment by Excitable Boy Monday, Apr 15, 24 @ 12:48 pm

  4. == I don’t see where he makes a commitment to rebuild in those same communities, am I missing something.==

    You aren’t missing anything. If he was committed to rebuilding in the same location, there is enough ground already there to build on site. He could skip these hearings and start construction.

    Comment by Southern Dude Monday, Apr 15, 24 @ 1:10 pm

  5. He actually announced that Stateville is being torn down and replaced on the same site. Did you miss the original announcement?

    Comment by bluey Monday, Apr 15, 24 @ 1:16 pm

  6. ==He could skip these hearings==

    I’m pretty sure he can’t. Whether he is rebuilding them in the same place or not he is still “closing” a facility and you have to have a hearing for that.

    Comment by Demoralized Monday, Apr 15, 24 @ 1:26 pm

  7. == I’m pretty sure he can’t. Whether he is rebuilding them in the same place or not he is still “closing” a facility and you have to have a hearing for that.==

    If he was building on grounds at these facilities that is already owned by the State, and there is plenty of ground, there would be no need for the closure.

    Comment by Southern Dude Monday, Apr 15, 24 @ 1:33 pm

  8. “He actually announced”

    I’ve noticed the gov is a master at saying exactly what he should say, and no more.

    What you have quoted, is not what he said.

    In March, he said in his press release *it is anticipated* Stateville will be torn down and rebuilt on the same grounds.

    He did not say it will be. That has not been finalized yet. It may well be finalized in the future, but the sun hasn’t risen on that day yet.

    Comment by TheInvisibleMan Monday, Apr 15, 24 @ 1:36 pm

  9. - Did you miss the original announcement? -

    No, but I did forget about it. Thanks.

    Comment by Excitable Boy Monday, Apr 15, 24 @ 3:01 pm

  10. SHPO might have a thing or two to say about the demolition of these prisons. It will be years before the new prisons are opened.

    Comment by Huh? Monday, Apr 15, 24 @ 4:05 pm

  11. What idiot in the Governor’s office decided to go public with this plan before bringing the unions that all have a stake in this plan to the table to give them the decency of finding out directly instead of by unexpected press release, and it probably would have been a good idea to include at least some of the legislators.

    So far JB is better at being a partner in governoring to private companies than he is to state workers.

    Comment by Candy Dogood Monday, Apr 15, 24 @ 6:16 pm

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