Current:Home > MyAlabama corrections chief discusses prison construction, staffing numbers -AssetPath
Alabama corrections chief discusses prison construction, staffing numbers
View
Date:2025-04-19 00:26:50
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) —
Alabama Corrections Commissioner John Hamm said Tuesday that the state is making progress in increasing prison security staff but will not meet a federal judge’s directive to add 2,000 more officers within a year.
The state’s new $1 billion 4,000-bed prison is scheduled to be completed in 2026, Hamm said, but building a second new prison, as the state had planned, will require additional funding.
The state prison chief gave lawmakers an overview of department operations during legislative budget hearings at the Alabama Statehouse. The Alabama prison system, which faces an ongoing U.S. Department of Justice lawsuit, has come under criticism for high rates of violence, crowding and understaffing.
Hamm said pay raises and new recruiting efforts have helped reverse a downward trend in prison staffing numbers.
The number of full-time security staff for the 20,000-inmate system was 2,102 in January of 2022 but dropped to 1,705 in April of last year. It has risen again to 1,953 in June, according to numbers given to the committee.
“We are certainly proud of how we are coming about on hiring. It’s very difficult,” Hamm said. “We’re doing everything we can to hire correctional officers. If anybody has any suggestions, please let us know.”
U.S. District Judge Myron Thompson ruled in 2017 that mental health care in state prisons is “horrendously inadequate” and ordered the state to add as many as 2,000 correctional officers. Thompson has given the state until July 1, 2025, to increase staff.
Hamm told reporters Tuesday that the state would not meet that target but said he believed the state could demonstrate a good-faith effort to boost staffing levels.
However, lawyers representing inmates wrote in a June court filing that the state has “zero net gain” in correctional officers since Thompson’s 2017 order. “Even with small gains over the past few quarters, ADOC is so far short of officers that it may not regain the level of officers that it had in 2017, and certainly won’t reach full compliance by July 2025,” lawyers for inmates wrote.
Some members of the legislative budget committees on Tuesday expressed frustration over the cost of the state’s new prison.
Hamm said construction of the state’s new prison in Elmore County will be completed in May of 2026. Hamm said the construction cost is about $1.08 billion but rises to $1.25 billion when including furnishings and other expenses to make the facility operational. State officials had originally estimated the prison would cost $623 million.
Alabama lawmakers in 2021 approved a $1.3 billion prison construction plan that tapped $400 million of American Rescue Plan funds to help build two super-size prisons and renovate other facilities. However, that money has mostly been devoured by the cost of the first prison.
State Sen. Greg Albritton, chairman of the Senate general fund, said he wants the state to move forward with building the second 4,000-bed prison in Escambia County. Albritton, who represents the area, said the state has some money set aside and could borrow or allocate additional funds to the project.
“We have the means to make this work,” Albritton said.
State Sen. Chris Elliott said there is a question on whether the design-build approach, in which the state contracted with a single entity to oversee design and construction, has made the project more expensive. He said he wants the state to use a traditional approach for the second prison.
“There’s a limit to how much we can blame on inflation before it gets silly,” Elliott said of the increased cost.
State officials offered the prison construction as a partial solution to the state’s prison crisis by replacing aging facilities where most inmates live in open dormitories instead of cells.
The Justice Department, in a 2019 report, noted that dilapidated conditions were a contributing factor to poor prison conditions. But it emphasized that “new facilities alone will not resolve the contributing factors to the overall unconstitutional condition of ADOC prisons, such as understaffing, culture, management deficiencies, corruption, policies, training, non-existent investigations, violence, illicit drugs, and sexual abuse.”
veryGood! (26)
Related
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Calgary Flames executive Chris Snow dies at 42 after defying ALS odds for years
- Investigators search for pilot of single-engine plane after it crashes into a New Hampshire lake
- AP PHOTOS: Asian Games wrap up their first week in Hangzhou, China
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Nightengale's Notebook: Why the Milwaukee Brewers are my World Series pick
- ‘Toy Story’ meets the NFL: Sunday’s Falcons-Jaguars game to feature alternate presentation for kids
- It's not just FTX's Sam Bankman-Fried. His parents also face legal trouble
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- Last Netflix DVDs being mailed out Friday, marking the end of an era
Ranking
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- In New York City, scuba divers’ passion for the sport becomes a mission to collect undersea litter
- The Taylor Swift-Travis Kelce romance is fake. You know it is. So what? Let's enjoy it.
- AL West title, playoff seeds, saying goodbye: What to watch on MLB's final day of season
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Who is Arthur Engoron? Judge weighing future of Donald Trump empire is Ivy League-educated ex-cabbie
- As Diamondbacks celebrate 'unbelievable' playoff berth, Astros keep eyes on bigger prize
- Roof of a church collapses during a Mass in northern Mexico, trapping about 30 people in the rubble
Recommendation
How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
As if You Can Resist These 21 Nasty Gal Fall Faves Under $50
Calgary Flames executive Chris Snow dies at 42 after defying ALS odds for years
A European body condemns Turkey’s sentencing of an activist for links to 2013 protests
Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
Airbnb guest who rented a room tied up, robbed Georgia homeowner at gunpoint, police say
Few Americans say conservatives can speak freely on college campuses, AP-NORC/UChicago poll shows
Pennsylvania governor’s voter registration change draws Trump’s ire in echo of 2020 election clashes