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News (Media Awareness Project) - US WA: Shortage Of Corrections Officers Ends Jail-Space Deal
Title:US WA: Shortage Of Corrections Officers Ends Jail-Space Deal
Published On:2007-05-22
Source:Seattle Times (WA)
Fetched On:2008-01-12 05:39:40
SHORTAGE OF CORRECTIONS OFFICERS ENDS JAIL-SPACE DEAL

A plan to reopen a corrections facility near Arlington to free up
space for state parole violators in the Snohomish County Jail was
dropped Monday after officials could hire only one of the 35 officers
needed to staff the new facility.

The decision comes three months after the Department of Corrections
(DOC) faced severe criticism from state lawmakers and Gov. Christine
Gregoire for releasing parole violators from county jails because of
overcrowding. In February, the DOC released more than 80 inmates from
two King County jails and the Snohomish County Jail because the
agency had exceeded its allotted capacity at the facilities.

In response, Gregoire scolded the agency and forbade them from
releasing parole violators because of overcrowding.

Gary Larson, a DOC spokesman, said top DOC administrators will meet
this week to consider other parole violator housing options.

Under an agreement between Snohomish County and the DOC, "The Ridge"
- -- formerly known as Indian Ridge Corrections Center -- was going to
reopen this summer and house nearly 180 minimum-security inmates from
the county jail in Everett. This would free up space for DOC
community corrections, or parole, violators at the county jail.

The Ridge closed in 2005 when Snohomish County opened a new jail.

But on Monday, Snohomish County officials announced that the facility
won't reopen because they couldn't find enough people to staff it.

"The state Department of Corrections gave us about 250 names [from a
job bank]," Snohomish County Corrections Director Steve Thompson
said. "We were able to hire only one."

The county needed about 35 officers to run The Ridge. Thompson said
nearly 60 names provided by DOC didn't have contact information. The
remainder were personally contacted either by telephone or e-mail and
invited to a job fair to begin the application process.

He said only a handful of potential corrections officers showed up.

By not reopening the jail, Snohomish County will lose out on about $1
million in potential revenues from a contract with the state. Larson
said the entire state is struggling to fill law-enforcement jobs.

Law-enforcement agencies cite a strong economy filled with
high-paying jobs and potential candidates fighting the war in Iraq as
reasons they are struggling to find new officers.

Larson said losing The Ridge has created a large problem for DOC's
strategy for housing inmates.

"We were looking at this as a longer-term potential solution to the
problem of finding adequate space for community custody violators,"
Larson said.

Since February, the agency has been freeing up space in prisons for
such inmates. About 27,200 people are on community corrections
release in the state. Offenders who violate the terms of their prison
release can face punishment varying from increased reporting and
mandatory drug treatment to 60 days in jail.

Hundreds of inmates sentenced to long-term prison time have been
shipped to out-of-state facilities to make room. The DOC is
contracting with the Yakima County Jail and is looking to increase
its allotted bed space there for parole violators.
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