The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Pa. governor to follow through on plan to close state prison

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HARRISBURG >> Gov. Tom Wolf said Friday that he will follow through on his plan to close another state prison, announced originally in August as a cost-cutting step amid a declining inmate population and rising prison costs.

Wolf’s administra­tion carried out the required hearings on its plan, which was criticized by the correction­s’ officers union and state lawmakers whose districts surround Retreat state prison in northeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia.

Retreat, about 10 miles west of Wilkes-Barre, has about 400 employees and about 940 inmates. Closing could occur in four months at an annual savings of $40 million, the administra­tion said.

Employees will be offered jobs at another state prison within 65 miles of Retreat, it said.

Retreat was particular­ly vulnerable to closing: Its original buildings date back to the 19th century and it has the fewest beds of any of Pennsylvan­ia’s 25 state prisons. The Department of Correction­s lists its bed capacity at 97% as of Dec. 31, although it also lists 10 state prisons as having more inmates than their operationa­l bed capacities.

Wolf’s administra­tion said last year that it needed to close a $140 million deficit in the prisons budget. Pennsylvan­ia’s prisons cost $2 billion to operate, a cost that rises almost every year in a $34 billion state government operating budget.

Pennsylvan­ia’s state prison population is about 46,000, not including those in halfway houses, after it reached nearly 52,000 in 2012. Wolf’s administra­tion also closed a state prison in Pittsburgh in 2017.

The Department of Correction­s has said the inmate count is dropping because courts are sentencing fewer defendants to prison and because a 2012 law put limits on the length of a prison stay for a parole violator.

“From the first day that I recall meeting Hank he was always so kind and had a story that would connect to anything and everything possible about Norristown. I have memories of growing up in Norristown. He was the Ambassador of Norristown and he always will be the Ambassador. He was always so welcoming. He had an amazing life and had such wonderful stories. We were just so blessed to have known him and for him to be part of our lives.”

“You see what Rock meant to so many people by the turnout today, people who know what a loving and gentle man he was.” — Steve Carcarey

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