Baltimore Sun

State takes next steps on $450M treatment center

Facility for certain nonviolent offenders is expected to take around 10 years to complete

- By Phil Davis

Maryland officials moved another step forward with plans for a large new mental illness and substance abuse treatment center for certain nonviolent offenders in Baltimore.

The Department of General Services has issued a request for proposal for a design and constructi­on consultant who would oversee various aspects of the planned Baltimore Treatment and Therapeuti­c Center, which officials say is expected to take around 10 years and cost more than $450 million to complete.

Plans call for the treatment center to be developed on the grounds of the former Baltimore City Detention Center, a stateowned city jail complex that was closed in 2015 after years of complaints about deteriorat­ing conditions and being effectivel­y controlled by the notorious Black Guerrilla Family gang.

The old building has been nearly entirely demolished to make way for the new facility, which Gov. Larry Hogan said he envisions becoming a place where certain defendants charged with nonviolent crimes could go for treatment for substance abuse and mental health issues.

According to a request for proposals posted earlier this month, the site is planned to include 504 in-custody beds, split between male and female detainees.

The consultant would oversee management services throughout the project, according to the RFP.

However, state officials wrote that the consultant would not control the actual design or constructi­on of the site. Part of the scope of work includes assisting with the selection of a design team and aiding in the bidding process once officials begin entertaini­ng bids for constructi­on, according to the request.

The planned center would look to bring more treatment options to detainees facing mental health or addiction issues, something advocates have said the state needs to do a better job addressing.

Throughout the year, the state has struggled

“It’s a new day for correction­s and Baltimore City, as this purpose-built facility is intentiona­lly focused on diversion, deflection, and treatment.” Robert Green, the state secretary of public safety and correction­al services

to meet the demand for inpatient psychiatri­c beds, which has only risen during the pandemic. As of last month, a Department of Health spokesman said that all state-run psychiatri­c facilities were at capacity.

In addition, there have been a number of instances where inmates and others have been charged with smuggling addiction treatment drugs inside prison walls.

In April, the Maryland Attorney General’s Office announced that 13 people were indicted on charges they schemed to smuggle Suboxone, which is used to treat opioid addiction, into the Maryland Correction­al Institutio­n for Women in Anne Arundel County.

One of the defendants was a dietary sergeant at the facility.

Robert Green, the state secretary of public safety and correction­al services, said in a statement that the new facility “encompasse­s the best practices of treatment and programmin­g.”

“It’s a new day for correction­s and Baltimore City, as this purpose-built facility is intentiona­lly focused on diversion, deflection, and treatment,” Green said.

 ?? JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? The former Baltimore City Detention Center has been nearly entirely demolished to make way for the new facility, which Gov. Larry Hogan said he envisions becoming a place where certain defendants charged with nonviolent crimes could go for treatment for substance abuse and mental health issues.
JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN The former Baltimore City Detention Center has been nearly entirely demolished to make way for the new facility, which Gov. Larry Hogan said he envisions becoming a place where certain defendants charged with nonviolent crimes could go for treatment for substance abuse and mental health issues.

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