Paradise Post

Rural town sues to keep a prison open; judge rules Newsom can close it

- By Hailey Branson-Potts

The California Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion may immediatel­y resume shutting down a prison in Northern California, a judge ruled this week, dismissing a lawsuit by a rural town that sought to stop the closure.

The state was supposed to close the California Correction­al Center in Susanville by this June.

But it has remained open because the town — where local officials say they face economic devastatio­n if they lose more than 1,000 prison jobs — sued the state last year, and a Lassen County judge issued a preliminar­y injunction halting the closure while the case moved through the court.

In a ruling issued Wednesday in Lassen County Superior Court, Visiting Judge Robert F. Moody dissolved the injunction.

“The legislatur­e and the CDCR both have had and have expressed policy reasons for closing prisons: there is a paucity of inmates, and the population of inmates is in continuous decline and the resultant reductions in required staff and physical plant make it fiscally imprudent to continue to maintain all or our expensive prisons,” Moody wrote.

“The wisdom of such legislativ­e or political policies are not and have never been the province of the courts.”

The state announced the prison’s closure in April 2021, causing widespread panic in long- shrinking Susanville, the only incorporat­ed city in Lassen County.

More than 45% of employment in Susanville is

at the California Correction­al Center and the adjacent High Desert State Prison, local officials told The Times.

In its lawsuit, Susanville argued that when the state announced the prison’s closure, it violated the California Environmen­tal Quality Act because it had not conducted the proper reviews of the shutdown’s impact on the town. The state began the environmen­tal impact review process in January.

But tucked into this year’s budget — which Gov. Gavin Newsom signed June 30 — was a trailer bill that says California law exempts the closure of state prisons and juvenile facilities from review under the state’s environmen­tal law.

The bill says the California Correction­al Center must close by June 30, 2023.

In his ruling, Moody said that while the trailer bill was legal, it was the kind of legislativ­e maneuver that has “an unpleasant odor about them, to be sure.”

“And ultimately,” he wrote, “the question of the public’s satisfacti­on or lack of it as to all these matters is electoral, not judicial.”

In a statement Thursday, Susanville City Administra­tor Dan Newton said the City Council will be briefed by the city attorney and will hold a special meeting as early as Monday to determine the next steps.

“The city’s primary concern is for CCC employees and their families,” Newton said.

Moody’s decision was celebrated by those who say closing the 59-year- old California Correction­al Center — which needs millions of dollars in repairs — is the morally and fiscally responsibl­e thing to do.

“Throughout this entire litigation, the prisoners inside CCC have been treated either as revenue or as irrelevant,” Shakeer Rahman, a Los Angeles-based attorney who filed an amicus brief signed by about 100 men incarcerat­ed at the prison, said in a statement.

Advocates “see the decision in this case as a decisive victory,” the statement said.

In the amicus brief filed this summer in support of the closure, the incarcerat­ed men said the prison is crumbling.

Rain water pours through the ceilings, they wrote, and some prisoners resorted to using soap to seal leaks in their cells. Toilets, they said, don’t flush and are filled with green algae.

And when the Dixie Fire — the second-largest wildfire in California history — burned last summer a few miles outside town, the men were not moved from the facility, even as electricit­y and water were shut off, smoke filled their cells, and they had to cover their faces with wet towels to breathe, they wrote.

Moody declined to consider the amicus brief.

As California’s incarcerat­ed population declines, other prisons will be considered for closure, state officials have said.

The Deuel Vocational Institutio­n in the San Joaquin Valley city of Tracy closed last September. In this year’s budget, the Newsom administra­tion said it was “committed to right-sizing California’s prison system to reflect the needs of the state” and could close three more prisons, in addition to the California Correction­al Center, by 2025.

Brian Kaneda, deputy director of California­ns United for a Responsibl­e Budget, a coalition of groups dedicated to reducing incarcerat­ion in the state, said in a statement that “Newsom has shown a lot of leadership, but now more than ever the state needs a concrete plan to close prisons included in the January 2023-24 proposed budget.”

“Decisions about which prisons to close next need to happen soon,” he said.

 ?? CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTION­S AND REHABILITA­TION ?? The California Correction­al Center and adjoining High Desert State Prison in Susanville.
CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTION­S AND REHABILITA­TION The California Correction­al Center and adjoining High Desert State Prison in Susanville.

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