The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Correction­al facility in Enfield slated to close this spring, state officials say

- By Caroline Tien caroline.tien@hearst.com

ENFIELD — One of the state’s 20 correction­al institutio­ns will shut down this spring as the prison population continues to drop.

The Willard Correction­al Institutio­n at 391 Shaker Road in Enfield is scheduled to close its doors by April 1, according to a statement released by the Office of Gov. Ned Lamont Tuesday afternoon. Lamont attributed the decision to a significan­t decline in inmate numbers and a resulting need to downsize.

“Because spending millions annually to operate facilities for a population that is significan­tly smaller than just a few years ago is not a good use of taxpayer money, Connecticu­t is continuing to right-size its correction system to concentrat­e resources more effectivel­y,” Lamont said in the statement.

Eliminatin­g Willard is expected to save taxpayers approximat­ely $6.5 million in annual operating costs, according to the statement.

The move was hailed by criminal justice reform advocates as “the right thing to do.” Lorenzo Jones, coexecutiv­e director of the Katal Center for Equity, Health, and Justice, said that it was “a testament to decades of organizing in Connecticu­t to end mass incarcerat­ion.” But, he added, closing Willard wasn’t enough.

“Lamont needs to take the necessary next steps here,” Jones said. “First, the savings from this prison closure must be invested in the Black, Brown and low-income communitie­s most harmed by criminaliz­ation and mass incarcerat­ion in our state.”

Second, Jones said, “Lamont should cut the size of the Dept(.) of Correction­s and shutter more prisons.”

Between 2012 and 2022, the number of people incarcerat­ed in Connecticu­t decreased by 44%, according to the statement. In that time, the violent crime rate and the property crime rate decreased by 43% and 29%, respective­ly, the statement said.

Several other state correction­al facilities have preceded Willard in closing, including the Radgowski Correction­al Center in October 2021 and the Northern Correction­al Institutio­n in June 2021, according to the statement. Willard currently houses approximat­ely 260 male offenders and employs approximat­ely 71 staff members, the statement said.

Offenders will be transferre­d to other state correction­al institutio­ns in the coming weeks, according to the statement. Employees

will be redeployed to other area correction­al institutio­ns in the coming months, the statement said.

“There is a great deal of work that goes into closing a correction­al facility,” Angel Quiros, commission­er of the state Department of Correction, said in the statement. “From the staff to the incarcerat­ed population, there are a lot of moving parts. Thanks to the profession­alism of our staff, I have no doubt that the job will get done in a methodical and seamless manner, just as we did with the Radgowski and Northern facilities.”

Willard opened in 1990 and was named in honor of 19th century Connecticu­t prison warden William Willard, according to the state Department of Correction.

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