Is Lowndes County in such bad shape that we, too, want a private prison,
no matter that there’s no business case for it?
Or should we learn from one bad business bet and not double down on another?
Susan Kinzie wrote in the Washington Post 30 May 2011,
New Virginia prison sits empty, at a cost of more than $700,000 a year
This is how bad the economy is in southwestern Virginia: People are
wishing they had more criminals in town.
That’s because Grayson County has a brand-new state prison standing
empty. No prisoners. And that means no guards, no administrators, no
staff, no jobs.
“I wish they would go ahead and open it up,” said Rhonda James of
Mouth of Wilson, echoing many residents there. “We really need it in
the county really bad.”
Three hundred new jobs — maybe 350 — that’s what people were told
when the prison was planned. With about 11 percent unemployment and no
relief in sight, that sounded really good to an awful lot of people here.
But months after the commonwealth finished building the 1,024-bed
medium-security prison for $105 million, it remains empty, coils of razor
wire and red roofs shining in the sun, new parking lot all but deserted
and a yawning warehouse waiting for supplies.
And it’s costing more than $700,000 a year to maintain.
Meanwhile, the story continued, Virginia has closed 10 prisons
due to budget shortfalls and lack of prisoners.
And it’s not just Virginia:
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