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Quinn stands by decision to close prisons despite crowding

Tamms shuttered; Dwight, Joliet juvenile center in process of being closed

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(MCT) — Gov. Pat Quinn on Monday stood by his decision to close two prisons and several halfway homes, even as overcrowding at remaining facilities has forced the Illinois Department of Corrections to convert gym space into housing for inmates.

The state agency said it plans to use gymnasiums at six more prisons to bunk inmates, a practice already in use in at least one prison.

Only minimum-security inmates will be housed in the “temporary dorm settings,” according to spokeswoman Stacey Solano.

About 100 inmates live in temporary housing, Solano said, and it is unclear how many more will be added. She said the department expects to phase out the temporary housing in the “coming months,” though the agency’s own projections estimate the overall prison population will increase by the end of the year.

The state’s largest public employee union contends that the move puts workers at direct risk because the gymnasiums are not equipped with the necessary safety features to properly house inmates.

“What this means is that prisons that were already overcrowded and dangerous are going to become even more overcrowded and dangerous,” said Henry Bayer, executive director of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Council 31. “It’s unbelievable.”

Bayer said the situation is a direct result of Quinn’s decision to close several corrections facilities, including the only “supermax” prison in Tamms in far southern Illinois.

That prison shut down in January along with a juvenile justice center in Murphysboro in southern Illinois.
The Dwight Correctional Center for women in central Illinois and a juvenile justice center in Joliet are also in the process of being closed.

And three transitional centers for inmates, including one on Chicago’s West Side, closed at the beginning of the year.

Quinn defended the closings Monday, particularly the shutdown of Tamms, saying the prison had “many, many problems.”

“I made the decision to close it,” Quinn said. “And I think Illinois is better off because we did.”

The Democratic governor said he hoped overcrowding would be eased by a revamped good-behavior credit program the administration plans to implement in the coming months. But that’s likely to be tricky, as the governor learned when he suspended good-behavior credit after a botched program saw some prisoners released after just a few weeks behind bars.

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