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Democrats join call to drop Ill. prison closures

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SPRINGFIELD – A handful of Democratic lawmakers turned up the heat on Gov. Pat Quinn on Monday, urging him to drop his plan to close some Illinois prisons and vowing to restore money to run them when legislators return to Springfield next month.

Pointing to an adult correctional system that has nearly 16,000 more inmates than it was designed for and a court ruling demanding Quinn slow down and consider prison employees' safety concerns, lawmakers from central and northern Illinois issued statements or spoke at press events, urging the Democratic governor to reconsider.

"Closing prisons in a system that's already overcrowded, it's illogical to say that's possible or safe," Sen. Michael Frerichs told The Associated Press as he headed to a news conference at the Danville prison in his district. It has double the 900 inmates for which it was designed.

"Talking to the guards there, it makes for a more difficult and dangerous situation," Frerichs said. "More (inmates) coming into Danville does not make it any easier for the employees here, it doesn't make it more safe."

Quinn ordered the closing of the super-maximum security prison at Tamms, the women's lockup at Dwight, three transitional centers and two juvenile detention facilities because of budget problems. Tamms, reserved for inmates who cause trouble, has many empty cells, and the administration says other facilities are "outdated" and too expensive to run.

Overall, the adult prison system has more than 49,000 inmates in facilities designed for 33,700.

Lawmakers opposed to Quinn's plan included money to run the prisons in the budget that began July 1, but the governor vetoed that spending. He wanted the money — about $56 million in the case of the prisons and youth centers — to go to the state agency responsible for controlling child abuse and neglect.

Spokesman Abdon Pallasch repeated Quinn's commitment to closing "half-empty" prisons and said the prisons and juvenile sites on the list are no longer needed. Frerichs acknowledged Tamms has plenty of empty space but said that was partly due to the administration's choice to not send inmates there. He called for a long-term analysis of correctional needs.

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