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6 prisons to set up 
temporary housing SPR

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SPRINGFIELD – Security is being undermined at Illinois’ prisons because of overcrowding and the need for space, a prison watchdog group said Thursday after state officials confirmed that six medium-security prisons would be using gymnasiums to temporarily house extra inmates.

Extra beds are being set up in the facilities in preparation for the closing of the women’s prison in Dwight, according to the main prison-employees’ union. A spokeswoman for the Department of Corrections said officials are preparing a half-dozen prisons but declined to say whether they’re linked to the Dwight shutdown or how many low-level offenders would be housed in the interim space.

The temporary housing poses safety concerns for a prison system that has 49,000 inmates in space designed for 33,000, combined with too few employees to watch them, said John Maki, executive director of the John Howard Association, a not-for-profit group that tracks the state’s prison system.

“What I think you’re seeing is bed space trumping security and operations,” Maki said. “All the facilities on this list are already extremely overcrowded. We shouldn’t be looking to pack more people into these facilities.”

Gyms will become communal inmate space at lockups in Centralia, Danville, Vandalia, the Graham prison in Hillsboro, Illinois River in Canton, and Shawnee in Vienna.

The Corrections Department disclosed the setup in a letter to the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, as part of a contractual requirement to notify and discuss such changes with its workers’ union. The letter, signed by Edward Jackson of the department’s labor relations office, didn’t say when inmates would move in but suggested talks with AFSCME late next week.

The announcement came a day after an AFSCME official wrote a letter to Corrections Director S.A. “Tony” Godinez protesting the transfer of up to 15 maximum-security inmates implicated in a brawl last week to segregation units at medium-security lockups.

The union claims those alleged troublemakers would have been exiled at the super-security Tamms prison before Gov. Pat Quinn closed it last month because of the budget crisis. The melee at the Menard prison in Chester injured two guards and a chaplain. It happened just days after a Menard inmate died in his segregation cell, which officials are investigating as a murder by another inmate.

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