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Bill to Reopen Private, High Security Prison Heads to Governor

Melissa Benmark

State lawmakers have approved a bill that would allow a private prison near Baldwin to reopen and house high-security inmates. It now goes to Gov. Rick Snyder’s desk. 

Vermont intends to move more than 300 high-security inmates to the prison near Baldwin. Those inmates include ones with a history of violent behavior in prison and who have attempted to escape.

Democrats and a handful of Republicans voted against House Bill 4467. They say it would create a security risk and that it’s immoral to allow a company to profit from shipping in out-of-state prisoners.

“It’s a sad state of our economy when the Legislature is looking to treat prisoners like a commodity and import people - yes, even when incarcerated they’re still people – to create jobs and make money,”

said state Sen. Steve Bieda (D-Warren). But supporters reject the idea that the move would create a security risk.

“There are safeguards in here. This is not just open the gates, let them all come in,”

said state Sen. Geoff Hansen (R-Hart). And they say it will create jobs in a high-poverty area of the state.

“Now the good sheriff – the good Democrat sheriff of this county – says we need these jobs. 300 jobs in a county that is struggling terribly in poverty,”

said state Sen. Rick Jones (R-Grand Ledge).

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