Alaska prisoners to move to Colorado from Arizona
Published: August 10th, 2009 01:58 PM
Anchorage Daily News
There, they will stay for three years until
The Alaska Department of Corrections is switching its $20 million-a-year private prison contract from the company that has held it for 15 years, the Corrections Corp. of
The prisoners will leave the Red Rock Correctional Center in Eloy, Ariz., for the Hudson Correctional Facility, in Hudson, Colo., about 30 miles northeast of Denver, sometime before Christmas, said Alaska Corrections Commissioner Joe Schmidt.
The state will save about $6 a day per prisoner from the switch, the commissioner said, a total of approximately $1.75 million a year. The state now pays $65 per day per prisoner at Red Rock while it will be paying $59 per day per prisoner at
Schmidt said the
The inmates will be transported by air but Schmidt wouldn't say exactly when for security purposes. It will happen in stages, with each $35,000 flight carrying 120 prisoners, he said.
The prison contract went out to bid in the spring and the finalists included Corrections Corp. and Cornell as well as the states of
The state already has a contract with Cornell for six halfway houses including in
Charles Seigel, spokesman for Cornell, said the 1,250-bed
Both Cornell and CCA are big players and national rivals in the multi-billion private-prison industry.
Alaska Corrections deputy director of institutions Bryan Brandenburg said prisoners will get more services than currently offered at the
But some are skeptical.
"They say all this stuff all the time because they want the public to feel like their dollars are doing something," said Brenda Watkinson, whose husband is serving a life sentence at the
Watkinson said her husband and other prisoners are quietly optimistic the new prison will be better. Maybe at the new prison the food won't be so intolerable, the rules will be more consistent, the guards won't be so rotten to the inmates, or there will be more activities, she said.
Brenda Watkinson, a day care worker, knows she and her husband aren't going to get sympathy from the public. She married Richard Watkinson eight years ago while he was at Spring Creek, beginning his life sentence for the 1995 murder of his parents when he was 16. But still, she broke into tears at the thought of having to move again to be near him.
There are about half a dozen families that currently live around the
The prisoners were going to be moved from


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