Pubdate: Sun, 04 Jun 2000 Source: St. Petersburg Times (FL) Copyright: 2000 St. Petersburg Times Contact: http://www.sptimes.com/ Forum: http://www.sptimes.com/Interact.html Author: Sheryl McCarthy, columnist for Newsday, where this commentary first appeared. PRISON PLANS FAIL IN RURAL NEW YORK In the 1980s, when the country was fighting a war on drugs, and Mario Cuomo was building more prisons than any other governor in New York history, there was a poor rural village named Malone, N.Y. Malone's farms and businesses were struggling, and there were no jobs for its sons and daughters, so the village officials had an idea. "We'll build us a prison!" the officials said. "That will bring construction jobs, prison jobs and food-service jobs. A prison will save our community." Malone is a beautiful, 19th century New England-like town bisected by the beautiful, trout-filled Salmon River, I a more likely setting for a college campus than a prison. The communities near New York City didn't want prisons, while depressed towns upstate eyed them hungrily. Malone wooed and won its state prison, the Franklin Correctional Facility, which now has 2,900 inmates. Two years later it got the Bare Hill Correctional Facility, with 1,900 inmates. Cuomo was voted out, and George Pataki came in and proposed building yet another prison. It was sited for Tupper Lake, in the sub-Canadian Adirondacks region. But when it was argued that a prison would pollute the town lake, the site was scrapped. There was Malone, however, with its reputation for loving prisons. So the state built a third prison, Upstate Correctional Facility, which opened last summer and houses 1,400 inmates. Malone's population is 20,000, including the inmates. More than 300 miles from New York City, it's at the end of a long journey for the wives and girlfriends of inmates and their children, most of whom are from the city. But the prisons haven't worked the economic miracle that town officials hoped for. They have brought Malone racial diversity of a sort, since more than 90 percent of the inmates are black and Hispanic, while Malone is overwhelmingly white. Sometimes residents see inmates on crews that do public construction and chip ice off sidewalks in the winter. The prisons could be credited with reducing Malone's poverty rate, since the $30,000 a year in goods and services each inmate receives from the state exceeds many salaries in Malone. But the 750 jobs that the Upstate brought to Malone went mostly to people from outside the town, because of prison system seniority rules, according to Boyce Sherwin, director of the Office of Community Development for the village. "Did we get 750 jobs?" he said. We didn't get a hundred. A hoped-for food processing plant to serve the prisons hasn't materialized, and a $4.5 million expansion of the sewage treatment plant, paid for by the state to accommodate the new prison, has increased the amount of nitrates that are dumped daily into the Salmon River. There's been a huge increase in traffic and in the sewage flow into a beautiful trout stream, said Sherwin, Who called the design specifications for the plant "totally unacceptable and barely at the legal limit for such pollutants. Because the loans to build the sewage plant and a new water system for the prison were based on the village's borrowing capacity, taxes have gone up, and the payments will be more than $1-miltion this year, Sherwin said. What Malone got was the state's first maximax prison for its most incorrigible inmates. At Upstate, they spend 22 hours a day in lock-down, with two hours of recreation in an outdoor cage. The town doesn't even have a YMCA, and the only form of recreation is the bars, Sherwin said. "It's an economic tool now, but they're not the long-term answer," says Ann Ruzow Holland, executive director of Friends of the North Country, a community development group that has opposed prison-building upstate. "Once you have the reputation of a prison town, you won't become a Fortune 500 company town, or an Internet or software company town, or even a diverse tourism and company town, Holland says. Sherwin sees a dream that has gone sour. "It was get a prison and your community is set," he says. "But look around, is this heaven?" - --- MAP posted-by: Derek