Pubdate: Tue, 15 Mar 2005 Source: Huntsville Times (AL) Copyright: 2005 The Huntsville Times Contact: http://www.htimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/730 Author: David Prather, for the editorial board HEADS IN THE SAND Legislators Should Find Out How Bad Things Are In Donaldson Prison Stephen Bullard isn't happy in his work. You probably wouldn't be either if you were warden of the Donaldson Correctional Facility in Bessemer, near Birmingham. That's because the conditions in the prison stink - literally. The facility has space for about 1,000 prisoners. It holds 1,625 inmates. The surplus population has overloaded the prison's sewer system. You know what that means. But that's not all that's wrong at Donaldson. There aren't enough employees to run the place, despite a 5 percent pay increase for prison workers willing to take on the work. So Bullard is having to force workers to work overtime - sometimes as many as 32 extra hours a week. And this isn't a medium-security prison. It houses inmates who are mentally ill. It houses inmates awaiting execution. If Bullard's correct, Donaldson is a bureaucratic snake pit. Bullard has been warden for five years in what he says is "considered by most in the department to be the most stressful institution in the state." He's asked for transfers, saying it's time someone else paid some dues. He's been denied. So Bullard decided to go to the top. On March 1, he sent a memo to Donal Campbell, the commissioner of the Alabama Department of Corrections, and said if something wasn't done about Donaldson, the state should expect "catastrophic consequences." Overworked employees may sue, he warned. And riots and death are real possibilities. Faced with a blunt warning from a veteran administrator, Campbell took firm action: He put Bullard on 10-day administrative leave. And that could be extended. Talk about shooting a messenger. Talk about the "open administration" of Gov. Bob Riley. Talk about ignoring a problem rather than facing up to it. Many government issues are more complex than some of us want to admit, but it seems pretty clear what's at issue here: Either Bullard is right or he's wrong. Either Donaldson is dangerously overcrowded or it isn't. Either employees are being overworked or they aren't. And either the state is facing a time bomb at Donaldson or this is so much hot air. All of the evidence favors Bullard. All of the actions of the Department of Corrections smell as strongly of cover-up as Donaldson smells of sewage. Luckily, the Legislature is still in session. Committees with oversight over prison funding can call Bullard to testify. The legislators, and the public, can hear what he has to say and decide whether the situation is so dire that immediate intervention is needed. In fact, that's the only prudent, responsible action that leaders of this state can take. And it shouldn't be difficult to arrange a time for Bullard to testify. After all, he's got some time on his hands now. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth