Source: San Jose Mercury News Contact: Tue, 4 Nov 1997 Big Houses on the Prairie Prisons bring money, tourists to depressed small towns BY JAMES BROOKE New York Times FLORENCE, Colo. A FEW miles from the ``Alcatraz of the Rockies,'' the maximum security federal prison where Timothy McVeigh spends 23 hours a day in an isolation cell, a cheery billboard beckons tourists: ``Stop and do time with us. Colorado Territorial Prison Museum and Park. Historical, Educational, Exciting.'' Eight miles down U.S. 50, at Canon City, a gray souvenir Tshirt proclaims in red lettering: ``Corrections Capital of the World Fremont County.'' While local boosterism can lead to exaggeration, 18 percent of Fremont County's 40,000 residents are involuntary guests of the ``Graybar Hotel'': 7,150 inmates in 13 prisons, four of them federal and nine state. As prisons emerged as a growth industry in the 1990s, this county, nationally known as the home of the magnificent Royal Gorge, illustrates a modern trend using prisons as a tool for rural development. Nationwide, the number of beds in state and federal penitentiaries increased 43 percent, to 976,000, in the first half of the 1990s, according to a Justice Department survey released in August. Prison employment jumped 31 percent, to 347,320. A variety of economically pressed small communities, disregarding the stigma traditionally attached to the label ``prison town,'' have opened their doors to prison construction in recent years, ranging from Hobbs, N.M., to Tupper Lake, N.Y., to South Bay, Fla., to Beeville, Texas, to Crescent City in Northern California. In a measure of prison pride, museums have sprouted. Every year, about 15,000 tourists troop through Canon City's museum, located below the looming gray walls of Colorado's oldest prison, the Territorial Correctional Facility, built in 1871 and still operating. Inside the gate, visitors encounter a deactivated, limegreen gas chamber. Leavenworth, Kan., beckons tourists with a billboard: ``How about doin' some TIME in Leavenworth?'' The local convention and visitors bureau uses a new slogan: ``You don't have to be indicted to be invited.'' Ruth Carter, 81, the mayor of Canon City, said, ``We have a nice, nonpolluting, recessionproof industry here.'' With local coal mines closing and ranches limping, the prisons of Fremont County filled the vacuum, employing 3,100 men and women. Here, prisons are called ``the industry.'' For this industry, Canon City has always been a company town. In the 19th century, when Colorado's territorial legislators decided to give the capital to Denver and the university to Boulder, they gave the prison to Canon City. The trend has continued. The four federal prisons that opened since 1994 south of Florence have brought a flood of jobs and new residents. The four adjoining institutions employ slightly more than 1,000 workers, with an average salary of about $30,000. At the maximumsecurity prison where McVeigh is incarcerated, there is almost one employee for every inmate. ``We as a community are doing better and better,'' Carter said of the influx of workers, adding, ``They are buying and renovating houses that I would have bulldozed.'' A former juvenile probation officer, Carter recently traveled to Odessa, Texas, to preach the benefits of prisons for ailing rural towns. ``I told them that you are worrying that your grandmothers, your mothers, your daughters are going to be raped and sodomized,'' said Carter, who lives in a cottage, surrounded by her cats, cactus plants and collection of cut crystal. `` `No sirree,' I told them. `When those people get out of prison, they are getting out of town as fast as they can.' '' Jail breaks have been infrequent in the 125 years that Fremont County has been Colorado's corrections capital. In Florence, where there is one prisoner for every free citizen, an upscale housing development centered on a golf course is being built just over a knoll from the prison where McVeigh awaits his appeal of a death sentence for the Oklahoma City bombing. For aesthetics, a forestgreen, Colorado lodgestyle roof tops the beige walls of McVeigh's prison, officially the United States Penitentiary Administrative Maximum Facility, also known as ADX. The highest security prison in the United States, it replaced a penitentiary in Marion, Ill. While some communities might see such a prison as the societal equivalent of a nuclear waste dump, Fremont County fought hard for the $60 million penitentiary complex that holds McVeigh. ``When I first came here, in 1984, the city was in a depression,'' said John Lemons, a reporter for the Canon City Daily Record. ``There were empty stores on Main Street; unemployment was 11 percent. The ROTC commander said he had great luck recruiting here.'' Residents were so eager to lure a federal prison that they massed on Canon City's Main Street for the TV cameras of ``Good Morning America'' and held up a banner reading: ``We want a federal prison! Fremont County, Colo.'' Today, Main Street is bustling and unemployment is 4 percent. The federal money has allowed Fremont County to look the other way as state legislators, seeing prisons as a tool for economic development, turn their attention to the state's eastern plains with funds for new prisons there. A mix of state and privately run facilities, the prisons are giving new life to a farflung archipelago of aging farming towns: Brush, Burlington, Las Animas, Olney Springs, Ordway and Walsenburg. In coming years, Eastern tourists heading to Colorado's booming mountain resort towns will fly over a growing network of what one Denver wag calls ``Big Houses on the Prairie.''