Pubdate: Mon, 08 Nov 1999 Source: Fresno Bee, The (CA) Copyright: 1999 The Fresno Bee Contact: http://www.fresnobee.com/man/opinion/letters.html Website: http://www.fresnobee.com/ Forum: http://www.fresnobee.com/man/projects/webforums/opinion.html Author: Lesli A. Maxwell, The Fresno Bee CORCORAN CONSIDERS 2 MINIMUM-SECURITY PRISONS Decision On Whether The Town Gets Nod Could Come Next Spring. CORCORAN - A decade ago, locals in this Kings County town counted on a new state prison to alleviate chronic unemployment caused partly by the farming economy. In 1997, they got another round of hope when the walls of a second state prison for substance-abusing inmates went up. Those expectations fell short. Fewer than 20% of the prisons' current employees are Corcoran residents, according to Don Pauley, who recently stepped down from nine years in the city manager's post. Unemployment in September was 10.4%. And farming operations remain the main source of jobs outside government. But Corcoran, which identifies itself as the "Farming Capital of California," is turning to prisons again. This time, city officials have partnered with a Bakersfield company to propose two small prisons for minimum-security inmates. The proposal is in response to a California Department of Corrections' request, put out earlier this year, for companies to build four so-called "community correctional facilities" throughout the state. "We welcome any industry here," said Corcoran City Council Member Joan Garcia-Munoz. "But we have what they Community Correctional Corporation want, and that's land, infrastructure and people who will work." Community Correctional Corporation, vying for two of those four state contracts, came to Corcoran shopping for sites. The city welcomed the proposal, said Rocky Ritchie, the company's administrative officer. "It's a perfect spot for us," Ritchie said. "When you're bidding a site, it's location, location, location. You have to find a place that is amenable to having a correctional facility and Corcoran is." The city completed an environmental study on the project late last month. It's available for public review until the end of this month when it goes before the city's planning commission for a vote. The corrections department will begin its evaluation of bids after Jan. 4, said Jeanie Esajian, department spokeswoman. A decision should be made by April or May. If Community Correctional Corporation wins the bid, it would build, own and operate the two prisons, Ritchie said. The company does not currently operate any of the 16 community correctional facilities in the state. Minimum-security inmates with short sentences or serving the last stretch of a long sentence would be housed in two 500-bed prisons on property just north of the existing state prisons. "Growth in the inmate population at that level of custody and the growth in inmates with substance abuse problems" prompted the state to request proposals for four such prisons, Esajian said. For Corcoran, it could mean 230 new jobs and another 1,000 heads to count in a census, boosting federal and state funding based on census figures. "Any time we can add a business-type entity to create work and permanent jobs for our residents, we'll work for that," Garcia-Munoz said. "This does more than bring jobs too. It creates a bigger tax base from our local businesses who would provide services to them proposed prisons." #22454 - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D