Following two prison guard deaths at a federal penitentiary in Marion, Ill., in 1983, federal officials began to contemplate building a more secure “supermax” prison facility to house its most dangerous prisoners. Once the decision to build it was made, residents of a small Colorado town began work to ensure the structure would be constructed in their own backyard.
Though the prospect of so many dangerous new neighbors may have stirred mixed feelings about the prison in any small community, the publisher of the town where the prison was built says citizens are happy with the way it worked out.
Bob Wood has been publisher of The Florence Citizen in Florence, Colo., since 1987, and he was a writer there for six years before that. As communities in Iowa and Illinois consider the possible transformation of the Thomson, Ill., prison into a federal “supermax” facility, Wood’s experiences could prove useful for analyzing the potential impacts of such a plan.
The U.S. Penitentiary Administrative Maximum Facility in Florence, also known as ADX Florence or “The Alcatraz of the Rockies,” opened 15 years ago. It sits on 37 acres of land, contains just under 500 beds for prisoners, and is one of three correctional facilities that comprise the Florence Federal Correctional Complex, each with a different security level.
“Our area is the headquarters for the state prison system, so prisons were nothing new to us,” Wood said in a telephone interview with The Iowa Independent Thursday.
“When the Bureau of Federal Prisons originally started looking, we had an old Catholic school and monastery that had been closed down and already had a lot of classroom-type buildings and offices. Our economic development council was actively seeking somebody to fill that property. They got in touch with the bureau, but that was not deemed to be a suitable location, so they started looking at other properties here in Florence.”
The residents of Florence didn’t just actively promote their community as a good spot for the new prison, they raised money to purchase a tract of land for it. Once the land was purchased, they donated it to the Bureau of Prisons.
All of this took place, of course, before the bombing of the Oklahoma City federal building and the September 11, 2001, attacks on New York and Washington, D.C., when terrorism was not on most people’s minds. If citizens of Florence knew then what they know now about the types of people who could be housed in the prison, would they have put so much work into attracting it?
According to Wood, they would.
“We get questions all the time from people wanting to know if we are concerned about housing terrorism suspects. Well, we already have them,” he said. “We’ve had Timothy McVeigh, Ted Kaczynski and some of those others — Zacarias Moussaoui — have all been house there.
“Granted, [if it weren't for recent terrorist attacks like 9/11 and the OKC bombing], there wouldn’t be as many of them. But this is such a secure facility, I don’t know how they could ever possibly communicate with each other and plan something.”
Because the facility houses the most dangerous inmates in the federal prison system, most are kept in seven-by-12-foot cells for 23 hours per day. The one free hour is spent exercising alone in a separate concrete chamber that resembles an empty swimming pool. Specific architectural features, including strategic placement of windows, prevent prisoners from even knowing their exact location within the facility. In a 2007 report with CBS News, the warden described the setting as “a clean version of hell.”
To the facility’s neighbors in Florence, the hell behind the prison walls is hardly noticeable.
“It is very isolated,” Wood said. “We hear very little from it. It just really doesn’t effect the community at all. People find it hard to believe that is true, but we honestly just rarely hear from them. They handle their own medical emergencies and all of those types of things.”
The one thing Wood would tell the people of Clinton, Iowa, and other communities near Thomson as they consider a similar facility nearby is to talk to others who have been through it.
“I went to Sheridan, Oregon to assess the situation there,” he said. “I found what happened there to be very similar to what has happened here. They have the same complaints: That it did not bring immediate financial benefit, but it did, in the long-term, begin to show up.”
If the federal government moves forward with purchasing the Thomson Correctional Center, communities like Clinton and Thomson will, like Florence, see an immediate but temporary economic boost from workers hired to renovate the facility.
“We had some benefit when they were building because many of the construction workers lived in town,” Wood said. “They filled up all the rentals, most of the hotels were full, and the restaurants were always busy. But once that construction phase was over, it took a long time for any real economic impact.”
Because prison guards and other federal prison employees are promoted from within the system, Wood said it took time for locals who hoped to work at the Florence facility to make their way in. Nearly all open positions at the prison were initially filled by existing employees transferred into the area from elsewhere, but now several from the community work there.
The prison has certainly benefitted the local economy, Wood said, but not all of the promises officials made in the planning stages have come to fruition. Officials spoke of a major boon to the region in increased demand for agricultural products and laundry services, for example.
“They promoted that would happen, but I don’t think that every really happened,” Wood said.
Although many Americans would fear the possibility of having suspected terrorists from the Guantanamo Bay military prison in their backyard, Wood says that no one in Florence is concerned about that possibility. Wood also knows that the Florence prison is nearing its full capacity, so the federal government will likely have to find a home for its detainees elsewhere.
“It’s not talked about in restaurants. You can go in, have a cup of coffee and hear the conversations around you, and I’ve never heard that [there is fear],” Wood said. “The only time it seems to come up is when the New York Times or someone calls and wants to do a story about it. Then the residents are talking about the media doing the story, but I honestly don’t think people here would be intimidated by that.”