{"id":55880,"date":"2019-11-26T01:30:00","date_gmt":"2019-11-26T10:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/legislators-craft-bill-to-keep-alaska-prisoners-in-state\/"},"modified":"2019-11-26T01:30:00","modified_gmt":"2019-11-26T10:30:00","slug":"legislators-craft-bill-to-keep-alaska-prisoners-in-state","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/legislators-craft-bill-to-keep-alaska-prisoners-in-state\/","title":{"rendered":"Legislators craft bill to keep Alaska prisoners in state"},"content":{"rendered":"
A group of state legislators is preparing a bill that would prevent the Department of Corrections from sending Alaskan prisoners to facilities out of state.<\/p>\n
In October, DOC Commissioner Nancy Dahlstrom announced Alaska’s prisons were at 97% capacity and the Department would be looking at out-of-state<\/a> prisons to house Alaskan inmates. Alaska’s prison population had risen, Dahlstrom said, following the passage of the “crime bill,” House Bill 49 which implemented stricter sentencing for crimes.<\/p>\n That announcement was met with push-back from legislators. On Oct. 23, a bipartisan group of lawmakers<\/a> sent a letter to Dahlstrom to reverse its decision to send prisoners out of Alaska and to reopen the Palmer Correction Center.<\/p>\n The Palmer Center was closed in 2016 because of budget cuts and in June, the Legislature removed language from the capital budget that would allow sending prisoners out of state. That vote passed<\/a> the House 29-6<\/p>\n Despite the protest, DOC has been moving ahead with its plans to contract out of state. The Department of Corrections could not immediately be reached for comment.<\/p>\n The bill that could prevent those plans is sponsored by Rep. Zach Fields, D-Anchorage, and co-sponsored by Reps. Dan Ortiz, I-Ketchikan; Harriet Drummond, D-Anchorage; and Andy Josephson, D-Anchorage.<\/p>\n “We feel this is a retreat from a statewide goal,” Josephson said in a phone interview Tuesday, referring to the vote in June. “We need to take care of our own because they’re Alaskans and that’s what mature sovereigns do.”<\/p>\n Josephson also raised the concern of Alaskan inmates interacting with gang members from other states and bringing those criminal connections back to Alaska.<\/p>\n