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Oregon Gov. Kate Brown Reverses Course, Keeps Warner Creek Prison In Lake County Open

Oregon Gov. Kate Brown speaks at a press conference to address the coronavirus pandemic in Portland, Ore., Friday, March 20, 2020.
Bradley W. Parks
Oregon Gov. Kate Brown speaks at a press conference to address the coronavirus pandemic in Portland, Ore., Friday, March 20, 2020.

Gov. Kate Brown won't close Warner Creek Correctional Facility in Lake County. It was set to close in July 2022.

Oregon Gov. Kate Brown announced this week the Warner Creek Correctional Facility in rural Lake County will remain open.

In January, Brown announced the facility would be one of three minimum security prisons she planned to .

鈥淭he long and short of it is, I鈥檓 making the decision at this time to not close your facility and to leave the decision to the next governor,鈥 Brown told Lake County commissioners during a meeting Tuesday, the . Brown鈥檚 comments were met with applause, according to the newspaper.

The prison employs 89 people, according to the Oregon Department of Corrections, with another 300 people in custody who live at the facility.

Lake County officials noted it鈥檚 difficult to attract new economic development and investments because the county is small and isolated. They said the prison provides more than $7 million that helps support schools and other businesses in the area.

鈥淚t really means a lot to the economy of Lakeview and Lake County,鈥 he told OPB. 鈥淚t would have been extremely dit to find a comparable business to replace WCCF with that would bring similar jobs and stability to our schools and other businesses. With this decision, we hope to get other businesses on board here as it adds a level of stability to our local economy.鈥.

鈥淚t really means a lot to the economy of Lakeview and Lake County,鈥 he told OPB. 鈥淚t would have been extremely difficult to find a comparable business to replace WCCF with that would bring similar jobs and stability to our schools and other businesses. With this decision, we hope to get other businesses on board here as it adds a level of stability to our local economy鈥.

Part of the governor鈥檚 decision to keep the prison open was because of the effect it would鈥檝e had on the county, Elizabeth Merah, a spokeswoman for Brown said in a statement.

鈥淚t is important to the Governor to balance criminal justice reform efforts with the real impacts to our smaller, rural communities,鈥 Merah said. 鈥淕iven the community impacts of closing Warner Creek, the Governor decided not to move forward with the closure of this facility.鈥

Bobbin Singh, executive director of the Oregon Justice Resource Center, acknowledged whether closing prisons can be complex, especially in communities with few jobs. But, he added, there are better ways to invest in communities than through prisons.

鈥淲e should not live in a state where a community feels it necessary to celebrate the continued operation of a prison; we should not have to force our state or communities into such a binary of choosing the economics of the carceral system over the well-being and health of our fellow Oregonians,鈥 he said.

Singh said Oregonians should work to 鈥渦nwind the devastating impacts鈥 of the criminal justice system, while also investing in new economies in places like Lake County.

The shuttering of two other prisons is still moving forward: The Mill Creek Correctional Facility in Salem is still set to close in July and Shutter Creek Correctional Institution in North Bend is set to cease operations in January 2022.

In her statement to OPB, Merah repeated the same sentiment from January that Brown 鈥渦ltimately would like to reduce our state鈥檚 reliance on incarceration and invest more dollars in the program areas that work to prevent people from entering the criminal justice system, such as behavioral health, education, housing, and substance use disorder recovery and treatment.鈥

Oregon currently operates 14 prisons across the state with about 12,000 people residing behind bars.

Copyright 2021 Oregon Public Broadcasting. To see more, visit .

Conrad Wilson is a reporter and producer covering criminal justice and legal affairs for Oregon Public Broadcasting, a JPR news partner. His reporting comes to JPR through the Northwest News Network, a collaboration between public media organizations in Oregon and Washington.