Inside the Small California Town with a Lot of Prisons, but Not Much Opportunity

via Vice.com


Inside the Small California Town with a Lot of Prisons, but Not Much Opportunity

February 3, 2015
by Matt Tinoco

Adelanto, California, is a small high desert town just a two-hour drive northeast of Los Angeles, but it feels a long, long way away from Southern California's stereotypical palm trees and beaches.
This is a town, like many others around the country, that exists largely thanks to America's overgrown prison industry. There are three incarceration facilities within its city limits, providing beds for up to 3,340 inmates. Two of these facilities are privately owned and operated by GEO Group, one of the US's largest private prison operators. The San Bernardino County Sheriff's department operates the third. On Adelanto's border with its neighbor city Victorville is a gigantic federal complex that's home to another 4,600 inmates.
Late last November, the town's outgoing city council decided that they needed moreprisons, approving by a vote of four to one plans for the construction of two new correctional facilities. One was to be a privately owned and operated 1000-bed facility from GEO Group, and the other a $327 million, 3,264-bed facility developed independently by Doctor Crants, the founder of the private prisons company Corrections Corporation of America, that's intended to house overflow from Los Angeles County's embattled jail system.
GEO Group has since withdrawn the proposal for its facility—according to the city manager, James Hart, that was just a bureaucratic ploy to make sure the company's permits don't expire on land they might wish to build a jail upon in the future. But if the other facility is completed as promised, there will be space for more than 6,500 inmates in Adelanto—and there are only around 30,000 non-prisoners in the town.
Adelanto is a wasteland of tractor-trailers, trailer homes, and trains. It's a harsh place to live. Temperatures in the summer are often in the triple digits, the only relief coming in the form of a 60-mile-per-hour wind biting desert dust into your skin. Residents have to cope with one of the worst regional economies in the entire United States: At its peak, in 2011, the unemployment rate in Adelanto was nearly 22 percent. Today that number rests closer to 12 percent. But development is still painfully slow.
"You can't buy a pair of shoes in Adelanto," former Mayor Cari Thomas told me. "For those, you'll have to drive down to the Walmart in Victorville. There's very little opportunity for residents to work in the city,."

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