Union leaders in the dark: Many wonder what this means for overcrowded state prison

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THOMSON – The local prison union was left reeling over the news that Thomson Correctional Center could be sold to the federal government and house Guantanamo Bay detainees.

Rumors that Thomson could become the new Gitmo have been flying over the last several months, said Lori Laidlaw, president of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Local 2359, which represents Thomson prison workers.

The Illinois Department of Corrections did not prepare AFSCME for the news, though, she said.

“We are not happy about it, and the members at Thomson are all up in arms,” Laidlaw said Saturday. “The Department of Corrections is not sharing any information and has not involved the union in anything.”

Sunday, Gov. Pat Quinn held news conferences at airports in Milan, Chicago and Rockford, announcing that Thomson is in the running to become a super-maximum facility with a unit  that would house the suspected terrorists.

The news has raised a lot of questions, such as how the prison will be run and what kind of staffing will be needed, Laidlaw said. 

“We would hope that it would mean more jobs for the people in the community, but how do you find people that have the training to work this detail?” she said. “At this point, we don’t even know what their plan is, or even if they have a plan.”

The state spent $145 million to build the 1,600-bed, maximum-security prison in Thomson, a town of a little more than 500. Construction was completed in 2001; 8 years later, the prison holds fewer than 200 inmates.

Laidlaw said she doesn’t think the village is equipped to handle a federal prison that houses dangerous anti-American terrorists.

“We just don’t have the law enforcement in that area,” she said. “It’s a very quiet community, and we are in no way ready.”

Another issue that has Laidlaw on edge, she said, is the problem of overcrowding at prisons statewide, where many maximum-security facilities are at 170 percent capacity.

In a written statement Saturday, Henry Bayer, executive director of AFSCME Council 31, echoed Laidlaw’s comments, and noted the proposal to close the maximum-security Stateville Correctional Center near Joliet.

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