'We need the prison open': Broken promises leave village of Thomson skeptical

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A CNN televison crew interviews patrons at the Sunrise Restaurant next to the prison Sunday afternoon. The Carroll County village has been the center of a media storm as the federal goverment looks to buy the prison. (Philip Marruffo/pmarruffo@svnmail.com)
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THOMSON – Long ignored in the fierce politicking over Illinois prisons, some residents of this  village of 550 say they welcome a proposal to house federal prisoners, including terrorism suspects from Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in this mostly vacant state prison.

Andrea McGinnis lives about one-half mile from the Thomson Correctional Center and manages Schafer’s Fisheries in Fulton, about 4 miles south of this Mississippi River town.

“I never liked the idea [of building it], but if it’s sitting there, I’d rather have people in it,” McGinnis, 37, said from behind a display case full of smoked catfish and sturgeon. “The community really could use it.”

Unemployment in Carroll County recently topped 11 percent, and previous plans to fill the 1,600 cells in this 8-year-old maximum-security prison sparked an economic buzz that eventually petered out every time, leaving residents wondering why.

Senior officials from the Obama administration were to visit Thomson today to determine whether the federal Bureau of Prisons will buy the state-of-the-art prison, which cost about $143 million to build and nearly $2 million a year to run, even with the fewer than 200 inmates now housed there.

Brad Spencer, 39, of Savanna, also works at the fishery. He said the repeated false starts from the Illinois Department of Corrections have left Thomson’s citizens cynical about the prison’s opening.

“They either need to open it or bulldoze it altogether and dump the remains in Springfield and let them deal with it,” Spencer said. “I don’t care if they bring terrorists here, ... but it won’t fly with everybody.”

A promise earlier this year from the Illinois Department of Corrections to open the prison at half-capacity was enough to persuade Zendel Zendeli, 41, to buy the Sunrise Restaurant on state Route 84.

The plan never materialized.

“Business is OK, but we all know it could be better,” Zendeli said. “We need the prison open.”

Zendeli doesn’t care whether the guards have IDOC or BOP badges on their uniforms. He just wants to sell them lunch.

“Prisoners are prisoners, as far as I’m concerned,” he said.

Like Spencer, Zendeli is jaded by IDOC’s track record in Thomson.

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