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http://www.pantagraph.com/articles/2008/05/09/news/doc4823bd73d58f8170762970.txt
Signs of opposition: 'Save Pontiac Prison' message popping up
5/9/2008
Bloomington Pantagraph
Tony Sapochetti
PONTIAC -- Mel Trevino said he didn’t have to think twice when he was
asked if he would put a “Save Pontiac Prison” sign in his front yard on
West Bennett Street.
“I’ve got the same feeling that a lot of people have: It will hurt,” he
said of Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s proposal to close Pontiac Correctional
Center to save money.
“All of these people will be out of jobs and it will hurt the economy,” he
said. “It’s just sad, I don’t like to see people laid off … for whatever
reason because it hurts them and their whole family.”
Trevino is among a growing number of residents in Pontiac and neighboring
committees who are being approached to display signs or banners and wear
T-shirts or buttons to show support for the prison.
Blagojevich announced Monday that his administration plans to close the
Pontiac facility in February and transfer inmates to a recently built but
still unused prison in Thomson. The move triggered calls from local
officials and lawmakers for a closure moratorium and a review panel to
evaluate the state’s entire prison system.
Many residents, meanwhile, are doing what they can to voice their
opposition to the closure.
“(The employees) are all good people, and they deserve a good living,”
said Ernie Charlier, who also has a sign in his front yard in Pontiac. “If
they close that prison, it will cripple the town and put a dent in the
economy.”
The Illinois Department of Corrections says the proposal would save about
$5 million annually, and the prison’s 551 workers would be transferred
elsewhere.
Stephanie DeLong, owner of DeLong’s Casual Dining and Spirits, former
corrections officer and wife of a current officer, has said she would make
“Save Pontiac Prison” T-shirts and hand them out at her restaurant.
Pontiac Mayor Scott McCoy said he has not heard of any “grassroots”
movement as of Thursday, but he is aware that the closure appears to be
the main topic of discussion.
“I have been getting calls from people who want to write letters of
support or start a petition, and right now we are just making sure that we
have all of our ducks in a row,” McCoy said.
“They are fighting for their community and we are fighting for the
community,” McCoy added. “We are all in this together, and it is
appreciative that people are active and want to participate. A lot of the
little things we can do could add up.”
Former Pontiac Mayor Mike Ingles said that when talk of closing the prison
arose in 2004, a wave of community support welled up in the community.
Community support is an important part of influencing what happens, but
people need to remember that fundamentally it is a matter of politics, he
said. He added that people advocating to keep the prison need to marshal
their arguments.
“I think it’s extremely important that we should separate emotion from
facts,” Ingles said.
The fate of the prison became a topic of discussion Thursday night for
Livingston County Board members at an administrative committee meeting.
“Whatever we can do, we will step up to the plate,” Livingston County
Board Chairman Bill Flott said. |