A Prison Explosion
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In the past decade, California has built and opened 16 prisons and several minimum security camps, and made major renovations and additions to the 12 prisons which existed when the state embarked on the nation’s most expensive prison construction program. Four other prisons are being built and construction is scheduled to begin shortly on two others. Here is a look at the expansion of the state prison system.
Opened Since 1984
1. Solano
Vacaville, Solano County
Opened: 1984-86
Security: low-high
Design capacity: 2,404 inmates
Current population: 4,817
Cost: $156 million
2. New Folsom
Folsom, Sacramento County
Opened: 1986-87
Security: high
Design capacity: 1,728
Current capacity: 3,070
Cost: $158 million
3. Richard J. Donovan
Otai Mesa, San Diego County
Opened: 1986-87
Security: high
Design capacity: 2,200
Current population: 4,484
Cost: $158 million
4. Northern California Women’s Facility
Stockton, San Joaquin County
Opened: 1987
Security: low-high
Design capacity: 400
Current population: 762
Cost $35.4 million
5. Avenal
Kings County
Opened: 1987
Security: low-medium
Design capacity: 3,034
Current population: 5,708
Cost: $163.5 million
6. Mule Creek
Ione, Amador County
Opened: 1987-1989
Security: minimum-high
Design capacity: 1,700
Current population: 3,247
Cost: $153 million
7. Corcoran
Kings County
Opened: 1988
Security: medium to high
Design capacity: 2,916
Current population: 5,387
Cost: $271.9 million
8. Chuckawalla Valley
Blythe, Riverside County
Opened: 1988-89
Security: low-medium
Design capacity: 2,000
Current population: 3,458
Cost: $127.4 million
9. Pelican Bay
Crescent City, Del Norte County
Opened: 1989-90
Security: high
Design capacity: 2,280
Current population: 4,313
Cost: $242.4 million
10. Central California Women’s Prison
Chowchilla, Madera County
Opened: 1990
Security: Various levels
Design capacity: 2,000
Current population: 3,880
Cost: $143.4 million
11. Wasco
Kern County
Opened: 1991
Security: low-high
Design capacity: 2,484
Current population: 4,496
Cost: $174 million
12. Calipatria
Calipatria, Imperial County
Opened: 1993
Security: high
Design capacity: 2,208
Current population: 3,898
Cost: $206.6 million
13. North Kern
Delana, Kern County
Opened: 1991-93
Security: medium-high
Design capacity: 2,492
Current population: 4,313
Cost: $170 million
14. Los Angeles
Lancaster
Opened: 1993
Security: medium high
Design capacity: 2,358
Current population: 3,820
Cost: $250 million
15. Centinela
Seely, Imperial County
Opened: 1993
Security: medium-high
Design capacity: 2,208
Current population: 4,104
Cost: $222.6 million
16. Ironwood
Blythe, Riverside County
Opened: 1994
Security: medium-high
Design capacity 2,400
Current population 2,336
Cost $214 million
Under Construction and Funded, or Partially Funded
17. Pleasant Valley
Coalinga, Fresno County
To open: late 1994
Security: medium-high
Design capacity: 2,208
Estimated cost: $210 million
18. Madera II
Chowchilla, Madera County
To open: 1995
Various levels for women
Security: various levels
Design capacity: 1,984
Estimated cost: $161 million
19. Susanville
Lassen County
To open: 1995
Security: medium-high
Design capacity: 2,224
Estimated cost: $260 million
20. Soledad II
Monterey County
To open: 1995-96
Security: medium-high
Design capacity: 2,224
Estimated Cost: $208 million
21. Corcoran II
Kings County
To open: Pending
Security: low-high
Design capacity: 3,600
Estimated cost: $208 million
Various minimum security camps
1984-92
Security: Minimum
Design capacity: 1,370
Cost: $43 million
Additions to existing prisons
1985-89
Design capacity: 4,500
Cost: More than $237.3 million
Built Before 1984
22. San Quentin
23. Folsom State
24. California Institute for Men (Chino)
25. Correctional Training Facility (Soledad)
26. California Institution for Women (Frontera)
27. Deuel Vocational Institution (Tracy)
28. California Men’s Colony (San Luis Obispo)
29. California Correctional Institution (Tehachapi)
30. California Medical Facility (Vacaville)
31. California Rehabilitation Center (Norco)
32. California Correctional Center (Susanville)
33. Sierra Conservation Center (Jamestown)
Note: Existing prisons are designed to house 66,183 inmates, one to a cell. However, almost all cells are double-bunked. All prisons have 200 or so minimum security prisoners as ancillary help.
Source: California Department of Corrections
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