Cuyahoga County residents denounce plans for new jail (2024)

CLEVELAND, Ohio – Roughly 100 Cuyahoga County residents attended a community meeting Thursday to speak out against a new jail they say they don’t want.

For an hour and a half, residents asked dozens of questions about why a new jail is the best use of half a billion public dollars, how a new building will fix some of the inhumane conditions they said stemmed from leadership and staffing problems, rather than structural concerns, and what the long-term ramifications may be if the mitigation systems meant to protect the community from toxins on the site fail.

Their questions were left mostly unanswered. But Kenn Dowell, the consultant hired to moderate the community meeting, promised that all the questions will be shared with county council and the 12-member Justice Center Executive Steering Committee before any decisions are made about the fate of the jail.

“When we have another meeting, we will answer your questions,” Dowell told the crowd gathered at the Jerry Sue Thornton Center. “We’re just here to get your feedback.”

The county didn’t have an exact date of when those meetings would occur, but Director of Public Works Michael Dever said public discussion will continue through the end of September, including at the next steering committee meeting, yet to be scheduled. He also pledged to host another public meeting to discuss the jail’s design by the end of the year.

If the residents who attended Thursday’s meeting have their way, the process wouldn’t get that far.

Cuyahoga County residents denounce plans for new jail (1)

“No new jail” was written on the signs they held, voiced in their comments, and repeated like a mantra by the collective body whenever they heard something they agreed with. Instead, they called for community solutions to prevent people from entering jails in the first place, rather than building new walls to house them.

“The problem is the system and the people and the attitudes,” Larry Heller with Northern Ohio Recovery Association said of conditions in the jail that led to a string of deaths in 2018. “Until we fix that, these all are window dressings.”

In the same breath, residents also agreed with speakers who denounced structural problems in the jail that prevent some inmates from seeing the sun, getting enough recreation time, or accessing other wanted programming. They called the conditions inhumane.

Rev. Vincent E. Stokes II talked about how the revolving door at the jail has shaped his life and said it was more important to consider the injustices of the current jail than the environmental justice of the potential new jail site at 2700 Transport Road.

“If we don’t have an alternative to this space, we need to come up with one because it’s not fair to keep them there,” Stokes said of inmates in the current jail. “We need a new county jail.”

Dever said he took away from the meeting that residents want to know more about the new jail’s operations and the potential for more diversion efforts, but he said what they’re seeking can’t be done in the current jail space. He called it antiquated and said it’s too cost prohibitive to update in any meaningful way.

Not building a new jail, he said, “it’s not an option.”

County council has not officially voted to build a new jail but has introduced plans to buy the controversial property where they’d like to place it and permanently extend an expiring quarter-percent sales tax to pay for it. Further discussion on that decision will occur when council returns from break on Sept. 13, but a final decision could come by the end of that month or early October, at the latest.

Also pending are the results of a second study on what it would take to renovate the existing jail as part of the Justice Center complex.

Cuyahoga County residents denounce plans for new jail (2)

The public comments followed an hour of presentations detailing the studies done in the last 10 years that led the county to the conclusion it needs to build a new jail and why its preferred location is a good fit, despite the known toxins at the site.

A recently released environmental study showed conditions at the property have improved some over the decades, but still flagged oil deposits and other chemicals in the soil, as well as carcinogenic benzene and methane gases. The county can still use the site, the consultant who performed the study determined, but it will need to maintain a clean soil cap, install a vapor barrier under the jail and limit any exposure to groundwater in order to make it safe for residential use.

The cost of that potential work has not been disclosed in public meetings.

John T. Garvey, vice president of Partners Environmental Consulting, Inc., which performed the study, again shared examples of other brownfields that he says have been successfully remediated for residential use in the same ways Cleveland’s jail property would need to be.

One is the Geroge R. Vierno Correctional Center addition in the Bronx, a borough of New York City. That facility has used a methane mitigation system since 1993, he said. He also highlighted similar systems used by a 56-story apartment complex and the Cedars-Sinai Hospital Advances Health Sciences Pavilion, both in Los Angeles.

Cleveland examples include Battery Park, which was the former Eveready Battery Co.’s old Edgewater Plant that is now covered by townhomes, and the east bank of the Flats, which became a residential and commercial hotspot after undergoing extensive remediation.

Cleveland.com is researching other examples of correctional facilities being located on or near sites with environmental concerns, what remediation efforts were used there and whether there have been any ramifications that might be relevant to the work planned in Cleveland.

Chris Ronayne, the Democratic candidate running for County Executive, attended the meeting and called the environmental presentation “vague.” He questioned the location itself, noting while driving on the dead-end road to get there what he felt was a lack of access to public transit in a remote site hidden away from the community.

He wanted to know more about why other sites in the community were eliminated and called for the county to wait to make any decisions about a new jail until it has more input on what the public wants in a justice system, not just a jail.

“To me, there’s still a lot of work to be done,” Ronayne said.

At the start of the three-hour meeting, Cleveland City Councilman Richard Starr, whose ward borders the proposed jail site, warned residents that if they don’t cooperate on building a new jail at the Transport Road site, it could be moved outside the city. That would cost taxpayers more money and more harm, he said.

“It’s important to keep the jail in the city,” he stressed to residents.

“Keep it downtown,” was their shouted reply.

Note: An earlier version of this story incorrectly identified Cleveland City Councilman Richard Starr’s ward, which covers the right side of Broadway Avenue. The proposed jail site, on the left side of Broadway Avenue, is in Ward 3, represented by Councilman Kerry McCormack.

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Cuyahoga County residents denounce plans for new jail (2024)

FAQs

Cuyahoga County residents denounce plans for new jail? ›

GARFIELD HEIGHTS, Ohio — The Cuyahoga County Jail Coalition is heading up a campaign called "No New Jail." It is against the building of a new jail facility in Garfield Heights. It said a new facility in Garfield Heights will be far from public transit, court hearings, and other resources.

How much did the Cuyahoga County jail cost? ›

The cost of the new jail complex has been projected at $750 million, cleveland.com reported previously. In September, Cuyahoga County approved spending $38.7 million in American Rescue Plan Act dollars to purchase a 72-acre site for the jail.

Where is the new jail in Cuyahoga County? ›

Cuyahoga County Council voted this week to move ahead with the purchase of land in Garfield Heights. The land will be the site of a new county jail. The council approved the purchase of about 72-acres for $38.7 million.

How many inmates are in Cuyahoga County jail? ›

Corrections Center - General Information

The Cuyahoga County Corrections Center (CCCC) is a full-service Jail that provides care and management of over 26,000 inmates annually.

Who runs Cuyahoga County jail? ›

The CCCC is managed by the Chief of Corrections, Warden, and Associate Wardens.

How much does the average prisoner cost in Ohio? ›

It costs about $30,558 per year to incarcerate one person in a state prison, and Ohio taxpayers will spend nearly $1.5 billion dollars on state prison incarceration this year.

How much does it cost to house an inmate in Ohio? ›

Institutional cost scenario

According to the ODRC November 2023 Fact Sheet, the average institutional cost to house an offender was $103.08 per day or $37,624.20 per year. Institutional costs are calculated by dividing all ODRC operating costs by the number of housed offenders, for a certain period of time.

How old is the Cuyahoga County jail? ›

In November of 1970, Cuyahoga County voters passed a bond measure to fund the proposed Justice Center. Construction on the site began in October of 1971 and was completed in 1976. The jail was built with 886 beds, and by 1979, overcrowding was once again an issue.

How many inmates are in Ohio prisons? ›

As of December 31, 2020, the number of prisoners under the jurisdiction of Ohio correctional authorities was 45,036 located in 28 state prisons and held in custody of private prisons or local jails. State operated facilities had a staff of 12,389 employees and a budget of $1,905,656,939.

Where do federal prisoners go in Ohio? ›

FCI Elkton
Address:8730 SCROGGS ROAD LISBON, OH 44432
Email:ELK-ExecAssistant-S@bop.gov
WorkPhone:330-420-6200
Fax:330-420-6436
Feb 14, 2023

What are Level 5 prisons in Ohio? ›

This is Level 5 maximum-security supermax penitentiary designed to hold the State's most dangerous prisoners. The facility is equipped with a pneumatic lock system.

What Supermax prisons are in Ohio? ›

The Ohio State Penitentiary (OSP) is a 502-inmate capacity supermax Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction prison in Youngstown, Ohio, United States.

What city has the biggest county jail? ›

17,049: Welcome to America's largest jail" by Breeanna Hare and Lisa Rose. There are 3,096 county jail jurisdictions in the United States and the Los Angeles County jail system is the largest.

Who oversees county jails in Ohio? ›

The Ohio Department of Rehabilitation & Correction (ODRC) oversees a network of correctional facilities throughout the state.

Who is over Ohio prisons? ›

The Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction oversees the following institutions in North, South, and Specialty regions of the state.

What facility is Cuyahoga County jail? ›

The Cuyahoga County Correction Center (CCCC) is one of these 3,300 jails, but is a unique facility. Two high-rise buildings, situated on one half of a city block in downtown Cleveland, are located at 1215 West 3rd Street, at the corner of West 3rd Street and Lakeside Avenue.

When was the Cuyahoga County jail built? ›

Jail I was built in 1976, when the rest of the Justice Center complex was completed. In 1995, Jail II was opened. Tens of thousands of people visit the Justice Center every year.

What is the oldest jail in Ohio? ›

General Information about the Ohio State Penitentiary

First erected in 1813 at the corner of Main and Second streets, the state penitentiary in Columbus was a three-story brick structure with 13 cells. A new three-story building was built on the same site in 1818.

Does Ohio have for profit prisons? ›

Ohio became the first and only state to sell a prison to a private company. The short documentary "Prisons for Profit" produced by the ACLU of Ohio, examines the first 18 months after Corrections Corporation of America purchased the Lake Erie Correctional Institution (LaECI) in 2011 from the state of Ohio.

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