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Prison farms closing in Ohio

Land will be sold and jobs will be affected

By Diego Flammini
Assistant Editor, North American Content
Farms.com

Correctional facilities in Ohio which gave inmates a chance to engage in farm activities, learn how to operate heavy machinery, weld and drive large vehicles, are closing.

Gary Mohr, director of Ohio’s Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, told The Associated Press on April 12 that the farms, located at eight of 10 sites set for closure, will be closed by 2017 and the land is expected to begin being sold soon after.

Nearly 220 inmates perform work on the farms at their busiest times, which cover more than 12,000 acres and include 2,300 beef cattle and 1,000 dairy cattle.

Digging

Mohr said few of the inmates take farm jobs after release and the closures are designed to focus on the big picture. The money raised from the sales and leases of the land will be used for other job-training programs and rehab strategies including housing and counselling.

"We're going to be able to touch a lot more inmates and focus on their re-entry," Mohr said in an interview with The Columbus Dispatch. "Farming has not been an area where we're placing people when they go out in the community. We want to focus more on prison enterprises inside the walls."

Mohr said that while farming operations provide inmates with work and food, it’s no longer part of the preparations for life after prison. He added that prison farms have become security risks with contraband items being taken from the farm back into the facility. 


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