| Report: Illinois Prison Could Create 3,000 Jobs |
|
|
|
Braley: The time for "fear-mongering" is over.
The full
text of the article is below.
Report:
Ill. prison deal could create 3,000 jobs
Associated
Press
November
22, 2009
WASHINGTON — A deal to
house Guantanamo Bay detainees at a northwestern Illinois prison could bring
nearly 3,000 jobs to the area, a White House analysis
says.
Residents from the
seven-county area surrounding the Thomson, Ill, prison would be "excellent
candidates" for up to 1,400 of the jobs generated in the deal's first year,
according to the report by the president's Council of Economic
Advisers.
The report comes as
officials from the federal Bureau of Prisons and the Illinois Department of
Corrections toured the facility Saturday, along with Democratic lawmakers from
Illinois and Iowa.
"It's a great
gathering from both sides of the river, Illinois and Iowa, folks who understand
how desperately we need jobs in this area," said Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois.
"There are too many people out of work, there are businesses closing down
because people are out of work. They need paychecks."
Converting, opening
and running Thomson as a federal facility would create 840 to 910 temporary jobs
and between 3,180 and 3,880 ongoing jobs over the first four years, according to
the White House report. Jobs not filled by local residents would go to people
who relocate to the area.
The Department of
Defense and Bureau of Prisons would turn the facility into a federal prison to
be used to relocate detainees. Thomson is about 150 miles west of Chicago and
was built by the state in 2001 with 1,600 cells. But budget problems prevented
it from fully opening, and it now houses about 200 minimum-security
inmates.
Republican lawmakers
largely oppose the plan, raising questions about the safety of housing terrorism
suspects and the deal's true economic impact.
Rep. Bruce Braley,
D-Dubuque, Iowa, and others said those fears are
unfounded.
"The time for
fear-mongering is over," Braley said. "I have listened to my constituents all
week, and they have told me with a resounding voice they want these jobs to come
to their area."
# # # |
|
|
Washington , DC Office 1019 Longworth HOB Washington, D.C. 20515 ph: (202) 225-2911 |
Waterloo Office 501 Sycamore St, Suite 610 Waterloo, IA 50703 ph: (319) 287-3233 |
Davenport Office 209 W. 4th St, Suite 104 Davenport, IA 52801 ph: (563) 323-5988 |
Dubuque Office 350 W. 6th St, Suite 222 Dubuque, IA 52001 ph: (563) 557-7789 |
|