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Thomson prison an example of state’s poor fiscal planning

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The real reason was the state didn’t have the money to hire guards and other workers.

For the next decade, the empty prison became a political hot potato.

Rod Blagojevich vowed, if elected, he would open the prison.

But the prison stood empty year after year. When he was up for re-election, he briefly transferred a handful of minimum security prisoners to Thomson to “fulfill” his campaign promise of “opening” the prison.

That didn’t last for long.

It would seem an irony that three of the key players in this drama – Ryan, Snyder and Blagojevich – each ended up in prisons themselves.

Lawmakers kowtowed to pressure from the union representing prison workers and made sure that closing aging, obsolete penitentiaries and moving jobs and inmates to Thomson wasn’t even considered.

So the prison sat empty. And the taxpayers kept paying on the money borrowed to build it.

So what does a state do when it has planned poorly, borrowed excessively and refused to make tough decisions?

It looks for a federal bailout.

This month, the feds cut a check for $165 million, making the Thomson penitentiary part of the federal Bureau of Prisons.

But there are still lessons to be learned from the 11-year saga.

“It was a boondoggle from the start,” said state Rep. Rich Morthland, R-Cordova. “Why didn’t anyone ask if we had the money to staff it when it was built? That would seem to me to be a pretty obvious question to be asking.”

But it is a question rarely asked these days when politicians call for building more state projects.

That leaves one to wonder: How many Thomsons are in our future?

• Scott Reeder is a veteran Illinois statehouse reporter and the journalist in residence at the Illinois Policy Institute. He can be reached at sreeder@illinoispolicy.org.

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