California is reducing their temporary beds and Arizona should do likewise ~~
This method of housing prisoners has been a contributing factor to the increased violence inside prisons. When you put temporary beds in for a permanent reason there are negative impacts associated with this task. The lack of showers, toilets, and encumbered space limitations increase tension and makes it unsafe for correctional officers that have to walk these beats.
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SACRAMENTO— After more than two decades of using non-traditional beds, the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) is no longer double- and triple-bunking inmates in areas that were not designed for housing, such as gymnasiums and dayrooms.
On February 23, 2012, CDCR removed the last of such beds and has begun renovation projects. "non-traditional beds became the iconic symbol of California’s prison overcrowding crisis,” CDCR Secretary Matthew Cate said. “Now, gyms once filled with inmates in triple-bunk beds are open and can be used for their intended purpose. This demonstrates how much progress California has made in improving inmate conditions and employee safety.”
On October 25, 2006, CDCR reached its all-time-high inmate population of 173,479, more than 200 percent of design capacity in its 33 adult institutions. August 2007 marked the peak of CDCR’s use of non-traditional beds at 19,618 in 72 gyms and 125 dayrooms.
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