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1001 SW Emkay Drive
Bend, OR   97702

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Prineville, OR   97754

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Inmate Crews Return To Reduce Central Oregon Fire Hazards

BEND, OREGON - April 25, 2005

 

In early May, Oregon Department of Corrections minimum-security inmate work crews will begin a seventh year working with the Forest Service to restore forest health and reduce fire hazards in Central Oregon.
Department of Corrections (DOC) officers will supervise 115 inmates at a tent camp on the forest called Deschutes Conservation Camp. Forest Service employees will provide technical direction for the 10-man inmate crews, deployed six days a week.

The program saves money and is more productive by having inmates live and work on the forest rather than traveling from Salem where the nearest DOC facility is located. Officials can then apply the savings toward completing work on the ground.

Corrections officers select inmates based on a number of criteria. For example, inmates must have fewer than three years remaining on prison terms and have demonstrated good behavior while incarcerated. Convicted sex offenders and arsonists are barred from the program.

"Last year, we invited the program back for a fall session because of the inmates' success in hand-piling brush and woody debris in the forest," said Deschutes National Forest Supervisor Leslie Weldon. "The inmates worked on fuels treatment with a focus on protecting homes, recreation sites throughout the forest and cabins near Crescent Lake."

In addition, she said the inmates learned critical outdoor skills that will help them obtain employment in landscaping, nursery and forestry fields upon release.

This summer's program will focus on protecting homes adjacent to forested land and creating wildland fire defensible space around many communities including Sisters, Camp Sherman, Crescent and La Pine. The inmates will also complete projects that reduce fire threats to the Bend watershed, and critical threatened and endangered species habitat.

"This partnership is a great example of the DOC’s Oregon Accountability Model at work," said DOC Captain Jeff Forbes, camp commander. "It is gratifying to watch the growth of the inmates while they participate in such a worthwhile program.”

The Oregon Accountability Model is both a philosophy and an action plan embraced by the DOC to hold inmates accountable for their actions and reduce the risk they will continue criminal behavior, both while incarcerated and following release.

Deschutes Conservation Camp inmates will complete a 10-week training program and receive a key firefighting training certificate that documents their skills. They can use the documentation to seek employment with firefighting crews following their release.

“Together with the Forest Service and local communities, we have created a national model in Central Oregon,” said Corrections Director Max Williams. “This project supports the state’s goal of teaching inmates valuable work skills.”

The inmate program has received two federal awards. In 2001, it received the Forest Service's Caring for the Land Award for the Oregon and Washington region. Secretary of Agriculture Ann M. Veneman also presented an award to DOC officials in July 2002 for their significant work in critical habitat restoration in areas of Central Oregon.

 

Media Contacts:

  • Shelley Hakanson, Deschutes N.F. people prog. coor., 541/383-5576
  • Perrin Damon, Oregon Dept. of Corrections, 503/945-0925

 

 

USDA Forest Service - Deschutes & Ochoco National Forests
Last Modified: Monday, 25 April 2005 at 16:29:38 EDT


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