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Extraído del Informe Consolidado
Esta investigación fue publicada originalmente como parte de un informe consolidado más amplio que contiene múltiples investigaciones. Consulte el PDF consolidado para ver el documento completo.
Shasta County Grand Jury
• 2005-2006
Sugar Pine Conservation Camp Cream of the Crop Sugar Pine Conservation Camp
⚠️ Aviso de traducción: Este contenido ha sido traducido automáticamente. El texto original en inglés es la versión oficial. La traducción puede contener errores.
⚠️ Este contenido ha sido traducido automáticamente. El texto original en inglés es la versión oficial. La traducción puede contener errores.
Findings and Recommendations 8 findings
F1
Page 351
The 80-acre camp includes a dormitory, kitchen/dining area, laundry room, administration building, fire fighting equipment storage building, maintenance building, and inmate hobby shop. All facilities were found to be clean and in good operating order.
No recommendations for this finding
F2
Page 351
SPCC provides the labor (fire or hand crews) that assists the CDF in achieving the Department’s primary mission to “reduce loss of life, property, and natural resources through the implementation of balanced fire prevention, fire protection, pre- suppression and suppression activities.” SPCC has six crews, each consisting of 15 well-trained inmates.
No recommendations for this finding
F3
Page 351
Inmates are responsible for meal preparation and serving. The average cost for meals per day, per inmate, is $2.56. Breakfast and dinner are served in the dining hall, and lunch is packaged for consumption at the crew work sites. Because SPCC inmates are low-risk, the cost of housing each man is significantly lower than for those housed in regular prisons. 351
No recommendations for this finding
F4
Page 352
Drug-related offenders make up 95% of the inmate population. Inmates at SPCC cannot have a record of arson offenses, sex-related offenses, or previous escapes from other CDC facilities, nor be potentially violent.
No recommendations for this finding
F5
Page 352
Eligible inmates serve the last nine months of their prison sentence at SPCC. Inmates have telephone and visitation privileges, and may earn the privilege of spending a weekend with their families at a house located on the property.
No recommendations for this finding
F6
Page 352
Inmates provide a labor force to the CDF. Overall, the California Conservation Camp fire crews average more than eight million hours of labor on work projects for CDF and for federal, state, and local agencies each year.
No recommendations for this finding
F7
Page 352
SPCC has 10 correctional officers and 12 fire captains. A supervisor and two correctional officers are on duty each day. At night, one supervisor and one correctional officer are on duty.
No recommendations for this finding
F8
Page 352
There are no medical facilities at SPCC. Only basic first-aid is available to inmates. Those needing emergency medical help are transported to Redding or the nearest healthcare facility if the crew is away from the camp. Non-emergency care is provided at the state prison in Susanville.
No recommendations for this finding