Another North Country Town Loses a Major Employer – a Prison
| By Davis, Mark | |
| Proquest LLC |
Nearly a quarter of the residents of
Last year's effort to save the
"It was awesome," said
Next week,
Summer visitors to the Adirondacks remember the shimmering lakes, green mountains and kitschy tourist traps. But much of the region's economy, once reliant on timbering and farming has in recent decades come to depend on a less romantic revenue source: housing criminals.
Desperate for middle-class jobs, small towns throughout the Adirondacks region enthusiastically accepted facilities to hold thousands of inmates, mosdy from
By some measures, the
"The good news is crime is down and our prisons have fewer people in them,"
Good news - for many. But not for
"It's a depressed area," said Chateaugay Town Supervisor
Just north of the
But the town exudes spirit. A welcoming sign on the side of
In the village, it seems there's a historic marker on every block - the site of
For most of its history,
As decades passed, larger companies gradually bought up small family farms and ran them with fewer hands. Young people born into farming families began to flee, prompting more sell-offs to bigger companies.
Meanwhile, manufacturing jobs - the area once had a
On a recent weekday, with no customers in his shop, Lopardo peered out his window and remembered, buildingby-building, what used to be.
"On the corner was a clothing store. Insurance office next door. Little drug store, and another one where the food pantry is. Two hardware stores. That next big building was a little-bit-ofeverything store. We had a diner on the corner, and a restaurant next to that..."
Those businesses had vanished long before the state decided to shut down the prison, which was seen as a last resort to keep the town's economy from crumbling. Lopardo worries for the future.
"Band-Aid's gone," he said. "There's not much else we can do. It wasn't growing before. It's not going to grow. It's not going to attract any young people, that's for sure."
With the prison gone, the only major employer left in town is the
Crime Paid
The Adirondacks region was an unlikely beneficiary of the national War on Drugs - a reaction to rising crime in urban areas such as
The result: more inmates.
Where would all the new inmates go? Many communities resisted prisonbuilding proposals, for obvious reasons. But others around the Adirondacks rolled out the red carpet, hosting as many as 19 correctional facilities at one time. Some were built from scratch. Others were housed in abandoned schools or other renovated buildings.
The town of
In 1993,
Towns thought they had stumbled on a business that would be immune from economic downturns. But like family farming and light manufacturing, the inmate business has also turned out to be vulnerable to changing times.
The crime rate has fallen in
Tax revenue shortfalls from the Great Recession forced the issue.
In
State law requires towns get a one-year notice before a prison is closed. Last July, Billow got a call from Cuomo's office.
The town tried to fight back. Residents created a 30-page glossy pamphlet stating all the reasons that
Clearly concerned that 111 jobs would seem negligible to officials from larger communities, they compared the impact to losing 6,000 jobs in
"The are no equivalent jobs in
Local officials brought as many brochures to
"We thought we had a chance. We worked our tail off, to try," Billow said. "They listened, but didn't do nothing. They sat there with poker faces."
Worse, most of the
Chateaugay Today
Neatly manicured green fields sat unused behind two-story barbed wire fences last week at
A few guards milled casually in the lobby beneath a sign that read "Attitude Makes the Difference." A prison official confirmed that inmates were no longer there, and said the few remaining workers were removing equipment.
Jones, the deli owner, said her business has already taken a huge hit. Guards used to stop by Wendy's Quick Stop during their morning and evening commutes. So did family members visiting inmates. They did a brisk delivery business at lunchtime.
"It was a seven-day-a-week thing," Jones said. "You close something like that... it's a domino effect. I've lost so much business. A lot of people stopped coming and going."
Prospects for replacing the lost jobs are dim. Town officials are crossing their fingers for a
Billow is holding out hope. Maybe crime will tick up, he said. Maybe the state will need
"It may come around," he said. "Some of those people they released may come back, and they may need the space."
Contact: [email protected], 865-1020, ext. 23, or @Davis7D.
| Copyright: | (c) 2014 Seven Days |
| Wordcount: | 1634 |



Burwell v. Hobby Lobby: Are Women Free?
Advisor News
- Younger investors turn to ‘finfluencers’
- Using digital retirement modeling to strengthen client understanding
- Fear of outliving money at a record high
- Cognitive decline is a growing threat to financial security
- Two lessons career changers wish they knew before starting the CFP journey
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- FACC and DOL enter stipulation to dismiss 2020 guidance lawsuit
- Zinnia’s Zahara policy admin system adds FIA chassis to product library
- The Standard and Ignite Partners Announce Launch of Thrive Plus Fixed Indexed Annuity
- CareScout Joins Ensight™ Intelligent Quote LTC & Life Marketplace
- Axonic Insurance Annuities, Built for Banks, Broker-Dealers and RIAs, Now Available through WealthVest.
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- 5 ways to navigate health care costs and coverage with confidence
- UnitedHealthcare’s mission control targets customer woes to build its brand
- NC State Health Plan expects to spend $1 billion more than planned. Here’s why
- FINEOS and Opifiny Partner to Modernize Medical Information Workflows for Claims and Absence Management Across North America
- ‘An outrage:’ CT insurers still flouting mental health parity law
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News
- Iowa widow claims premium-financed IUL plan jeopardized family farm
- Redefining life insurance for a new era of trust and protection
- Agam Capital and 1823 Partners Announce Strategic Partnership to Provide Life Insurers with an End-to-End Value Chain Solution
- AM Best Revises Outlooks to Positive for Western & Southern Financial Group, Inc. and Its Subsidiaries
- Principal Financial Group Announces First Quarter 2026 Results
More Life Insurance News