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Prison Will Have Largest Dairy In South Carolina

SEANNA ADCOX   11/12/10 01:09 PM ET   AP

REMBERT, S.C. — A state prison will soon be home to South Carolina's largest dairy under one roof, as a $7 million expansion quadruples the herd at a prison farm and allows the state to sell millions of gallons of excess milk.

South Carolina's three prison farms save taxpayers more than $600,000 annually, as inmates work to produce all of the milk, eggs and grits – and some vegetables – served to 24,000 prisoners statewide. The new dairy at Wateree River Correctional Institution, set to open in January, could eventually more than double that savings, according to the state Corrections Department.

"Hopefully, it will be the best run dairy in the state," said Bert Dew, the agency's agriculture chief.

Its features will include fans and misters to keep cows cool in the summer, digital sensors of the milk temperature, and computers that monitor when cows are most productive.

The hope is to make farming operations self-sustaining, with profits covering all salaries, Dew said.

The extra savings are welcome in a state expecting a $1 billion shortfall in next year's budget. The prison agency has been allowed to operate in the red for several years, as lawmakers slashed agency budgets.

South Carolina is among 17 states nationwide with prison farms. Besides South Carolina, eight others have dairy operations – California, Colorado, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, Ohio, Tennessee and Wisconsin, according to the National Correctional Industries Association's latest survey.

At 7,000 acres, Wateree's farm is by far the largest of the three in South Carolina's prison system.

More than 50,000 pounds of sweet potatoes grown there this year will be sent to prison cafeterias, but the farm's major crop is corn, which covers a quarter of the land. Other operations include a gristmill, where the corn is ground into grits for inmates and corn meal for cows; a sawmill, where fallen timber on prison property is converted to construction lumber; and 300 head of beef cattle, with calves sold at market to generate cash for inmate meals.

Duane, who worked in construction before being sentenced to 13 years for driving drunk in a fatal car crash, is among the inmates building the new dairy using wood from the prison sawmill. With four years left, he said he'd much rather work outside than pass the time idly in prison, no matter the temperature.

"I enjoy what I do," said the inmate, whose full identity could not be given under prison policy. "A lot of fellas out here are willing to learn. The one's willing to learn, they jump right in and give you a hand."

Because of the farms, the state spends a paltry $1.51 daily on three meals per inmate. Agency director Jon Ozmint said that's among the lowest, if not the lowest, food costs among state prison systems.

"This does a great service for the state," Dew said. "We're using the inmates to work. We're using land that belongs to the state to furnish food for them. They produce a large portion of their food, and we're hoping in the near future it will be even more."

The state "hires" qualifying minimum-security inmates to work on the farm. In return, they get time off their sentences – two days shaved off for every five-day workweek, and three days off for a seven-day workweek. Another plus in the summer? Only inmates who work on the farm can live in Wateree's new unit with air conditioning.

Work for the roughly 200 prisoners varies from driving tractors to shoveling feed.

Whenever a job is open, inmates quickly line up to fill it, said Warden Donald Beckwith.

The pluses for society, he said, is that the inmates learn a trade, and they're easier to manage.

"When they're out here, it's a physical, demanding, labor-intensive job, so when they get back in the evening, they're worn out," Beckwith said. "They don't have excess energy to burn off by doing rambunctious things."

The current dairy, built in 1985, consists of 220 cows generating 500,000 gallons of milk yearly. Onsite, the milk is reduced to 2 percent fat, pasteurized, vitamin-fortified and packaged into 6-gallon bags shipped to prisons statewide.

The new, 27-acre dairy – funded with a $6 million loan to be repaid with milk sales within 10 years – will open with 500 cows and should reach its 1,000-cow capacity by summer. At full capacity, the dairy should produce 1.8 million gallons of excess milk yearly for sale, and its new equipment will be able to package milk and juices into single-serve containers.

State officials say South Carolina's 95 dairies produce only about a third of milk consumed in the state, so the rest has to be hauled in from elsewhere. By producing the milk at the prison, consumers should benefit because lower freight costs should mean lower prices at markets, John Wilson, senior vice president and chief fluid marketing officer for Dairy Farmers of America.

Some inmates find work in their new trade after prison, officials said.

Others take away a work ethic, Dew said: "They're learning that for everything you do it takes effort. You get up, you go to work, you do your job and you go home."

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REMBERT, S.C. — A state prison will soon be home to South Carolina's largest dairy under one roof, as a $7 million expansion quadruples the herd at a prison farm and allows the state to sell mil...
REMBERT, S.C. — A state prison will soon be home to South Carolina's largest dairy under one roof, as a $7 million expansion quadruples the herd at a prison farm and allows the state to sell mil...
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03:57 AM on 11/16/2010
It's an illegal loan. The Federal Milk Order is clear. If public funds are used to finance milk processing plants, the milk produced, "Must be treated as 'Class 3 Milk"., meaning they, South Carolina legislators, absoultuley cannot produce and then 'sell' said milk on the open market, as standard, processed bottled milk. It's illegal. The lending bank knows this, but hopes it doesn't get caught. They are caught. They can only powder extra milk and only sell it as "Class 3 milk", meaning their dreams of massive prison income, are gone, right now.
That milk must be powdered, sold only at the lowest possible Federal Price,which today, is a certain loss. Should they go forward, there will be an anti trust and Federal Order complaint of criminal activity. Violating Title 7 section 601.
'Any milk produced by the sale of public bonds, must be treated as 'Class 3 milk'.
Powdered and fed to calves and starving populations.
12:17 AM on 11/16/2010
The inmates broke the law. What did the cows do to deserve their incarceration?
03:33 AM on 11/14/2010
Seems fitting.
10:53 PM on 11/13/2010
What exactly is government over reach in the south? When a dem is in power? Someone talk to me.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jJohnson1
02:51 PM on 11/13/2010
I agree with an earlier statement. How can outside farms that are struggling as is compete with prison labor? and could these jobs of gone to people on the outside of the prison who desperately need the work right now? im not sure this was the logical decision but i'm not entirely opposed to it either the prison systems are ever growing. and it is costing taxpayers a fortune to sustain, cutting costs helps. i guess i am on the fence on this one not sure which side is best.
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KarlaElisa
The atmosphere is Toxic
12:12 AM on 11/14/2010
I hear your concern and return it. None of us want to 'foot the bill' for people who made poor choices or are outright evil. But my thoughts are along the same lines as yours AND that I have reservations about privatized prisons being able to use prisoners to produce products sold outside the prison for profit. I can envision 'needing' inmates to run things as we all know, once a corp begins to make a profit, an ever larger profit is demanded. I see room for all types of abuse in that situation. Sort of like when you hear about all those death row inmates in China who benevolently donate their organs upon their death. I wonder how many could be there on trumped charges or were sentenced to death instead of serving time because they had a certain blood type or some tissue was a 'match'.
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WorkhelpWorkhelp
Control your money locally. Charter banks now.
03:39 AM on 11/15/2010
We need all of the food we can get. Hopefully healthy grown...
03:18 AM on 11/13/2010
While allowing inmates to work will likely impact them positively, this sort of arrangement, in which government holds all the controls and the population remains captive, should lead thinking people to desire strict supervision and to question its advisability. The possibility of having imprisoned labor competing with non-imprisoned workers does not inspire confidence.
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MajorKong
If the pilot's good, see, I mean if he's reeeally
11:00 PM on 11/12/2010
"allows the state to sell millions of gallons of excess milk"

So, if I read this correctly, private dairies will have to compete with government-run prison labor? And they accuse us libs of being Socialists.
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KarlaElisa
The atmosphere is Toxic
12:13 AM on 11/14/2010
Thing is...an enormous number of our prisons ARE privately owned. I'm chewing on that myself right now.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WorkhelpWorkhelp
Control your money locally. Charter banks now.
03:40 AM on 11/15/2010
That's a big reason prop 19 didn't pass.
03:28 PM on 11/12/2010
Ahh, the return of slavery/indentured servitude.

Hey Reich Wingers: you longed for the "good old days" so here you go.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
robmclaughjr
N.M.E. of G.O.P.
03:11 PM on 11/12/2010
This represents the worst aspects of right-wing socialism. A government-run dairy farm run by slaves. South Carolina never changes.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Phoebe917
old hermit who lives in the woods
03:48 PM on 11/12/2010
i am as big a liberal as there can be, but i see this as a positive thing. prisoners are doing something constructive, not just sitting around in cells, playing basketball and watching the teevee. and they seem to like according to the article. they are learning a trade and if it helps the various prisons by supplying food, then that is an extra bonus. and for those of you who call it "slave labor", that is ridiculous. they are not slaves they are prisoners. i don't suppose any of you complain when you see inmates cleaning up trash from the highways.
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BlueZoo
Independent voter, Independent thinker!
12:50 PM on 11/13/2010
...or making license plates! In Texas, they have used prison labor on farms for decades and it has worked really well. They grow all the food needed to feed the prisons! Many prisoners, once released, have gone on to become productive farmers. I agree with you! I'm tired of seeing prisons where the incarcerated have nothing to do but watch television, play cards and plot revenge on those who put them there! Let them learn to contribute!
09:23 PM on 11/12/2010
They are prisoners, not slaves..... Make them do something constructive rather than just work out in a gym all day for gods sake. A/C and time off for working, no wonder crime is on the rise everyone wants to go to that prison where the conditions are better than most have at home.
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MajorKong
If the pilot's good, see, I mean if he's reeeally
11:04 PM on 11/12/2010
"conditions are better than most have at home"

I can't speak for your house but I can't recall the last time someone got a shank between their ribs in my bathroom and I don't think I've had a single gang fight either.
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02:42 PM on 11/12/2010
Does the idea of using a captive labor pool for profit (public or private) disturb anyone else?
02:42 PM on 11/12/2010
No.
08:36 PM on 11/13/2010
Do you mean.... like slavery?
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02:21 PM on 11/12/2010
That's great. Save the state money and provide a path to rehabilitation for prisoners. Why am I not surprised that such a good idea would be unpopular on HP?
02:24 PM on 11/12/2010
Its called SLAVE LABOR FOOL! It works well in North Korea, the country you want our country to become like. besides the state is not reimbursed for its services.
02:25 PM on 11/12/2010
Its called SLAVE LABOR F@@L! It works well in North Korea, the country you want our country to become like. besides the state is not reimbursed for its services.
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02:33 PM on 11/12/2010
As your post clearly illustrates, it should come of no surprise that good ideas are wildly unpopular with HP's base readership of fuming, ideological zealots.
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02:20 PM on 11/12/2010
Debtor's prison will be created in America.
08:38 PM on 11/13/2010
Already here in MN
02:17 PM on 11/12/2010
Next Step for the corporatist and Prison industry: SLAVE LABOR. Beware illegal immigrants American prison slaves are coming to take your JOB!
02:16 PM on 11/12/2010
The real reason the American prison system has grown so large in the last few decades. Pretty soon all those wining about companies outsourcing jobs to foreign countries can stop , all that cheap labor will soon be available in America.
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wjhamilton29464
Attorney, progressive activist and writer
02:14 PM on 11/12/2010
Well it is nice to read something positive about my state on the Huffington post. Not everyone here is an idiot.