91°F
weather icon Cloudy

Utah ICE detainees could be housed in Pahrump

An existing federal detention center in Pahrump could be expanded to house detainees for the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Salt Lake City operations.

CoreCivic, formerly known as Corrections Corporation of America, was one of three private companies that submitted proposals to house detainees for ICE’s Salt Lake City operations. CoreCivic currently holds a federal detention facility known as the Nevada Southern Detention Center in Pahrump, where it’s proposing to house the detainees from Utah.

A reporter from the Pahrump Valley Times emailed CoreCivic and was told to contact ICE for information regarding the process related to a Request for Proposal or Request for Information that the federal agency conducts.

ICE had not responded before the publication deadline of this article.

ICE put out a Request for Information notice in October 2017 to identify potential sites for a detention center to house detainees from its Salt Lake City operations and other field offices.

The federal detention facility in Pahrump, used for housing federal inmates awaiting trial or sentencing, along with inmates waiting to be transported to a long-term facility, is roughly 481 miles away from ICE’s facilities in Salt Lake City.

According to a report from the Salt Lake Tribune, ICE was seeking proposals for sites in Salt Lake City or within 180 miles of the agency’s field office and immigration court in Salt Lake City.

The proposal information was released by a Chicago-based organization, National Immigrant Justice Center, which sent ICE a Freedom of Information Act request.

According to the FOIA request, CoreCivic proposed an expansion, up to 604 beds, at its 2190 E. Mesquite Ave. facility for ICE detainees, for the Salt Lake City operations.

Two other companies also made proposals for facilities outside of Utah.

Centerville, Utah-base Management and Training Corp. proposed to construct a new 640-bed detention facility in Evanston, Wyoming (83 miles from ICE’s Salt Lake City operations). The other company was the GEO Group Inc., which proposed using an existing 432-bed facility in Aurora, Colorado (522 miles away from the Salt Lake City facility).

The Request for Information put out by ICE in October 2017 stated that the detention facilities that would service ICE’s Salt Lake City operations should have a capacity of 200 to 600 inmates.

According to an audit that occurred in July 2017, the facility contained 1,064 beds and housed 779 inmates at the facility at that time.

A spokesman for Nye County said the Pahrump detention facility has a development agreement with the county to house up to 1,500 inmates at the facility.

Using the 2017 audit numbers of 779 inmates, the facility could expand and house more than 600 ICE inmates and stay in compliance with its development agreement.

If the facility was to go over the 1,500-inmate maximum, a new agreement would have to be approved by Nye County.

In a report from the Salt Lake Tribune, Orem, Utah immigration attorney Chris Keen said that several ICE detainees from Utah County have already been sent to states such as Nevada and Colorado.

This was due to, Keen said, the county ending its contract to hold ICE detainees in its jail.

Keen went on to explain the difficulties of servicing clients who are sent out of state in the Tribune’s report.

In the Tribune report, Keen stated that, “It was much easier ‘to see my clients. I could pass papers to them. They could sign. I could interview them. I could prepare them for hearings. Their families could come see them.’”

Contact reporter Jeffrey Meehan at jmeehan@pvtimes.com

THE LATEST
Pahrump man injured in gunfire with deputy

Nye County Sheriff Joe McGill told the Pahrump Valley Times the incident occurred at a residence along Bunarch Road at approximately 7:30 a.m. on May 14.

Burn ban in place — what you need to know

A new BLM Nevada Fire Prevention Order is in effect through Oct. 31. The order, issued by the Bureau of Land Management, prohibits specific fire-related activities on all BLM-managed land in Nevada.

Nye County solar regulations nearing completion, moratorium extended

Nye County has spent the last year and a half working to create local regulations for the burgeoning solar industry and following plenty of research and the careful gleaning of input from various stakeholders, that process is finally nearing completion.

Motorcycle rider flown to UMC Trauma

Pahrump Valley Fire and Rescue Services Chief Scott Lewis told the Pahrump Valley Times that crews were dispatched to a report of a serious two-vehicle collision at the intersection of Sandpebble Street and Kellogg Road on the south end of the valley at approximately 6:30 a.m. on Wednesday, May 8.

US 95 head-on crash kills one in Nye County

The Nevada Highway Patrol is investigating a fatal crash along US 95 at approximately 2 a.m. on Monday morning, May 13, according to Pahrump Valley Fire and Rescue Services Chief Scott Lewis.

Impact fees rising for new development in Pahrump

The cost for new construction in Pahrump has now officially gone up following impact fee increases approved by the Nye County Commission, which went into effect as of Tuesday, May 7.

Nevada Volunteers hosts Pahrump Volunteer Fair

Nevada Volunteers hosted the Pahrump Volunteer Fair this month, the first such fair in a grant-funded series that will take the nonprofit all around the Silver State over the course of the next three years, all in the name of advocating for and educating people on the power of volunteering.

Garage fire destroys 11 classic cars

Close to a dozen classic cars in various states of restoration were consumed by fire at a residence along the 3000 block of North Joanita Street last week.