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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR McSorley
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
01/30/08
02/05/08 HB
SHORT TITLE Camino Nuevo Facility Transformation
SM 33
ANALYST Escudero/Baca
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
New Mexico Correction Department (NMCD)
New Mexico Women’s Agenda
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Memorial 33 requests the New Mexico Legislative Council to create the Camino Nuevo
Task Force and requests the Corrections Department, the Warden of Camino Nuevo Correctional
Center and other Contractors at Camino Nuevo to collaborate with the Camino Nuevo Task
Force on Transforming the facility into an appropriate Gender-Responsive Low-Security Facility
For Women.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
There is no appropriation attached to this legislation.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The Camino Nuevo correctional center houses female inmates who are classified at the
lowest security levels, who are close to being released and who require the tools that will
allow for their reintegration into our communities.
The Camino Nuevo correctional center is centrally located in the Rio Grande corridor,
where gainful employment and reintegration opportunities exist.
pg_0002
Senate Memorial 33 – Page
2
Camino Nuevo's location in the city of Albuquerque allows for easy transportation of the
children of female inmates for visitations and familial bonding.
Allowing inmates to connect with their communities and families has been shown to
reduce recidivism and to provide more positive outcomes for women placed in the
corrections system.
National research shows that effective gender programming and gender-sensitive
environments improve institutional culture, result in positive outcomes for female
inmates and reduce recidivism.
The Camino Nuevo facility was originally constructed to house the most dangerous
juveniles classified at the highest security levels, and despite the lowest security
classification of women now housed at the facility, the environment continues to reflect
high-security incarceration practices.
Serious allegations of sexual assaults upon female inmates have arisen this past year.
SM 33 requests that:
The New Mexico Legislative Council create the Camino Nuevo task force, to be chaired
by the chairs of the house and senate judiciary committees and to consist of legislators,
the secretary of corrections, representatives from the New Mexico Women.s Justice
Project, central New Mexico community college, the Bernalillo County Behavioral
Health Collaborative, the University of New Mexico School of Architecture,
Metropolitan Alcohol Assessment and Treatment Services, Peanut Butter and Jelly
Family Services, health care for the homeless, the New Mexico Federation of Labor and
the New Mexico Women's Agenda and other interested and appropriate parties; and
the Corrections Department, the Warden of the Camino Nuevo correctional center, The
Corrections Corporation of America and other contractors at the facility be requested to
collaborate with the Camino Nuevo task force and to allow the task force and other
relevant members of the community, as selected or approved by the task force, to assist in
transforming the environment at Camino Nuevo, including assistance in educational and
vocational training, community and family reintegration, mother-child bonding,
employment opportunities, behavioral health services and modifications of the physical
environment at Camino Nuevo to meet the goals of a successful low-security facility for
women; and
The Corrections Department examine and, if necessary, renegotiate its contracts to better
address the goals of transforming the Camino Nuevo correctional center into a model
facility for successful reintegration of women; and
The Camino Nuevo task force, the Secretary of Corrections and the Warden of the
Camino Nuevo Correctional Center report to the appropriate Interim Legislative
Committee during the 2008 interim on the progress of this collaborative process and on
any changes or improvements made to the environment and services at the facility; and
Copies of this Memorial be transmitted to the New Mexico Legislative Council, the
Chairs of the House and Senate Judiciary Committees, the Secretary of Corrections, the
Warden of the Camino Nuevo Correctional Center and the Corrections Corporation of
America.
pg_0003
Senate Memorial 33 – Page
3
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
According to NMCD, the Memorial:
erroneously assumes that Camino Nuevo is not a low security facility—it is already a low
security facility. Camino houses low custody level 1 and 2 female inmates. The New
Mexico Women’s Facility in Grants, New Mexico houses the higher custody female
inmates.
implicitly, but again erroneously, assumes that NMCD needs to collaborate with certain
designated entities on a task force in order to improve or transform the environment at the
Camino Nuevo facility, and erroneously assumes that the environment at Camino needs
substantive improvement or transformation.
The NMCD reports the department already works with the American Correctional Association
(ACA) in order to make sure that it complies with ACA national standards for the safe and
efficient operation of Camino Nuevo. ACA recently audited and accredited Camino Nuevo,
finding it to be in 100% compliance of all mandatory and nonmandatory standards. During the
audit, the ACA auditors interviewed almost all of the 32 female residents in Camino Nuevo.
These female offenders spoke very positively about living in Camino Nuevo, and reported they
felt very safe there. The Memorial completely disregards the fact that the ACA’s accreditation
process demonstrates that the environment at Camino is already comfortable and appropriate.
Further, the NMCD notes, it is also already working with and seeking technical assistance from
the National Institute of Corrections (NIC), a nationally recognized group comprised of
correctional experts, to ensure that NMCD’s female correctional facilities and programs
(including educational and vocational training, behavioral health services, etc.) are operated in a
gender-specific fashion. If NIC makes recommendations to the Secretary of Corrections
regarding changes to the operation of Camino Nuevo or the New Mexico Women’s Correctional
Facility in Grants, Secretary Williams will follow those recommendations to the extent feasible.
NMCD further notes that Secretary Williams is also scheduled to attend a 36-hour NIC training
program regarding the operational practices in women’s prison. Helen Carr, NMCD’s Deputy
Director of Female Offender Services, will also be attending the NIC gender-specific training
that Secretary Williams will attend. That training will include, among other things, gender
differences as those relate to treatment, classification, programs and services. It should also be
noted that Ms. Carr has already received intensive NIC training entitled “An Agency Approach
to Gender-Specific Programming." Further, Ms. Carr’s article “A Woman-Centered Approach
for Female Offenders in New Mexico" was recently published in the August 2007 issue of
ACA’s Corrections Today Magazine. Significantly, Gender-Specific Trauma Informed Training
is already being provided to staff working with female offenders in the NMCD system.
Significantly, Peanut Butter and Jelly family services, one of the entities proposed for
membership in the task force, already has a substantial contract with NMCD to provide gender-
specific services.
Finally, according to NMCD, NIC and ACA staff interacts and collaborates with NMCD and
Camino Nuevo staff in an objective, professional manner, and again those entities are comprised
of nationally recognized correctional experts. NMCD legitimately desires to follow the
pg_0004
Senate Memorial 33 – Page
4
recommendations of the experts, NIC and ACA, not the recommendations of others who are not
experts and who tend to possess a bias against NMCD.
In support of the memorial, advocates from the New Mexico Women’s Agenda and Women’s
Justice Project indicate that:
The physical environment at Camino Nuevo suggests it is not a low security facility.
Of the 30 inmates, only 8 are in work release programs although the intent was to have
almost all of them in the program.
Even though important steps have been initiated, advocates look for collaboration and
transformation as the best means to achieve the reintegration of these
women into the
community and prevent recidivism.
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Similar to SJM 14 and duplicates bills HM 3 and HJM 10.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
According to NMCD, it should be noted that there are only about 30 females housed at Camino
Nuevo. Eight of those are in work release. The others are in addictions and educational
programming. The Memorial makes it appear as if there are hundreds of female offenders in
Camino Nuevo.
Finally, it would be a conflict of interest for Peanut Butter and Jelly family services to be on the
task force, since it provides the gender-specific programming and services that are called into
question in the Memorial.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
According to NMCD, None. The memorial is not needed. Camino is already operating as a low
security facility. NMCD is already complying with ACA national safety standards at Camino.
NMCD is also already consulting with NIC regarding gender specific programming and services
at Camino—NMCD has therefore already complied with the previous request made by the
Courts, Corrections and Justice legislative committee for NMCD to consult with NIC. NMCD is
already providing gender-specific programming or services to its female offenders through a
private vendor. NMCD will continue to work to ensure that Camino continues to help its
females successfully reintegrate into society.
PME/mt