Prison goes green to save

MONROE — The push mowers rolled back and forth across a green lawn at the Monroe Correctional Complex.

Tony Turner, serving time for assault and hit and run, was behind one.

His face was beaded with sweat by late Monday morning.

“It’s a good arm and leg workout,” said Turner, 28.

Prison officials are realizing it’s also a good way to save money.

The Monroe prison is joining a growing list of state prisons that are trimming their budgets with environmentally sound practices. The push mowers, for instance, cut gas consumption in Monroe by about 100 gallons a month.

“That’s the advantage when you’ve got time,” Monroe prison superintendent Scott Frakes said. “No use in going high-tech.”

Environmentally sound programs aren’t new to prisons. Neither are tight budgets. Both are increasingly commonplace, however.

The state wants to cut 1,580 beds from the prison system, potentially saving $65 million over four years.

The Monroe prison — the state’s largest, with an annual budget of $106 million — escaped deep cuts last year, but still needs to operate under tight conditions.

“We have no reason to think that we won’t have to do some more budget reducing this year and possibly next,” Frakes said. “The need for efficiencies is going to touch every single thing we do.”

That’s where environmentally sound practices enter the picture.

Admittedly, some of those have been in place for years. Recycling started in Monroe in 1997, for instance. Other projects are newer, such as one where inmates receive old mattresses, break them down into components — metal, stuffing — and ship everything they can out to be recycled.

The state doesn’t know how much money it can save by expanding programs such as composting and gardening throughout the prison system.

Because it’s the state’s largest facility, Monroe can help tease out those numbers.

“You just apply it all on a much grander scale,” said Dan Pacholke, deputy director of prisons for the state.

Take the compost program. It began in 2004 at Cedar Creek Corrections Center, a 500-person minimum security work camp outside Olympia.

Monroe launched its own carefully monitored program in June. By the end of the year, it saved $43,000 on waste bills. The program has redirected 1.08 million pounds of food and trash away from landfills. That compost may wind up in stores and, eventually, neighborhood gardens.

While budget pressures are a driving force behind the programs, the new initiatives have advantages beyond the bottom line.

For example, those push mowers make prison a bit safer. They keep inmates away from gasoline, which can be used as a weapon, drug or bartering item.

“All kinds of undesirable things,” Frakes said.

The jobs also act as a reward, improving discipline. Anecdotal evidence suggests inmates are less likely to break rules when they know they could lose a job they enjoy, prison officials said.

That certainly seems to be the case with Rory Brown, 47, who will be in prison until 2034 for rape, burglary and robbery.

Brown works in the gardens, which are new to Monroe this year. The work keeps him out of trouble. It makes him feel good. He knows the tomatoes he grows will wind up in his own meals, and the flowers may stock a garden bed outside the prison walls.

He was in a greenhouse on Monday, tending to flowers — impatiens.

“We’re all excited because they’ve bloomed,” he said. “We’re like a bunch of old ladies.”

Andy Rathbun: 425-339-3455; arathbun@heraldnet.com.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Local News

Vehicles travel along Mukilteo Speedway on Sunday, April 21, 2024, in Mukilteo, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Mukilteo cameras go live to curb speeding on Speedway

Starting Friday, an automated traffic camera system will cover four blocks of Mukilteo Speedway. A 30-day warning period is in place.

Carli Brockman lets her daughter Carli, 2, help push her ballot into the ballot drop box on the Snohomish County Campus on Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Here’s who filed for the primary election in Snohomish County

Positions with three or more candidates will go to voters Aug. 5 to determine final contenders for the Nov. 4 general election.

Students from Explorer Middle School gather Wednesday around a makeshift memorial for Emiliano “Emi” Munoz, who died Monday, May 5, after an electric bicycle accident in south Everett. (Aspen Anderson / The Herald)
Community and classmates mourn death of 13-year-old in bicycle accident

Emiliano “Emi” Munoz died from his injuries three days after colliding with a braided cable.

Danny Burgess, left, and Sandy Weakland, right, carefully pull out benthic organisms from sediment samples on Thursday, May 1, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
‘Got Mud?’ Researchers monitor the health of the Puget Sound

For the next few weeks, the state’s marine monitoring team will collect sediment and organism samples across Puget Sound

Everett postal workers gather for a portrait to advertise the Stamp Out Hunger Food Drive on Wednesday, May 7, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Snohomish County letter carriers prepare for food drive this Saturday

The largest single-day food drive in the country comes at an uncertain time for federal food bank funding.

Everett
Everett considers ordinance to require more apprentice labor

It would require apprentices to work 15% of the total labor hours for construction or renovation on most city projects over $1 million.

Clothing Optional performs at the Fisherman's Village Music Festival on Thursday, May 15 in Everett, Washington. (Will Geschke / The Herald)
Everett gets its fill of music at Fisherman’s Village

The annual downtown music festival began Thursday and will continue until the early hours of Sunday.

Women hold a banner with pictures of victims of one of the Boeing Max 8 crashes at a hearing where Captain Chesley B. “Sully” Sullenberger III testified at the Rayburn House Building on June 19, 2019, in Washington, D.C. (Katherine Frey/The Washington Post)
DOJ plans to drop Boeing prosecution in 737 crashes

Families of the crash victims were stunned by the news, lawyers say.

First responders extinguish a fire on a Community Transit bus on Friday, May 16, 2025 in Snohomish, Washington (Snohomish County Fire District 4)
Community Transit bus catches fire in Snohomish

Firefighters extinguished the flames that engulfed the front of the diesel bus. Nobody was injured.

Signs hang on the outside of the Early Learning Center on the Everett Community College campus on Wednesday, Dec. 1, 2021 in Everett, Wa. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Everett Community College to close Early Learning Center

The center provides early education to more than 70 children. The college had previously planned to close the school in 2021.

Northshore school board selects next superintendent

Justin Irish currently serves as superintendent of Anacortes School District. He’ll begin at Northshore on July 1.

Auston James / Village Theatre
“Jersey Boys” plays at Village Theatre in Everett through May 25.
A&E Calendar for May 15

Send calendar submissions for print and online to features@heraldnet.com. To ensure your… Continue reading

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.