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2,500 lock up jobs at Stockton prison hospital

State prison inmates with serious physical or mental health problems will begin arriving in mid-July

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A Correctional Officer stands outside of one of the secure housing units at the new California Correctional Health Care Facility in Stockton, Calif., Tuesday, June 25, 2013.

AP Photo/ Rich Pedroncelli

By J.N. Sbranti
Mod Bee

STOCKTON — Dignitaries and media members got their first look at California’s massive new prison hospital Tuesday, but many of its well-paid staff members have been working there for months.

Psychiatric technician Sod Kommavong commutes up from Ceres. Donna Miles drives over from Tracy. Tonya Juneau just moved to Stockton from Southern California. And R. Addison is trekking down from Jackson every day until she can find a closer place to call home.

With about 2,500 doctors, nurses, technicians and mental health personnel, plus prison guards and support staff being hired, the new California Health Care Facility is stimulating the Northern San Joaquin Valley’s economy.

State prison inmates with serious physical or mental health problems will begin arriving in mid-July. The nearly $900 million facility is expected to fill up with 1,722 patients by December.

Running the place will pump $1 billion a year into the local economy, predicted Jeffrey Beard, California’s secretary of corrections and rehabilitation.

Full story: 2,500 lock up jobs at Stockton prison hospital