No Completion Date in Sight Yet for Fort Madison Prison

The state’s top prison official says legal action is likely against the designers blamed for months of delays in opening a new state prison.

Iowa Department of Corrections Director John Baldwin says he still can’t say when the new Iowa State Penitentiary in Fort Madison will open. The facility’s smoke system needs certification. Baldwin says once the project is complete, it will be up to the attorney general to decide whether to seek compensation for the design flaws.

The cost of fixing the geothermal system and other problems may reach five-million dollars ($5 million), according to Baldwin. The new prison was supposed to be up and running back in March. In the meantime, the Department of Corrections is staffing security officers at the new facility so they’re, in effect, running two prisons.

Around 550 of the state’s toughest criminals are housed in the old Iowa State Pen, originally built in 1839. The new $130 million prison has room for 800 inmates. Baldwin updated progress on the prison at a budget hearing for the Department of Corrections.