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Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 33°58′34″N 118°03′04″W / 33.975974°N 118.050982°W / 33.975974; -118.050982
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History: expanded
Sale: Historic site may be protected
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In 2006, the City Council lost a bid for the now-closed Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility. The city and the state disagreed on the price of the Nelles property and the state put it up for bid, eventually selecting Meruelo Maddux Properties of Los Angeles. However, before the company could purchase the property, the State of California unlisted the property and it was designated as one of a handful of potential sites for a new men's [[prison]]. Plans for this were part of Governor [[Arnold Schwarzenegger]]'s master plan to build more prisons across California. Then, Robert Sillen, the former federal receiver in charge of prison health care, placed Nelles on a list of seven sites that could be used for a new regional or mental health prison hospital. Some of the impressive and historical buildings at the former school site may be demolished to make way for development of the 73.8-acre, state-owned property.
In 2006, the City Council lost a bid for the now-closed Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility. The city and the state disagreed on the price of the Nelles property and the state put it up for bid, eventually selecting Meruelo Maddux Properties of Los Angeles. However, before the company could purchase the property, the State of California unlisted the property and it was designated as one of a handful of potential sites for a new men's [[prison]]. Plans for this were part of Governor [[Arnold Schwarzenegger]]'s master plan to build more prisons across California. Then, Robert Sillen, the former federal receiver in charge of prison health care, placed Nelles on a list of seven sites that could be used for a new regional or mental health prison hospital. Some of the impressive and historical buildings at the former school site may be demolished to make way for development of the 73.8-acre, state-owned property.


==Sale==
==Sale contested==
Today, Whittier is a fully matured community of homes and businesses and the Fred C. Nelles facility occupies an area on Whittier Blvd. in the middle of town. The possibility of Nelles returning as a prison came to life in the form of Assembly Bill 5 and Senate Bill 2. You can read more about AB 5 and SB 2 in a recent Orange County Register article at OC Register: AB 5 and SB 2.<ref name="full"/>
Today, Whittier is a fully matured community of homes and businesses and the Fred C. Nelles facility occupies an area on Whittier Blvd. in the middle of town. The possibility of Nelles returning as a prison came to life in the form of Assembly Bill 5 and Senate Bill 2. You can read more about AB 5 and SB 2 in a recent Orange County Register article at OC Register: AB 5 and SB 2.<ref name="full"/>


The Fred C. Nelles facility occupies an area on Whittier Blvd. in the middle of town. Residents were thrilled when they were told that Nelles was closing and the property would be developed into commercial and retail property. <ref name="full"/>
The Fred C. Nelles facility occupies an area on Whittier Blvd. in the middle of town. Residents were thrilled when they were told that Nelles was closing and the property would be developed into commercial and retail property. <ref name="full"/>


The new receiver Clark Kelso released the 73-acre property for sale. The state Department of General Services accepted bids to purchase the property in November, 2009. Brookfield Homes, a national developer, has been selected to develop the property. Negotiations must be completed before a final deal will go to the California State Public Works Board for approval.
The receiver Clark Kelso released the 73-acre property for sale. The state Department of General Services accepted bids to purchase the property in November, 2009. Brookfield Homes, a national developer, has been selected to develop the property. Negotiations must be completed before a final deal will go to the California State Public Works Board for approval.

According to the San Gabriel Valley Tribune on 4/25/2010, historical protection and high-priced development could be on a collision course when it comes to developing the now-closed 119-year-old Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility. The 73.8-acre Nelles property as a whole has been listed as a state historical landmark. In addition, eight of its buildings may qualify for listing as a national landmark. The administration building was constructed in 1928-29 and is one of two buildings the state says must be preserved. <ref>http://sgvtribune.mycapture.com/mycapture/folder.asp?event=987694&CategoryID=27239</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 12:59, 25 September 2010


Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility
Map
LocationWhittier, California
Coordinates33°58′34″N 118°03′04″W / 33.975974°N 118.050982°W / 33.975974; -118.050982
StatusClosed
Opened1891 (1891)
Closed2004 (2004)
Former nameWhittier State School
Nelles School for Boys

For over a century, Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility was a highly visible youth prison (CYA)located on the major throughfare, in Whittier, California, Whittier Blvd. Its almost 74 overgrown acres in Whittier was home to wayward California youth until it went bankrupt in 2004 [1] It was the oldest juvenile facility in the state, first opened in 1890 as the Reform School for Juvenile Offenders. In 1941, the institution was renamed to honor Fred C. Nelles, superintendent of the school from 1912 to 1927.[2] It was closed down and abandoned in 2004.

History

The facility opened in the late 19th Century when Whittier was only a small community with spacious open land, [3]as a reform school for boys and girls. Its original name was the Whittier State School. At one time it had children as young as 8 years old there, because they had no place else to go.." At the time that Nelles was built there was plenty of land, wide open spaces, and the the prospect of a juvenile correction facility on the outskirts of town posed little threat to the community.[3] In the early 20th century, the State School had some of the best manual training and music programs in the state, and was a perennial football rival of Whittier High School, but every time someone broke out, all the Whittier schools would be notified.[4] In 1990 , five guards were fired for allegedly beating up several prisoners in their cells at the Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility [5]

In June 2004, the California Youth Authority, now part of California Department of Corrections, closed Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility in Whittier (11850 East Whittier Blvd.) In 1941, this 114 year old juvenile facility , the was renamed to honor Fred C. Nelles, superintendent of the school from 1912 to 1927. Averaging a daily population of 439 wards in its later years, the facility once housed nearly 1000 juveniles. The last young man left the facility on May 27, 2004.[2]

Reform school

The term "reform school" itself, originally intended as destigmatizing, had developed its own stigma, but developed a stigma of its own. Today, no state openly or officially refers to its juvenile correctional institutions as "reform schools", although such institutions still exist. The attempt has also been made to reduce the population of such institutions to the maximum extent possible, and to leave all but the most incorrigible youths in a home setting. In an attempt to make the incarceration conform to more sociological and sociocultural norms, and in response to the rising number of young female offenders, many such institutions have been made coeducational.

Confidential management review audit 2002

  • low efficiency rating for the provision of education services.
  • The goal of achieving accreditation has not yet been achieved.
  • Promptly fill teaching vacancies, esp.those in academic and special ed.
  • Recruit more substitute teacher so that classes are not cancelled.
  • Physical inventory of the armory
  • Perimeter fences have neither been repaired or replaced. Fence alarm being set of by foliage

To be continued

Campus

Averaging a daily population of 439 wards in its later years, the facility once housed nearly 1,000 wards. The last ward left the facility on May 27, 2004.[2]

Whittier College faculty, staffers tour Nelles - Whittier Daily News

Many people in our community have a lot of curiosity about Nelles, and its wall of trees and fences." "They drive by it multiple times a day, and have, most of their lives." a local resident said. "People are really curious to see what's behind the fence. They want to understand it more." Johanna Perez, a Whittier College librarian, recalls her parents threatening to send her to Nelles if she wasn't good, described the place as "surreal." [4]

There are the superintendent's residence, the Catholic and Protestant chapels, and a gymnasium. When you went into the dormitory - Roosevelt Hall - you saw the lack of privacy, she said. In fact, you had to earn a private cell.[4]

Inmate

Sanford Clark was never tried for murder, because the Assistant District Attorney, Loyal C. Kelley, believed very strongly that Sanford was innocent,[34] a victim of Gordon's death threats and sexual abuse, and that he was not a willing participant in the crimes, nor was he a criminal. Mr. Kelley told Sanford that he had "secured an entirely unique settlement to Sanford's legal situation by having Sanford signed into the nearby Whittier Boys School, where an experimental program for delinquent youths was under way. Mr. Kelley assured Sanford that Whittier Boys School was unique because of its compassionate mission of genuine rehabilitation".[35] Sanford was sentenced to five years at the Whittier State School (later renamed the Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility). His sentence was later commuted to 23 months, because the trustees of the Whittier School for Boys felt that "Sanford had impressed the Trustees with his temperament, job skills and his personal desire to live a productive life during his nearly two years there." ( Amazon)

LEAD boot camps

September 1992 Boot Camp Experience 2 60 bed living units Resource: Prevention and Control of Juvenile Delinquenc… (Paperback) by Richard J. Lundman $39.95

LEAD, a boot camp and intensive parole program: An implementation and process evaluation of the first year at the Fred C. Nelles School by Teresa M Isorena (Unknown Binding - 1995) Out of Print—Limited Availability

LEAD: A boot camp and intensive parole program an impact evaluation : preliminary findings by Jean Bottcher (Unknown Binding - 1995) Examining the Effectiveness of Boot Camps: A Randomized Experiment with a Long-Term Follow Up

  • 1. Jean Bottcher1 and. Michael E. Ezell2

+ Author Affiliations

  • 1.

Department of Criminal Justice at Western Oregon University, bottcherj@wou.edu

  • 2.

Department of Sociology at Vanderbilt University

Abstract

The boot camp model became a correctional panacea for juvenile offenders during the early 1990s, promising the best of both worlds—less recidivism and lower operating costs. Although there have been numerous studies of boot camp programs since that time, most have relied on nonrandomized comparison groups. The California Youth Authority’s (CYA’s) experimental study of its juvenile boot camp and intensive parole program (called LEAD)—versus standard custody and parole—was an important exception, but its legislatively mandated in-house evaluation was prepared before complete outcome data were available. The present study capitalizes on full and relatively long-term follow-up arrest data for the LEAD evaluation provided by the California Department of Justice in August 2002. Using both survival models and negative binomial regression models, the results indicate that there were no significant differences between groups in terms of time to first arrest or average arrest frequency. [1] full text

LEAD: A boot camp and intensive parole program an impact evaluation : preliminary findings by Jean Bottcher (Unknown Binding - 1995)

Investigation

The Whittier Daily News newspaper has reported that State Senator Gloria Romero stated on July 6, 2007 that she has requested the CYA to investigate claims that bodies of 28 deceased wards are buried at the former Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility. The Senator stated she received an anonymous letter from a person who claimed that he or she worked at the CYA. Nelles remained open for 113 years until budget cuts shut it down in 2004. The burials reportedly took place up to the 1930s.[6]

Behind the fence

Currently the location is used as a backlot for television and motion picture filming. Due to a federal court ruling, the federal government has taken over the issue of whether a prison will be built at Nelles. It has yet to make a decision. The federal government is considering whether to construct an inmate medical facility on the site of Nelles due to the inadequate healthcare provided to prison inmates in California.[7] The television show, "The Othersiders," [8] visited the facility and The gang investigated a facility that used to house troubled youths. In the end, the Othersiders unanimously agree that the Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility is haunted.[9] Reportedly, you can hear girls laughing in the chapel and ghostly bangs in the gym and garage. A recent visitor said that "I know every street here in Whittier and now I've come to a whole new area. It feels like I'm not in Whittier, like I've been transported to another state or another area in the country."[4] Blow - Film starring Johnny Depp and Penelope Cruz. Scenes were filmed at the Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility, Exteriors of a state execution facility were filmed at the Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility, the facility name being clearly shown in multiple shots.

  • "Prison Break" is still filming at the Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility

In Fiction:The Apocalypse Stone by Pete Earley (Hardcover - Jun 13, 2006) 14 new from $4.90 26 used from $0.01 Other Editions: Hardcover, Mass Market Paperback, Paperback Excerpt - page 239: "... Nelles Youth Correctional Facility in Whittier. That's where he became pals with our witness, ..."

This ad is still currently posted on the internet: Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility Make a Difference in the Life of a Child

The Foster Grandparent Program offers seniors age 60 and older opportunities to serve as mentors, tutors, and loving caregivers for children and youth with special needs. If you are interested in serving as a Foster Grandparent, you must meet income eligibility guidelines, and you will receive a modest, tax-free stipend to offset the cost of volunteering. Foster Grandparents serve 20 hours a week, usually 4 hours a day Monday through Friday, serving children with one-on-one, direct service. Other benefits include reimbursement for transportation, some meals during service, an annual physical, and accident and liability insurance while on duty. Pre-Service and monthly training sessions provided. [2]

Land controversy

In 2006, the City Council lost a bid for the now-closed Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility. The city and the state disagreed on the price of the Nelles property and the state put it up for bid, eventually selecting Meruelo Maddux Properties of Los Angeles. However, before the company could purchase the property, the State of California unlisted the property and it was designated as one of a handful of potential sites for a new men's prison. Plans for this were part of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger's master plan to build more prisons across California. Then, Robert Sillen, the former federal receiver in charge of prison health care, placed Nelles on a list of seven sites that could be used for a new regional or mental health prison hospital. Some of the impressive and historical buildings at the former school site may be demolished to make way for development of the 73.8-acre, state-owned property.

Sale contested

Today, Whittier is a fully matured community of homes and businesses and the Fred C. Nelles facility occupies an area on Whittier Blvd. in the middle of town. The possibility of Nelles returning as a prison came to life in the form of Assembly Bill 5 and Senate Bill 2. You can read more about AB 5 and SB 2 in a recent Orange County Register article at OC Register: AB 5 and SB 2.[3]

The Fred C. Nelles facility occupies an area on Whittier Blvd. in the middle of town. Residents were thrilled when they were told that Nelles was closing and the property would be developed into commercial and retail property. [3]

The receiver Clark Kelso released the 73-acre property for sale. The state Department of General Services accepted bids to purchase the property in November, 2009. Brookfield Homes, a national developer, has been selected to develop the property. Negotiations must be completed before a final deal will go to the California State Public Works Board for approval.

According to the San Gabriel Valley Tribune on 4/25/2010, historical protection and high-priced development could be on a collision course when it comes to developing the now-closed 119-year-old Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility. The 73.8-acre Nelles property as a whole has been listed as a state historical landmark. In addition, eight of its buildings may qualify for listing as a national landmark. The administration building was constructed in 1928-29 and is one of two buildings the state says must be preserved. [10]

References

Sources

Miroslava Chavez-Garcia, an associate professor at UC Davis, has written a book about ethnicity and the effect on juvenile inmates in the state corrections system from the 1890s to the 1940s. In particular, the book focuses on Nelles.

Read more: Glimpse behind the fence: Whittier College faculty, staffers tour Nelles - Whittier Daily News http://www.whittierdailynews.com/ci_16138356#ixzz10NVYf13q