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Money for prison projects approved

University system also lands funding

CARSON CITY -- Prison beds will take a big chunk of an $804 million capital construction program approved by the Legislature's two money committees Thursday.

The construction budget includes six prison projects costing $285 million, 35 percent of the total.


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  • But higher education made out well too, receiving about $99 million to complete several projects already under way and another $90 million for several projects for the Health Sciences System spread out over different campuses.

    The Health Sciences System projects, designed to boost Nevada's pool of nurses and physicians and expand the medical school specializations, require a 30 percent match from other university funds, including donations, to advance.

    The money allocated to the Nevada System of Higher Education would finish the science, engineering and technology building at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, at a cost of $21 million, and the Greenspun College of Urban Affairs, also at UNLV, at a cost of $19.4 million, among other projects.

    Executive Vice Chancellor Dan Klaich said the system did well, given the limited amount of money available this session for projects outside of corrections.

    "In a perfect world, we would have really liked to have gotten more planning money for system projects," he said.

    The Department of Corrections' allocation included $66.2 million for an expansion of the Southern Nevada Women's Correctional Center, $53.1 million for the fifth phase of the High Desert State Prison and $56.8 million for an expansion of the Indian Springs Conservation Camp.

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    john lindsay wrote on July 18, 2009 10:24 AM: with the prison system they done wasted 8.3 million on one project that didnt work ....but they didnt try the right idea, we have their answer but cannot get intouch with them. We are bioenergy co. and we can make their system work just fine, heating the prisons its simple and its fully operational right now, but no one calls us back, so why spend money on things that never worked. Its stupid not to see our unit, but then why not just spend more money untill we go broke and then get more help to start over again to see what went wrong, catch 22 no thats 44 Thanks John Lindsay P.S. we can save 5 million a year but I do need a call first


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    Teresa wrote on June 01, 2007 01:27 PM: 13,000 inmates get 100 MILLION dollars MORE then 426,391 students in Nevada... Where are our priorities?