Pugsley Correctional Facilities ( MPF ) is Michigan's minimum security jail operated by the Michigan Correction Facility Administration Administration Department (CFA), located between Kingsley, Michigan and Fife Lake 25 miles ( 40Ã, km) southeast of Traverse City in Grand Traverse County.
Pugsley Correctional Facility is located at 180 acres (0.73 km 2 ); in that area, 23 acres (93,000 m 2 ) are covered by two fences as high as 15.5 feet (4.7 m) to create a secure perimeter that holds 1,342 adult male prisoners. The facility has a public job of minimum security prisoners and tasks passing through the gates.
A security vehicle patrolling the property manned by an Armed Forces Officer twenty-four hours a day.
In May 2016, the Michigan Department of Improvement announced Pugsley would close in September in the same year as a result of the declining prison population in the state.
Video Pugsley Correctional Facility
Histori
The Pugsley Correctional Facility was named after Earl C. Pugsley, (1885-1976) from Hart, Michigan in Oceana County. He's a Republican; a lawyer; Circuit Court Judge at 27 Michigan Circuit, from 1930-1959; and candidates for Michigan State Superior Court Judges], in 1942.
Pugsley's Correctional Facility was originally opened as a "Camp Pugsley" prison camp in 1956 as part of the Prison Conservation Correctional Prison Camp Program and resident [minimum adult male security prisoners. The purpose of the Correction Prison Correction Camp is twofold. Conservation projects under the direction of the Conservation Department (now the Michigan Department of Natural Resources or DNR) need to be manned and prisoners provide a cheap and reliable source of labor.
On October 1, 1997, Camp Pugsley was placed under the jurisdiction of the Oaks Correctional Facility located in Eastlake, Michigan. The Coronation Conservation Correction Prison Camp Program, headquartered in Grass Lake, Michigan, was officially dissolved.
Camp Pugsley is expanded by building administrative buildings (containing administrative offices for prisons, safe control centers, armory, visit rooms and Health Care Units); six prison units, with 24 guest rooms open per unit to accommodate 144 prisoners; building prison programs (containing classification of prisoners, psychological services, public libraries, and law libraries; Development of Public Education, Business Education & Development classrooms, barber shop and prisoners), and food service buildings. The original camp building was converted into 150 houses [prisoners in an open barracks housing unit. The camp was converted into a Safe Level I prison and opened in January 2001 with a population of 1,014 prisoners run by Warden Ray Wolfe.
In the summer of 2005, six new home units added an additional detention per living room that increased the population of the detention units to 168 detainees, raising the total prison population to 1,158 prisoners. In the summer of 2009, six new housing units added an additional detention per living room that increased each population of the housing unit prisoners to 192 detainees, raising the total prison population to 1,302 prisoners. In the fall of 2009, the original camp building added 40 additional detainees, raising the total prison population to 1,322 prisoners.
On May 31, 2016, the Michigan Department of Improvement announced its intention to close Pugsley during the next fiscal year. They mention the age of the facility, limited capacity, and the reduction of the state prison population. Pugsley's budget for 2017 is cut accordingly. The prison is expected to close on Sept. 24, 2016.