Oregon Department of Corrections
The Oregon Department of Corrections is the agency of the U.S. state of Oregon charged with managing a system of 14 state prisons since its creation by the state legislature in 1987. In addition to having custody of offenders sentenced to prison for more than 12 months, the agency provides program evaluation, oversight and funding for the community corrections activities of county governments. It is also responsible for interstate compact administration, jail inspections, and central information and data services regarding felons throughout the state. It has its headquarters in Salem.
Institutions and Community Corrections Offices
The Oregon Department of Corrections operates 16 facilities across the state, with the Oregon State Penitentiary being the only Maximum Security facility.- Coffee Creek Correctional Facility
- Columbia River Correctional Institution
- Deer Ridge Correctional Institution
- Douglas County Community Corrections
- Eastern Oregon Correctional Institution
- Linn County Community Corrections
- Mill Creek Correctional Facility
- Oregon State Correctional Institution
- Oregon State Penitentiary
- Powder River Correctional Facility
- Santiam Correctional Institution
- Shutter Creek Correctional Institution
- Snake River Correctional Institution
- South Fork Forest Camp
- Two Rivers Correctional Institution
- Warner Creek Correctional Facility
Oregon Department of Corrections Agency History
In 1929 Mill Creek Correctional Facility was converted from a state training school to a minimum security prison. This facility is entirely self funded and uses prison labor to produce food for their facility and other ODOC institutions. Eastern Oregon Correctional Institution was opened in Pendleton in 1985 in the form Eastern Oregon Hospital and Training center and as a minimum security prison places significance on rehabilitation. However, Oregon Department of Corrections was not called the Oregon Department of Corrections until 1987 in which its name changed from "Corrections Division". Oregon Women's Corerectional Center opened in 1965, became autonomous in 1972, and was recommissioned in 2002.
Santiam Correctional Institution was opened in 1977 in Salem as minimum security facility. Powder River Correctional Institution was opened in Baker City in 1989. Shutter Creek Correctional Institution was previously an Air National Guard Radar Station in North Bend and was converted to a minimum security labor camp in 1990. Snake River Correctional Facility was opened in 1991. South Fork Forest Camp has used inmate labor to combat forest fires and to assist the State Forestry Department in its reforestation program. Two Rivers Correctional Facility's construction was complete in March of 200; however, ODOC began housing inmates in December 1999. Coffee Creek's minimum security institution was opened in October 2001 and the medium security facility was opened in April 2002. Coffee Creek Correctional Facility comprises Oregon Corrections Intake Center for men and women; in addition, to the states only full service women's prison. Warner Creek Correctional Facility opened in September 2005 and houses 400 inmates. Construction for the institution was delayed in 2001 due to lack of funding and continued in 2003 after funding was allocated. Finally, the states newest prison, Deer Ridge Correctional Institution, was established in 2007.
Organization
Office of the DirectorColette S. Peters, Director
The Office of the Director oversees all ODOC divisions while divisions have their own units within them.
Division and units
- Administrative Services
- Community Corrections
- Human Resources
- Operations
Oregon Probation Population Demographics
- Asian: 160
- Black: 972
- Hispanic: 931
- Native American:218
- White: 12,427
- Pacific Islander: 18
- Total: 14,726
- Women:4,298
- Men: 10,476
- Total: 14,774
- 17 and Under:12
- 18-24: 2,218
- 25-30: 3,331
- 31-45: 5,944
- 46-60: 2,687
- 61 and Older: 582
- Total: 14,774
Oregon Prison/Jail Population Demographics
- Whites make up 78% of Oregon's state population they consist of 69% of Oregon's prison/jail population.
- Latinos account for 12% of Oregon's state population and 16% of Oregon's prison/jail population.
- Blacks make-up 2% of Oregon's state population and 10% of Oregon's prison/jail population.
- American Indians and/or Native Americans are 1% of the Oregon state population and make-up 3% of Oregon's prison/jail population.
Sex:
- Women account for 1,211 of inmates in the Oregon prison population and make up 50.4% of the Oregon state population.
- Men account for 13,512 of inmates in Oregon's prison population and make up 49.6% of the Oregon state population.
- 17 and under:0
- 18-24: 1,267
- 25-30: 2,811
- 31-45: 6,253
- 46-60: 3,556
- 61 and older: 1,036
- Total: 14,923
Oregon Death Penalty
Male death row inmates are held at Oregon State Penitentiary. Women on death row are held at Coffee Creek Correctional Facility until shortly before their execution. The execution chamber is at Oregon State Penitentiary. The Oregon Statute States:"The punishment of death shall be inflicted by the intravenous administration of a lethal quantity of an ultra-short-acting barbiturate in combination with a chemical paralytic agent and potassium chloride or other equally effective substances sufficient to cause death." The chemicals used to inflict death are Pentobarbital which induces unconsciousness, Pancuronium Bromide which stops breathing, and Potassium Chloride which stops the heart from beating.
As of January 1, 2019 there are 30 inmates on death row.
Effective 2020, while there will still be inmates with death sentences, the death row itself will dissolve as an entity.
Private prisons
The state of Oregon does not use private prisons, and as of 2001 outlawed its former practice of exporting state prisoners to other states.An effort in 1996 had about 12% of Oregon's prisoner population exported to private facilities run by Corrections Corporation of America in Texas and Arizona. The experiment ended after escapes, sexual contact between guards and inmates at Central Arizona Detention Center, and a controversy related to CCA's housing of 240 Oregon sex offenders in a private facility near Houston Intercontinental Airport. Local authorities were only notified of their presence after two had escaped.
Fallen officers
Since the establishment of the Oregon Department of Corrections in 1987, ten officers have died in the line of duty.Women At [Coffee Creek Correctional Facility] (CCCF)
The Real Cost of Prisons project highlights that 78% of women in prison in the United States have survived physical or sexual abuse. Additionally, that when who have a history of abuse or neglect as children have a 77% high rate of arrest than that of women who were not abused. Surveys conducted by Portland State University of two-hundred women at Coffee Creek Correctional Facility also report display that many of the women in their facility have also survived domestic violence and childhood trauma. Of the two hundred women surveyed, 68% of the women who were in relationships when imprisoned, report that they faced physical, mental, and emotional intimate partner violence. In addition, in regard to childhood abuse and trauma 80% of women reported being emotionally abused, almost 70% reported being physically abused, and report being sexually abused.However, sexual abuse does not end while women are incarcerated. Sexual abuse and rape is not only occurring at Coffee Creek Correctional, but it being ignored by prison staff and those who report it are reprimanded, in accordance to a series of multi-million dollar lawsuits filed against the Oregon Department of Corrections. The Oregon Department of Corrections are being sued by five current and former inmates of CCFI for allegations of rape, groping, assault, and molestation at the hands of a nurse in the medical unit, Tony Klein. Oregon State Police investigation found that Klein had been reported by 11 inmates for some type of sexual contact and was not charged due to accounts being "unreliable". Tony Kleins nursing license with Oregon State Board of Nursing remains active.