Our Site
logo

  News

Archives Archives
Archives News & Sports
Classifieds Classifieds
Editorials Editorials
Editorials Columns
Obituaries Obituaries
AP Videos Video Center

  Top Jobs


  Extras

Blog Traveler Blogs
Com. Blogs Community Blogs
Com. Calendar Community Calendar
Com. Calendar Data Center
Progress Front Page
Gallery Photo Gallery



  Special Sections

Arkalalah Sanderholm
Arkalalah Arkalalah 2008
Arkalalah Arkalalah 2007
Arkalalah Arkalalah 2006
Arkalalah Arkalalah 2005
Progress Progress 2007
Progress Progress 2006
Progress Progress 2005

  Sports

ACHS ACHS Sports
Cowley Sports Cowley Sports
Cowley Sports Wichita State Sports
K-State Sports K-State Sports
KU Sports KU Sports
OU Sports OU Sports
OSU Sports OSU Sports

  Site Info

About Us About Us
Archives Advertising
Classifieds Subscribe
-
  USA Weekend



 
Google
WWW arkcity.net
Web posted Wednesday, July 26, 2006


Plant will employ inmates

By FOSS FARRAR
Traveler Staff Writer

A new industry in Arkansas City that is hiring minimum-security inmates from the Kansas Correctional system opened its plant today to community leaders.

The Northern Contours plant is located just east of the Creekstone Farms Premium Beef facility. It produces kitchen cabinet components and furniture components and will eventually have 60 to 75 employees, company officials said at a reception, ribbon-cutting and plant tour this morning.

Floor workers will be hired from among minimum-security inmates who live at the Winfield Correctional Facility. Supervisors and office personnel will be hired from the community at large, company officials said.

"We are not under production yet," said Ken Pharr, president and chief operating officer of Northern Contours, which is based in Minnesota. The company has plants in that state and in Kentucky.

Northern Contours picked Kansas for another plant as part of a company expansion, said Jim Moe, chief financial officer. "We selected Kansas because that allows us to serve our current customers in Kansas and Texas."

This is the company's first experience using inmate labor, Moe said. "We spent a lot of time talking with people who have worked with inmate labor throughout the state; they have had 25 years' experience."

The program is designed for those inmates close to returning to society, generally within two years of finishing their terms, who are considered low risk to others and to themselves, he said.

Plant manager Mickey Roark, a Winfield native, said he is undergoing a security training program for supervisors of inmate labor. He will pick up the inmates employed by the company from the Winfield facility each morning and return them each night.

"Every (plant) supervisor attends classes on handling inmates," he said. "We pick them up. I have lunch with them, and I personally take them back to the Winfield facility."

Every 15 minutes during the work day a check is made of all employees. "But really, every minute we know where everybody is, because our process is so driven by flow," Roark said.

Tom Vohs, deputy director of Kansas Correctional Industries, a part of the state Department of Corrections, said inmate labor programs for minimum-security inmates have worked well at various Kansas communities, including Leavenworth, Lansing, Topeka, and Salina.

"There have been no incidents with the inmates in the past six years I've worked in this position," he said.




  Breaking News

Forum

  Advertisers


  Weather

  Online Forum

Forumn Traveler Talk

  Opinion Poll

Passenger Rail
Do you favor using tax dollars to bring passenger rail service through Arkansas City? Find out more from The Northern Flyer Alliance.


  Join E-news
Newsletter Signup
The Traveler Online



All Contents ©Copyright The Ark City Traveler
Comments or questions? Contact the webmaster.
Add Arkcity.net to your favorites