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4/4/2017 Piint Article: Santa Ana's motto: !ails not schools <br />ORANGE COUNTY <br />MG1;r73r1FER <br />Santa Ana's motto: Jails not schools <br />By CHRISTINA FIALHO and DIANA ZUNIGA <br />2017 -04 -04 12:44:46 <br />In 2002, the City of Santa Ana changed its motto from "education first" <br />to the "spirit of change." Since then, the city has embraced the wrong <br />"spirit of change" by prioritizing iail and police expansion at the expense <br />of education. <br />Tonight, the Santa Ana City Council has the opportunity to change this <br />history by refusing to contract with a company that promotes building <br />new jails. <br />The city is considering a contract with Vanir Construction Management, <br />Inc., to conduct a "jail reuse study" of the Santa Ana City Jail. Vanir has <br />a track record of turning "jail reuse" possibilities into self- serving jail construction opportunities. <br />Vanir's "jail reuse study" for Los Angeles County resulted in five multi - billion dollar jail expansion options. <br />Vanir made no recommendations for reducing the jail population or developing alternatives to detention. In <br />fact, although the Vera Institute for Justice and the Chief Executive Office of Los Angeles County issued <br />reports with recommendations on how to lower the jail population, Vanir did not even address these <br />recommendations in its own report. Vanir's "jail reuse study" ultimately was a study on jail expansion. <br />In San Diego County, Vanir was the construction management company responsible for building the <br />Women's Detention Facility in Santee, which is nearly triple the size of the old facility. In Indio, Vanir is <br />currently at work constructing the East County Detention Center, which will add 1.273 new fail cells for <br />Riverside County. Vanir also is building the new Tuolumne County Juvenile Detention Facility to incarcerate <br />more youth. <br />Meanwhile, the city of Santa Ana is spending over $19.5 million dollars this year to arrest and incarcerate <br />youth, according to a new report from Resilience OC. Education is certainly not first in Santa Ana. Although <br />school suspensions, which directly correlate to the likelihood of a child ending up in jail or prison, were on the <br />decline in Santa Ana last year, the city has experienced declining school enrollment. <br />The children of Santa Ana are literally disappearing. This is one reason why nearly 300 Santa Ana educators <br />were handed pink slips last month, indicating potential layoffs. <br />The city of Santa Ana can do better than Vanir, but Vanir's expertise in jail expansion is perhaps exactly what <br />city officials have always wanted. <br />In January 2016, Community Initiatives for Visiting Immigrants in Confinement (CIVIC) filed a multi - individual <br />federal civil rights complaint against the Santa Ana City Jail for unlawful and degrading strip searches of <br />immigrant women. CIVIC and local advocates in Santa Ana entered into a series of meetings with the City <br />Manager's office, educating city officials on alternatives to detention and incarceration and on how other cities <br />have repurposed jails. <br />After a year of community input and discussions around repurposing the jail entirely, the city of Santa Ana <br />released a Request for Qualifications (RFQ) in December for a reuse study on the Santa Ana City Jail. The <br />reuse study was to include an evaluation of alternatives to detention and an evaluation of jail conditions. And <br />two of the three reuse proposals were supposed to be for non - punitive facilities, such as a residential building <br />or mixed -use offices. <br />http:llsvww.ocregister.cam /common /printer/ view .php' ?db= oeregistcr &id= 748451 1/2 <br />