Location | Moorak, South Australia |
---|---|
Security class | Principally medium and low security male sentenced prisoners; can also accommodate short-term high security males and females. |
Capacity | 653 |
Opened | 1995 |
Managed by | G4S [1] |
Mount Gambier Prison is an Australian prison located in Moorak immediately south of Mount Gambier. It is managed and operated by G4S. [2]
The prison accommodates medium and low security male sentenced and remand prisoners. Short-term high security male and female prisoners can also be accommodated when required. [3] Accommodation includes: a traditional cell block arrangement, shared living cottages, semi-independent living cottages, an induction area that houses new prisoners, and a small allocation of high-security cells.
Mount Gambier Prison provides a full range of prisoner services, including all medical, education, facilities management, equipment and grounds preventative maintenance services ‘in house’, using locally employed staff and sub-contractors. Consistent with other prisons in South Australia, prisoners are placed on incentive-based regimes that provide varying levels of privileges based on behaviour.
Prisoners are engaged in a range of work programs including grounds and building maintenance, cleaning, laundry and kitchen work. The prison also has a large timber furniture manufacturing workshop that produces bedroom and living room furniture for dispatch directly to retail outlets in South Australia.
Education and program activities focus on numeracy and literacy skills and cognitive skills programs are aimed at high risk offenders. [4] In 1998, prisoners under the instructions of a local builder constructed an education centre within the prison. The work was also attached to a vocational course. This resulted in prisoners learning new skills and obtaining TAFE certificates to assist them upon their release.
A strong partnership exists between Lifeline South East and the prison. This relationship began in mid-1995 with Lifeline's involvement in suicide awareness training for new prison staff. In 2010, the prisoner listener program, which aims to reduce suicides at the prison, gained a national award. [5]
In March 2009, an expansion of the prison was announced. [6] With a project budget of $22.9m, it will be the first South Australian prison to employ the cheaper and faster modular construction method using shipping containers. The cell block is constructed as a single storey facility designed around two wings of 54 beds (total of 108 beds) with a central officers station to supervise both wings. Each wing has a central external exercise yard. A new kitchen will also be built and the prison perimeter will be extended. [7]
In April 2001, a single prisoner became the first to escape the facility by climbing two razor-wire-topped fences. [13] This is the only escape from within the confines of the prison as of June 2022.
In July 2004, the South Australian Coroner was critical of cell design, Group 4 and Department of Correctional Services staff following the death of a prisoner. [14]
In March 2009, Chief executive of the Department of Correctional Services Peter Severin said that since the Mount Gambier Prison was opened in [1995], it has been a stable facility with "very few" incidents. [6]
G4S is a British multinational private security company headquartered in London, England. The company was set up in July 2004 when London-based Securicor amalgamated with Danish firm Group 4 Falck. The company offers a range of services, including the supply of security personnel, monitoring equipment, response units and secure prisoner transportation. G4S also works with governments overseas to deliver security services.
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An Inquest taken on behalf of our Sovereign Lady the Queen at Mount Gambier in the State of South Australia, on the 12th and 13th days of July 2004 and in Adelaide on the 6th day of August 2004, before Wayne Cromwell Chivell, a Coroner for the said State, concerning the death of Troy Phillip Turner