ATLANTA - The Department of Corrections plans to curb the practice of subsidizing housing for employees, a 70-year-old practice originally intended to attract people to work for the prison system. <br>
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Almost 330 state employees get subsidized housing, but only 38 are wardens. Twenty-three others are not even in the prison system. <br>
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None of the tenants pays more than $100 a month in rent and no more than $95 a month in utilities. <br>
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The DOC plans to increase the charges for the first time in 20 years starting July 1. Depending on the house, tenants would face increases of $82 to $1,063 a month in rent and utilities. <br>
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The higher rents would put almost $75,000 a month into the agency's bank account. <br>
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Taxpayers will continue paying the housing expenses for the 38 wardens in the state prison system. <br>
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Corrections officials say the housing subsidies are incentive for employees to live close enough to respond quickly to emergencies, and also to offset low pay. <br>
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``The reason they built these houses was they wanted to entice people to come to work,'' Corrections Commissioner Jim Wetherington said. <br>
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Wetherington said the impact of the housing cost on the willingness of people to work for corrections no longer is as important. <br>
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``I have compassion for them,'' Wetherington said. ``But it's something I think is fair. It's going to be tough on some of them, but there are lots of Department of Corrections employees who don't have the benefit of housing.'' <br>
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DOC spokesman Scott Stallings said the starting salary for secretaries is about $18,000 and for correctional officers about $23,000. But, Stallings said, it usually takes several years for an employee to get a state-subsidized house, and by that time they may be making about $30,000 a year. <br>
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The list of tenants is dominated by correctional officers but includes secretaries, clerks, a chaplain and a carpenter. The 23 who don't work for the agency include employees of the Georgia State Patrol, the Parole Board and the Medical College of Georgia. <br>
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If they are approved, a secretary at the northeast Georgia prison at Alto will see her monthly rent and utility expenses go from $160 to $851.51 A radiology technician from the Medical College of Georgia, living in a four-bedroom, three-bath house at the Georgia State Prison at Reidsville, will see her monthly charges for rent and utilities increase from $195 to $942.07. <br>
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Those renting just a room will continue to have utilities free, but tenants at state-owned houses will face increases in utility charges. <br>
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The rate increases must be approved by the Corrections Board at its monthly meeting Thursday or its meeting in May.
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