
California on track to open revamped San Quentin rehabilitation facility in January
State of play: San Quentin State Prison — the state's most notorious correctional facility that has been home to criminals like Charles Manson and serial killer Richard Ramirez — is undergoing a $239 million renovation expected to be completed by January 2026.
Why it matters: The shift from a maximum security prison into a rehabilitation center represents a dramatic departure from long-held punitive approaches towards more humane practices that could soon make San Quentin a nationwide model for progressive prison reform.
What they're saying:"The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation is driving a once-in-a-generation transformation of California's prison system," CDCR spokesperson Terri Hardy told Axios in an email.
"The holistic initiative leverages international, data-backed best practices to improve the well-being of those who live and work at state prisons," Hardy added.
The big picture: The goal is to create a Nordic-style institution that prioritizes rehabilitation and reentry into society over punishment. The hope is that a new system can reduce recidivism rates and the inmate population.
The reintegration approach is centered around education and teaching inmates new vocational and training skills to help them pursue successful careers outside of prison and better adjust to their eventual return home.
Nearly half of California inmates released from prison in 2018 received a conviction within three years and 20% returned to prison, according to a 2023 CDCR report.
San Quentin, which currently has about 3,400 inmates, has been over capacity for years. The new reforms could bring the population down to between 2,200 and 2,600.
Zoom in: The project includes restructuring living quarters and building new community spaces such as a library, grocery store, multi-purpose gathering area and cafe — all designed to help "normalize" the environment.
The concept is rooted in recreating experiences and interactions that resemble life outside prison that would make it easier "for people to transition and adjust to life in the community upon release," according to a 2024 report from the San Quentin Transformation Advisory Council, a group of criminal justice experts appointed to guide the project.
The site will also include a new 81,000-square-foot educational facility and a technology and media hub, fit with a coding training program, podcast, TV and recording studios, mixing room and dedicated media production space.
Catch up quick: The prison renovation, which has been two years in the making, is part of a broader effort led by Gov. Gavin Newsom to change the state's criminal justice system.
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