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Newtown Meets The New Warden
BY ANDREW GOROSKO
Garner Correctional Institution Warden Giovanny Gomez met with members of the
Newtown Public Safety Committee Monday and assured them he plans to maintain
positive relations between the town and the state's high-security prison on
Nunnawauk Road.
Prison officials will do whatever is necessary to continue a positive
relationship with the town, Warden Gomez said.
Warden Gomez and several of his lieutenants met with town representatives on
the safety committee at Town Hall South. The location of the quarterly public
safety committee meetings alternates between Town Hall South and Garner.
Warden Gomez, 43, began work as Garner's warden February 1. He replaced former
Garner warden Remi Acosta whom the DOC has assigned as warden of the New Haven
Correctional Center. Gomez is the third warden for Garner which opened in
November 1992.
Gomez formerly worked for the Federal Bureau of Prisons and as a correction
officer in the military. He has 24 years experience in corrections.
Before coming to Garner, Gomez served as warden at Northern Correctional
Center in Somers, the state's highest-security prison which is commonly known
as "supermax."
"I basically am what you refer to as a rank-and-file guy," Warden Gomez told
safety committee members of his way of working his way up through the ranks
during his almost 15 years with the state Department of Correction (DOC).
Safety committee member Wendy Beres asked Warden Gomez about Garner's
preparedness for the "Year 2000 Problem," also known as Y2K, a computer
software bug which is expected to create widespread computer-related problems
when the year 2000 arrives, one second after midnight on January 1, 2000.
If computers at the prison were to fail at that time, would Garner be able to
function, Ms Beres asked. The modern prison is heavily computerized.
Duties handled by staffers at the prison can be performed manually, the warden
said. DOC is working to ensure that Y2K problems don't occur, he added.
The prison has a variety of contingency plans for various emergencies, he
said.
"Our state of readiness is always at a certain level," the warden said.
Computers are a great aid to running a prison, but there's no substitute for
having well-trained staff members performing their jobs, he said. "The
staffing is really the key to running a good facility," he said.
Head Count
As of Monday, Garner contained 683 inmates, 334 of which were incarcerated in
gang-control sections, 204 of which were in the general population, and 145 of
which were in mental health units, Warden Gomez said.
Currently, there are not as many inmates being held in gang-control sections
as normal, he said. Of the 683 inmates in Garner, 24 are designated as "Level
2" security risks, he said. Level 2 is the lowest of several security levels
at the prison.
First Selectman Herbert Rosenthal suggested that Garner provide a few Level 2
inmates to paint the western side of Town Hall South. Several Level 2 inmates
painted the other sides of the building recently.
Warden Gomez assured the first selectman that such inmates will be available
for the paint job.
Warden Gomez said he will carry on cooperative programs with the town which
were in place while Acosta served as Garner's warden.
Police Chief James E. Lysaght, Jr, said town police would provide escorts for
state prisoner transport work in Newtown, if requested by Garner.
"Garner has been a good neighbor since I got here," Chief Lysaght said. "I'm
looking forward to working with you," he said.
"I feel fortunate to have inherited this facility. The host community is
important. It's very important," Warden Gomez said of the prison's presence
within Newtown.
"It's a very secure facility, very well run. I don't anticipate problems,"
said Garner Major Wayne Sparks.
As of Monday, state prisons housed 16,458 inmates, down from an all-time high
of 16,500 inmates last month.