Exploring A Womens Correctional Center -Explore NC-

Thanks for Supporting by Viewing, Leave Comments Like and Sub up if you havnt, thanks everyone 🤝!! Dont forget to watch the Videos in 4K 2160p for your best experience!! Please Share on your Social Media page's!! Join me as I Explore Old Historic, Abandoned and Vacated Locations all over North & South Carolina !!! As a serious Documenter , I do not Damage, Vandalize, Break or Steal or Otherwise Cause Harm to any Property or Buildings I Explore ! , I simply take Video and Photo footage and Leave only Footprints behind ! This Correctional Center for Women, is a minimum security prison for women. In 1923, the General Assembly established the Eastern Carolina Training School for Boys, which opened in 1926 to house white males, 21 or younger. In 1969, legislators named the school after Richard T. Fountain, chairman of the first Board of Trustees of The School. In 1976, the state made the 25-acre training school site a minimum security prison for male youth, 14 to 18 years old. The Fountain Youth Center became the Correctional Center for Women in 1984. The prison serves as the point of entry into the prison system for women sentenced as misdemeanants. Upon arrival, inmates undergo a series of diagnostic evaluations that will determine future prison assignments. These new inmates stay in the Clark dormitory separate from the general population inmates in dormitories on the other side of the prison campus. The prison also has seven cells for placing inmates in administrative or disciplinary segregation. Inmates work in a number of jobs. This was the first female prison to establish community work squads, where a correctional officer supervises a squad of inmates in short term, manual labor work for local governments. It had three community work squads. Other inmates work under contract for local government agencies or may be assigned to maintenance or kitchen duties. Inmates nearing the end of their imprisonment may participate in work release, leaving the prison for the part of the day to work for a business in the community. The Community College worked with the prison to provide vocational classes for nursing assistants, office technicians and job readiness. Classes for adult education and preparation for the GED tests are available. The prison's campus is a mixture of old and new buildings. The 1950's training school buildings house the prison's administrative offices, processing center, dining hall and clothes house. As part of the $55 million prison construction program authorized in 1989, legislators provided for renovation of the old Clark building into a 50-bed dormitory and a misdemeanant diagnostic processing center. Another 100-bed dormitory was added as part of the $87.5 million prison construction program authorized in 1993. The prison's oldest buildings, constructed in 1928 and 1929, are of brick construction, wood frames, wood floors and interior wood stairwells. According to present building codes, these buildings cannot be used for sleeping quarters. In 1976, the Department of Insurance condemned the first of these structures. Since then, all of the vacant buildings that sit outside the prison's security fence have been condemned.