User Panel
Posted: 8/5/2017 1:20:00 AM EDT
Im thinking about taking a job at the max prison here near Boise.
Curious to know if anybody here works at a prison or has. |
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For a start I would go on the internet and get yourself a copy of the department's administrative regulations, the ones that are public.
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State run or private? The job isn't for everyone, your maturity is a big factor in your ability to handle it. I describe it as soul-sucking. If you do it as a job vs. it becoming your life you'll do better. It is a good job in PA, but the new hires have had a lot of their benefits cut, creating two tiers of employees.
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I work in a close custody state facility. the job is what you make of it. things can go from real quiet to SHTF in .0001 seconds. you are surrounded by societies rejects that have nothing else to lose. it was said before its not for everyone i have had more then i can count quit before their 1st week was up.
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Spent 5 years in a County jail followed by almost 4 in a Federal joint...
What do you wanna know? |
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I hit 10 years with DOC in December. What would you like to know?
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I will hit 30 years in October. Started as a CO, came up through the custody ranks. Did some management time and a few years ago (10+) went back to the field as a P&P officer. Best decision I ever made.
Ask away... |
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Currently work in a county jail (as a deputy). Pay is steady, hours are readily available (at least here). Would i want to spend a career here? No. Definitely not for everyone. I see a lot of Deputies come and go.
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State administrative max prison here. The job is what you make it. The rest of these guys are right goes from quiet to crap in a fan real quick.
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Worked in prisons for the past 22 yrs. Texas State first, and now BOP. Less than 2 yrs from retirement now.
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I work for DOC, started off at a medium and transferred to a minimum. if your in Idaho I would suggested applying for OR DOC and try to get hired on at snake river in Ontario. I know the pay and benefits in OR are a lot better
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Yep, 32 year retiree from the DOC. Have a thick skin, if you unlock it - lock it and most important learn to use the word NO!
Actually, was very good for me. Not for everyone. Can be political especially for management. Go for it. |
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My base salary is $54,5XX...
After all the added fun, I made a little over 60 last year... New job I start in September pays more... I'm excited... |
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Worked in prisons for the past 22 yrs. Texas State first, and now BOP. Less than 2 yrs from retirement now. View Quote I still have 18 years left to hit minimum age. I hope I make it! |
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25 years working for the NJ Dept. Of Corrections, I retired 4 years ago at $80,300 as an Officer and starting pay is around $46,000.
Officers have to do 30 years now though. |
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25 years working for the NJ Dept. Of Corrections, I retired 4 years ago at $80,300 as an Officer and starting pay is around $46,000. Officers have to do 30 years now though. View Quote |
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The worst part is, my problem was never the inmates... View Quote The minagary of weirdos and mental case I've worked with is surreal.. $71k base, but adding in all the holiday pay and premiums most of us gross almost $100k There are overtime hounds that earn $120-$130k. Shift work kills you slowly. Eat smart and stay fit. Leave the job at work. Firm, but fair. Shake and bake |
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Not one myself but know/talked with a bunch of County/State guys/gals.
It is definitely what you make of it, if you don't find some enjoyment it will burn you the hell out. Some love it, some hate it and are just doing it in the interim til they figure something out. Keep in mind, you're basically doing time with them. You just get paid for it. |
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Last years pay. 65% of that at retirement. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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I took a position with the DOC for a short period of time, but was offered a position with a county detention center shortly after graduating the DOC academy. Spent two years in county corrections before going to the police academy and transferring to patrol division. Given my state DOC employment was very brief, here are my observations.
County Corrections > State Corrections (this will vary greatly by agency and state) For my area the county has... - Higher pay - No mandatory OT (unless staffing emergency) - More relaxed rules (see below) - Lower turnover - Less dirty CO's Working at a state facility was horribly boring, and employees moral in general was very low. Hiring standards were pathetically low, so you will work with some real winners... When you hire in you're the low man on the totem pole, and 16 hour overtime "drafts" are common. All the positions work on a bid system by seniority, so you get the worst positions first. For the facility I worked at you had airport style security coming in with mandatory clear lunch containers, take boots off, metal detector, x-ray machine, cell phone detector, no glass or metal utensils, etc. This is because you essentially are with the inmates all day, and never go outside "the wall". Working county corrections was not bad at all, and moral was pretty high. Hiring standards were very strict unless you are female (due to very high demand for female CO's). At the facility I worked at you entered the building through the sallyport into a secure booking area. No metal detectors, no restrictions on metal utensils, cell phones were OK as long as they stay in the break room... Much more relaxed atmosphere in general. Positions are pretty much "fill the gaps" so we rotated out between booking, the floor, and control tower. We even had internet access on our booking computers, so when it got slow it was perfectly acceptable to browse the internet in between duties (nightshift). Again, these are just from my experience and this will vary greatly between agencies and states. |
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The job is dangerous, stressful, and underappreciated. If you do decide to take it make sure its with the state system; any other system (county, private, fed) is not worth it. Also, make sure you find out what the pay, benefits, and retirement package will be like.
Oh yeah, If the position you're interested in isn't a peace officer position, do not take it. |
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Most of my friends in the BOP have or are within a couple years of retirement. Those who have gone said do it first day you can. Those who havent yet just want the hell out. I still have 18 years left to hit minimum age. I hope I make it! View Quote |
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The job is dangerous, stressful, and underappreciated. If you do decide to take it make sure its with the state system; any other system (county, private, fed) is not worth it. Also, make sure you find out what the pay, benefits, and retirement package will be like. Oh yeah, If the position you're interested in isn't a peace officer position, do not take it. View Quote |
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Worked almost 4 years for the Florida system. Pretty much all of it was working in close management (basically the worst of the worst in the FL system) The hardest part was dealing with state politics dictating how to run a dorm. I got burned out with the state and briefly tried private prisons before I quit corrections entirely. Looking back on it, I dunno how I did it.
The pay system with FL DOC is stupid. Start at $33,500 and retire in 34 years (3 percent pension each year). All throughout this, you don't get a longevity pay increase. The recruitment officer who hired me was making the same pay as me when I started despite her having ~20 years in. You basically have to promote to get more pay. Which no one wants to because they have to recycle back to night shift. OP, honestly its what you make of it. The morale is low but if you stay focused, it can be a decent job. |
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Worked 5 years in SD Prison system before going to a sworn position.
It was a good job where there's lots of advancement opportunities. Grass was greener for me on this side, many more benefits but I did take a "pay cut" |
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I've worked in two county jails and a city jail (seriously).
Wasn't my cup of tea, but I did it just fine. Worked in linear and podular setups. I liked direct contact the best. Forced shower time was the worst. Meds were challenging. Learning how to control a cell or pod was exceptionally instructive. Some of it works on the outside, too. A friend of mine solved some sibling issues by putting their tv on the weather channel (some of you will get it) I always have said the best road officers came out of the jail with almost no exceptions. Learning how to work with no use of force tools and a shitty radio (if you got one at all), you either learn some skills, or they promote you to the catwalk or something... LOL |
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I work for DOC, started off at a medium and transferred to a minimum. if your in Idaho I would suggested applying for OR DOC and try to get hired on at snake river in Ontario. I know the pay and benefits in OR are a lot better View Quote |
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12 years I've been inside. Trust no one, there are no secrets in jail.
Anything else that you want to know can be seen right here. Good luck. It's not the inmates that you have to worry about 90% of the time. https://youtu.be/Pfm_upp_c40 |
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