New Fort Belknap jail lacks money to operate

The federal government spent $1.7 million for a new detention facility on the Fort Belknap Reservation in Montana but there's not enough money to operate it.

The Bureau of Indian Affairs only has $74,000 in the budget for the detention and dispatch center. But the Fort Belknap Tribes say it will cost $400,000 to run the facility.

"That money is gone in three weeks," acting police Chief Ed Long Knife told The Great Falls Tribune. "We're already in the red."

The tribe's current jail was shut down in the wake of an Interior Department investigation into substandard detention facilities in Indian Country. It has since reopened but remains overcrowded and understaffed.

Get the Story:
Fort Belknap jail in trouble before it opens doors (The Great Falls Tribune 1/28)

DOJ Study:
Prisoners in 2006

Inspector General Final Jail Report:
Text | PDF

Inspector General Interim Jail Report:
Text | PDF

Department of Justice Jail Reports:
Year 2002 | Year 2001 | Year 2000 | Years 1998-1999

Related Stories:
DOJ reports no change in Indian jail population (12/6)
Man's death at Colville jail ruled a suicide (11/28)
Family sues over death at BIA detention center (11/21)
Sen. Kyl: Tribal jails neither safe nor secure (10/19)
Nebraska county to house inmates for BIA (10/10)
BIA working on study of detention centers (09/07)
BIA director faults management for jails (07/26)
Tribes blast BIA on law enforcement (06/04)
Editorial: Navajo Nation jail crisis affects all (05/18)
Senate Indian Affairs hearing on law enforcement (5/17)
Senate hearing this week on law enforcement (5/14)
Criminals get out of jail for free on Navajo Nation (5/7)
A 'revolving door' for criminals on Navajo Nation (5/4)
Navajo Nation approves emergency jail funds (5/2)
Navajo Nation Council OKs emergency jail funds (4/18)
Blackfeet Nation to relinquish detention center (04/04)
Oglala Sioux Tribe to open new jail this week (02/26)
DOJ budget slashes funds for tribal courts and jails (02/07)
BIA budget targets youth with new initiatives (2/6)