PUEBLO COUNTY, Colo. (KOAA) — Pueblo County officials cut the ribbon on a new detention center Thursday, a project designed to address overcrowding and aging infrastructure at the old jail.
The new facility has 672 beds, 150 more than the previous jail, and includes additional space for administration and evidence storage. The facility sits on a 33-acre site, which Sheriff David Lucero said provides room to grow if needed.
“We do have the ability out here if we come close to capacity at 680, that we can then expand on this 33 acres to bring another cell block in and connect it if we needed to,” said Sheriff Lucero.
The new building also gives its team the tools to modernize how corrections are handled.
“We can do more things that we were not able to do it or accomplish in our old structure. So this really gives us those capabilities of what modern corrections are,” said Sheriff Lucero.
Voters approved a tax on marijuana revenue to fund the jail.
The facility is also designed to be zero-net energy, using solar panels to generate as much power as it uses, a move officials say will save taxpayers money for years to come.
This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.
___
Deborah Nicholls a Colorado woman convicted of killing here three children following a house fire in 2003, could get a new trial after the Innocence Project discovered new evidence in her case.
____
Watch KOAA News5 on your time, anytime with our free streaming app available for your Roku, FireTV, AppleTV and Android TV. Just search KOAA News5, download and start watching.
Report a typo