Columbia County Jail horticultural program in its seventh year

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HUDSON – The inmate horticulture program at the Columbia County
Jail is in its seventh year, providing inmates with instruction in gardening,
composting and general horticultural lessons.

Inmates who volunteer are selected based on their security classification
and institutional record, Sheriff David Bartlett said. Once in the program,
they work on a daily basis in the horticulture area in the secure compound
of the public safety facility.

Inmates and deputies check the progress in the jail garden

Bartlett said the program, begun in May, will produce vegetables including
tomatoes, squash, cucumbers, lettuce, string beans and wax beans, radishes,
parsley, basil and rosemary, until the end of September. They will be
served to inmates to supplement meals in the jail.

The program operates at no cost to the county and “creates an opportunity
for our inmates to learn a valuable skill that will be useful to them
once they are released from our facility,” Bartlett said.




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