The Federal Bureau of Prisons said on Wednesday that it would close at least six facilities that house thousands of inmates, citing “extreme staffing challenges” and crumbling infrastructure.
The units are minimum- and low-security facilities and satellite complexes, meaning they typically house inmates considered lower risk. They include prisons in Texas, in Beaumont, Big Spring, and La Tuna, and facilities in Lexington, Ky., Petersburg, Va., and Taft, Calif. The highest-population facility, in Beaumont, houses 1,651 inmates in its low-security prison, and 514 in an adjacent minimum-security camp.
The Bureau of Prisons added that an unspecified number of staff members at Big Spring and La Tuna would be laid off, while other staff members would be transferred to nearby facilities.
The bureau did not answer questions about where inmates would be moved once the facilities closed. But in announcing the closures, the bureau added that it would upgrade minimum-security prison camps in Morgantown, W.Va., and Duluth, Minn. The facilities, which currently house about 400 inmates, are expected to transition from minimum-security camps — for inmates deemed to be the least risky — to low-security prisons, allowing them to house inmates considered more risky.
The Biden administration signaled in December 2024 that it would make similar moves to cut costs and address crumbling facilities, saying that it would shut down the Morgantown and Duluth camps. At the time, the Bureau of Prisons said that the Duluth facility had “aging and dilapidated infrastructure, including several condemned buildings that have contaminants such as asbestos and lead paint.”
The planned closures come as the bureau struggles with a yearslong staffing crisis and derelict conditions across its prisons. Many of the roughly 35,000 Bureau of Prisons employees often earn less than state and county corrections workers.
In recent years, shortages of correction officers have gotten so bad that teachers, case managers, counselors, facilities workers and even secretaries were being enlisted to serve as corrections officers to make up for shortfalls.
William K. Marshall III, the director of the bureau, said in a statement Wednesday that an infusion of $5 billion from President Trump’s signature domestic policy bill last year would help with some of the problems. But he added that it was “not sufficient to fully resolve the operational and infrastructure challenges that have accumulated over decades.” The bureau also acknowledged those shortcomings, noting in its statement that it was “currently confronting a deferred-maintenance backlog exceeding $4 billion.”
The Taft prison had already been emptied of inmates in the first Trump administration after it was deemed in “critical disrepair.” The bureau estimated at the time that it would cost nearly $200 million to repair and reopen the prison. But it later abandoned the effort during the Biden administration as the project was considered “uniquely expensive.”

