The Toledo Blade Online
The Toledo Blade OnlineThe Toledo Blade Green Edition
Click here to subscribe or renew!
Temp: 16°
Humidity: 79%
Wednesday, 02/10/10
Click Here Click Here Click Here Click Here Click Here
Home »   Latest News »   Regional News » 


Click to Receive RSS Feeds!EmailPrint IndexHelp FacebookTwitterDiggDel.icio.usFark

Article published February 23, 2008
Jail inmates quilt, fix bikes in Monroe County
Arnoldo Bedoyestrada, a trusty in the Monroe County Inmate Dormitory, works with Corrections Officer Kenneth Cain.
( BLADE PHOTOS/DAVE ZAPOTOSKY )

MONROE - Inside the Monroe County Inmate Dormitory Facility, inmates are turning scraps of donated fabrics into quilts and restoring abandoned or stolen bicycles to working condition.

It's part of a program that doesn't cost taxpayers a dime and serves multiple purposes: putting items into the hands of needy children and families across the county and providing prisoners with skills they can use outside the jail.

"Bicycles are the main thing. We are fixing them up for underprivileged kids," said Deputy Kenneth Cain, who runs the program for the Monroe County Sheriff's Department.

Most bikes that come into the program are unclaimed items from the property rooms of the sheriff's office and the Monroe Police Department.

Trusty Alvaro Rincon-Penaloza operates a sewing machine in the jail.

Deputy Cain said bicycles also are donated by people who no longer want them.

Once the bicycles are restored to working condition, cleaned, and polished, they are sent to the Arthur Lesow Community Center, the Salvation Army, and the Monroe County Youth Center.

The Lesow center on Monroe's east side last year gave away more than 70 bicycles it obtained through the program, Executive Director Will Sweat said.

"We try to make sure that anyone who needs a bike gets one," he said. "It's been a good program for us."

Inmates make dolls like these for needy kids.

Inmates also produce hand-sewn quilts and dolls in the jail program.

The quilts are assembled by sewing scrap fabric pieces together and fitting remnants of tattered wool jail blankets inside.

Deputy Cain screens volunteers from the 160-bed jail on East Dunbar Road to determine their mechanical ability to work on bikes or operate the sewing machines to make dolls and quilts.

Over six years, inmates at the lockup in Monroe Charter Township have reconditioned 5,119 bicycles and produced 1,929 hand-sewn lap quilts and 1,440 rag dolls.

The sheriff's office said 31 of the bicycles and 175 quilts went to victims of Hurricane Katrina in September, 2005.

Sheriff Tilman Crutchfield said the program provides inmates with a skill that they may not have had before they entered the facility and keeps them busy while they are incarcerated.

"We are happy with the program, and we will continue as long as I am sheriff," he said. "I can't foresee eliminating this program because of the benefits the community derives from it."

Scrap metal from bikes and parts that can't be fixed are given to recycling centers in exchange for money. Deputy Cain uses the proceeds to buy components and other parts, such as tires and tubes.

The Salvation Army's Maj. Michael Thomas said most of the nearly 300 bikes given to his organization were distributed during the holidays to needy children. Lap quilts made by trusties were used at the Salvation Army's homeless shelter.

Contact Mark Reiter at:
markreiter@theblade.com
or 734-241-3610.


Permanent Link

 RECENT RELATED ARTICLES

United Way partners expect fewer funds | 01/27/2010

Blade Area
Updated: 6:18 pm
Weather check, radar and roads
RADAR / FORECAST / CAMS >>
Nation/World
Updated: 6:18 pm
Cribs recalled after 3 deaths >>
State
Updated: 6:18 pm
Weather-related crashes kill 2 on Michigan freeways >>
Accidents/Vehicular
Updated: 6:17 pm
U.S. 24 traffic rerouted, I-75 backed up >>
Blade Area
Updated: 6:17 pm
Toledo officials given raises up to 26.9% >>
Nation/World
Updated: 5:39 pm
Transport Canada offers to buy Ambassador Bridge >>
More news stories
 



click here!

ADVERTISING SECTIONS
Tom Henry
Updated: 7:13 am
Playing the odds can help mitigate disasters >>

S. Amjad Hussain
Updated: 5:53 am
France draws line over Muslim women’s dress >>

Marilou Johanek
Updated: 5:54 am
Sense of superiority drove church to 'help' Haitian children >>

Jack Kelly
Updated: 5:42 am
As Democrats schmooze, Obama’s credibility slides  >>

Jack Lessenberry
Updated: 5:32 am
Granholm failed to make case in last Michigan address >>

Rose Russell
Updated: 6:09 am
Even in South Africa, pols' private affairs are people's business >>

David Shribman
Updated: 9:37 am
Love means never saying budget deficit >>

Mike Sigov
Updated: 12:31 pm
Russia's president brings little to the table >>

Tom Walton
Updated: 5:40 am
Apologies in politics are unprecedented >>

More columnist stories
MOST READ STORIES
MOST E-MAILED STORIES
1.  Tennis champ accused of phone harassment
2.  Toledo strip club puts cover charge into quake relief
3.  Mental health agency looks to pare $3.5M from services
4.  Homelessness board votes for outside audit; advocate Ken Leslie safe for now
5.  Sylvania lawyer charged in thefts from 2 clients
6.  'Stagecoach Mary' broke barriers of race, gender
7.  MAC basketball struggles with fall from elite
8.  Students, staff navigate Perrysburg High School halls in wheelchairs
9.  Ohio Highway Patrol trooper killed in Wyandot County
10.  Lucas, Fulton residents are fined for burning


AP  News Headlines



AP  Business Headlines



AP  Sports Headlines


AP  Features Headlines
Copyright 2010 The Blade. By using this service, you accept the terms of our privacy statement and our visitor agreement. Please read them.
The Toledo Blade Company, 541 N. Superior St., Toledo, OH 43660, (419) 724-6000
To contact a specific
department or an individual person, click here.
The Toledo Times ®