The exterior of the Two Rivers Regional Detention Facility in Hardin. Credit: Jacob Olness / MTFP

The Montana Department of Corrections said Tuesday that it is considering three localities 鈥 Hardin, Butte and the greater Boulder area 鈥 as it determines where to site a new women鈥檚 prison.听

Boulder and Butte are under consideration because the department already owns property in those locations, spokesperson Carolynn Stocker said in an email to MTFP. She also said the department is working with Hardin because a representative of the community reached out directly.听

Stocker said the department hasn鈥檛 made a firm commitment to any of the three locations and doesn鈥檛 have a timeline for a decision.

A bill for a new women鈥檚 facility was one component of the roughly $436 million this year鈥檚 Legislature approved for expanding state prisons.听

As the bill was debated on the floor of the Montana House in April, sponsor, , called it an opportunity 鈥渢o set some money aside to deal with the most pressing issue that we now have in our correctional system, which is a lack of capacity for women prisoners.鈥

Gov. Greg Gianforte said at an April press conference that the state鈥檚 female correctional facilities are 14% over capacity.

As of Tuesday, about 84% of Montana鈥檚 nearly 300 incarcerated women were held at Montana Women鈥檚 Prison in Billings, according to . The remainder were serving sentences at Riverside Facility in Boulder.

Local leaders representing Boulder and Hardin expressed support for locating the new facility in their communities in comments to MTFP Tuesday.

Boulder also hosts Elkhorn Treatment Center, a behavioral health center with a focus on substance use disorder that accepts female DOC inmates. The Montana Highway Patrol also maintains its headquarters at the southern edge of Boulder鈥檚 downtown.

鈥淲e鈥檙e already a community that kind of supports that lifestyle anyway. So to me, and from a municipality standpoint, we just sell more water and sewer and utilities. Which, as the city of Boulder, that鈥檚 what we鈥檙e in the business for,鈥 Boulder Mayor Rusty Giulio said in an interview Tuesday.听

Corey Kirsch, the Jefferson County commissioner representing the Boulder area, expressed measured optimism about the project.

鈥淚 would say 鈥 before knowing everybody鈥檚 sentiment on it 鈥 that we would very much support such a facility in our little town here just because of the economic benefit,鈥 Kirsch said in an interview.

Clayton Greer, a Hardin city commissioner, cited economic upsides. Hardin completed a 464-bed jail in 2006 at a cost of , but a string of setbacks have to .听

The corrections department did not indicate Tuesday whether it would seek to repurpose existing facilities.

Some about the possibility of siting a new women鈥檚 prison there during a June 4 Council of Commissioners meeting, according to Montana Public Radio. The commission voted unanimously to officially ask the DOC for additional details.

The 2025 Legislature also approved funding to address overcrowded men鈥檚 prisons, including major renovations to Montana State Prison in Deer Lodge.

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An Ohio native, Zeke Lloyd spent four years in Colorado before moving up to Helena, Montana. Now acclimated to the elevation, he coordinates the Voter Priority Project, an MTFP initiative designed to keep Montanans informed on the issues that matter most to them. His responsibilities include public polling, data analysis and legislative reporting. Outside the office, you can find Zeke in a quiet, cozy spot immersed in a good book. You can reach him at zlloyd@montanafreepress.org.