Berks County's new jail: four years of planning, no decision
Berks County said a new jail would beat renovating the old one. Four years after restarting the project there is no site, no price, and no decision.
By The Berks Beat staff · Published July 7, 2026 · Updated July 7, 2026
Running the Berks County Jail System costs taxpayers $55.6 million this year, one of the largest single operations in county government, and the county has said for years that the aging Bern Township facility should be replaced. As of July 7, 2026, the replacement project remains in planning with no public site, no cost estimate, and no construction decision.
The timeline
- 2018: The county begins planning for a new correctional facility.
- 2020: The project is shelved for nearly two years during the COVID-19 pandemic.
- January 2022: Planning restarts. The county hires CGL Companies, a national corrections planning and design firm, and appoints a steering committee.
- March-August 2022: A programming study and needs assessment conclude that Berks needs a facility with nearly 1,000 beds, and that building new would be “significantly more cost-effective” than renovating the existing jail.
- February 2023 to present: The project enters what the county calls the “population reduction exploration” phase, studying whether courts, probation, and diversion programs can shrink the future jail population, which would shrink the building and the bill.
- April 8, 2026: The county Prison Board holds a meeting reviewing jail operations; the recording and presentations are posted online.
Caution or drift
Read charitably, the population-reduction phase is the fiscally careful move. Every bed not built saves capital costs up front and staffing costs forever, jail populations statewide have shifted since the pandemic, and locking in a 1,000-bed design too early risks overbuilding.
Read less charitably, “exploration” has now lasted more than three years with no public milestone, while the current jail gets more expensive to run. Operating costs are up about 10% since 2024. Deferred decisions on old buildings tend to become emergencies.
The unanswered money question
A new county jail would likely be the largest capital project in Berks County history; comparable projects in other Pennsylvania counties have run into the hundreds of millions. The context makes the silence louder:
- The county issued $25 million in bonds this year, its first borrowing since 2015, for other capital needs.
- The 2026 budget leans on reserves to close an operating gap.
- Officials have flagged a new youth detention center and a 911 radio-system replacement landing in 2027-2028.
- The county is separately pursuing the purchase of 600 Penn Street for a government center.
A jail on top of that queue is a generational financial decision. It deserves a public price conversation before a design is chosen, not after.
What we’re tracking
- Whether the population-reduction studies will be published in full, and what they concluded
- The current planning assumption for bed count
- The cost range and how it would be financed
- Whether the existing Bern Township site would be reused
- When the commissioners, who sit on the Prison Board, will put a decision point on a public agenda
We will update this report as the record changes. Prison Board meetings are public; here is how county meetings work.