A plan to show how the environmental impact of building new cells at Prescoed Prison on bats will be managed has been provided to Monmouthshire County Council.
The plan was a condition of planning permission, granted in April 2024, for the 80 ‘rapid deployment cells’ within its grounds near Usk.
Details of other environmental impact plans and biodiversity measures, which were also required, have also been provided and are being considered by the council’s planning department.
The same permission also gave retrospective approval for 40 Covid isolation cells put in place at the start of the pandemic, in April 2020, without planning permission.
HMP Prescoed is a Category D open prison that houses men and young offenders and the cells that are to be built will replace 40 beds in what was known as the Lester Unit that was demolished in 2022 after it failed a fire safety inspection following the Grenfell Tower tragedy.
The expansion takes the prison’s capacity from 250 to 330 and when the application was approved the prison said it would take on 11 new members of staff.
Natural causes verdict in death of newborn at Grange Hospital
Council to buy land to fix road cut off by landslip
Neighbouring towns to Battle for UK Culture crown
Wales–England bridge now closed to all access
Wye Valley bridge closure sparks fear residents are being ‘fobbed off’