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Iowa Inmates May Make Toilet Paper To Save Money

Iowa Inmates May Make Toilet Paper To Save Money
(AP Photo, file)

DES MOINES, Iowa (CBS/AP) There probably won't be any squeeze tests involved, but Iowa prisons could soon be stocking inmate-made toilet paper to save taxpayers money and give prisoners jobs.

The Des Moines Register reported on Thursday that inmates at two Iowa prisons are testing a single-ply tissue processed at a Missouri prison.

Roger Baysden, director of Iowa Prison Industries, says Iowa inmates could start processing their own toilet paper next year, if the legislature supports the idea.

Iowa prisons use about 900,000 rolls of toilet paper annually.

Prison officials say producing it in-house would save about $100,000 a year and create jobs for about 50 inmates.

Al Reiter, the associate warden at the prison in Anamosa, Iowa, says the paper isn't fluffy, but it's an acceptable roll.

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