Apartments  were heated by coal stoves, but cooking in the residential area was  discouraged. Furniture for the apartments included only army cots,  mattresses, and blankets. Some residents constructed rough tables and  shelves out of scrap lumber left lying around the camp.
                    The  barracks, crudely constructed of pine planks covered with tarpaper as  the only insulation, and sheetrock on the inside, provided little  protection against the extreme weather of the semi-arid climate. The  first killing frost was recorded the end of September 1942, and the  first snowfall was on 13 October. Some of the apartments still had no  windows installed at that time. The winter temperatures in the area  typically hover near or below zero, and in the summer soar to the  nineties.
                    Internees  were employed at different jobs around the camp and were paid wages  ranging from $16.00 up to $19.00 a month for doctors and other skilled  workers. Residents could obtain passes to shop in nearby Delta, and some  found employment in that community. One man who worked at the local  newspaper was subsequently charged "rent" at the camp. On 11 April 1943  James Wakasa, age 63, was shot by a guard when he was standing near the  southwest section of the fence. After an outcry from the camp  population, guarding procedures changed.