Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Sanders rips ‘no’ on prison expansion

- NEAL EARLEY

Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders on Friday called for the state Board of Correction­s to hold an “emergency meeting” after it rejected part of a request to expand capacity at state prisons.

Sanders called a news conference at the state Capitol to call out the board for refusing to approve most of Department of Correction­s Secretary Joe Profiri’s “thoughtful, informed and desperatel­y needed request” to add 622 beds at state facilities.

“We have the space. We have the resources. We have the personnel. All that stands between us and a safer, stronger Arkansas is bureaucrat­ic red tape,” Sanders said. “It’s time for the Board of Correction­s to do what is needed to protect our people.”

During its Nov. 6 meeting, the board approved adding 60 temporary beds at the Ouachita River Unit in Malvern and 70 at the North Central Unit in Calico Rock. However, the board rejected the request to add a combined 492 beds at the Ester Unit in Pine Bluff, the McPherson Unit in Newport and the Maximum Security Unit in Jefferson County. The Board of Correction­s, through an executive assistant, declined to comment on Friday.

The request for additional bed space was meant to reduce the backup of inmates in county jails waiting for space in state prisons to open up.

Members of the board had concerns that some of the prisons were already overcrowde­d and that the proposed 622-bed expansion would not serve county jails’ long-term needs. One board member said the McPherson Unit had a high number of staff vacancies. However, in

a statement Profiri countered some of those claims, saying, “We have space, we have beds and will make room for criminals who belong in prison.”

As of Nov. 3, 1,886 inmates, the vast majority sentenced to the Department of Correction­s, were in county jails waiting for space in state prisons to open up, according to Dexter Payne, director of the Division of Correction.

The Ouachita River Unit will add beds in a gymnasium currently not in use. At the North Central Unit, 14 barracks will add five beds each.

Attorney General Tim Griffin put the blame on Board Chairman Benny Magness, who he said was “a defender of the status quo.”

“For someone who claims to support law enforcemen­t, the chairman’s actions indicate otherwise,” Griffin said in a news release. “He opposes solutions that would make us safer and help law enforcemen­t; he’s part of the problem. The Board’s failure is territoria­l bureaucrac­y at its worst and is a clarion call for reform.”

Magness, reached by phone Friday evening, declined to comment.

Sanders and Griffin said the board’s refusal to add the number of temporary beds requested by the Correction­s Department is a rejection the Protect Arkansas Act, an expansive criminal justice law that will require offenders to serve most, if not all, of their sentences in prison. Beginning Jan. 1, those convicted of 18 of the most violent felonies in the state code, such as murder, will have to serve 100% of their sentences.

In March, Sanders announced plans for a $470 million, 3,000 bed correction­s facility. When asked about an update on its constructi­on, the governor said her November request to the Board of Correction­s was a needed stop-gap measure that will provide temporary relief to county jails while the state is in the early stages of building the new prison.

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