Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Funds for Profiri’s pay given final OK

- MICHAEL R. WICKLINE

The Arkansas Legislativ­e Council on Friday signed off on Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders’ request for a $104,000 appropriat­ion transfer to increase the extra help appropriat­ion in the governor’s office to cover the cost of former Department of Correction­s Secretary Joe Profiri serving as a special adviser in the governor’s office in the fiscal year that ends June 30.

Without any debate, the council approved the recommenda­tion of its Performanc­e Evaluation and Expenditur­e Review Subcommitt­ee for the council to complete its review of the governor’s office’s request. The subcommitt­ee’s recommenda­tion came in a voice vote Tuesday over a handful of audibly dissenting state lawmakers.

The governor’s office requested the council review the $104,000 appropriat­ion transfer to increase the extra help appropriat­ion in fiscal year 2024, with Profiri assuming the special adviser job in an extra help position in the governor’s office Jan. 12 at a salary of $201,669.89, according to state records.

Under Act 885 of 2023, the extra help appropriat­ion in the governor’s office is $8,789 in fiscal 2024. The operations appropriat­ion in the governor’s office totals $6 million in fiscal 2024.

Profiri’s salary was $210,000.13 as secretary of the state Department of Correction­s, according to the Arkansas Transparen­cy website. In January 2023, the Legislatur­e’s Joint Budget Committee approved salaries for four department secretarie­s, including Profiri, that exceeded the maximum salary of $201,700 a year. Profiri formerly

served as deputy director at the Arizona Department of Correction­s.

On Jan. 10, the state Board of Correction­s voted 5-2 to terminate Profiri, four weeks after suspending him and banning him from the Department of Correction­s administra­tive building. The board and Profiri had battled over opening certain prison beds.

After Profiri’s firing, Sanders announced she had hired him as a senior adviser in her office. At that time, the Republican governor sharply criticized the state Board of Correction­s.

“We firmly support Joe Profiri as Secretary of Correction­s and are proud of the accomplish­ments we’ve achieved together,” Sanders said at the time. “During ongoing litigation, Joe Profiri will be serving as a senior advisor to me in my office. I’m confident that Attorney General [Tim Griffin] will successful­ly defend the law in court.”

Arkansas House Speaker Matthew Shepherd, R-El Dorado, said Friday in an interview: “For where we are at right now, I think it made sense to go ahead and review that [appropriat­ion transfer to increase the extra help appropriat­ion] … and I am good with what the governor’s office was doing with regard to bringing [Profiri] into her office in particular.

“We passed legislatio­n back in the [2023 regular] session to provide for certain changes related to how we do correction­s, and I realize that there is litigation ongoing and that there will be further court decisions on it,” he said.

On Tuesday, Senate Democratic leader Greg Leding of Fayettevil­le and Republican Sens. Jimmy Hickey of Texarkana and Scott Flippo of Mountain Home were among the handful of lawmakers who dissented in their voice votes to recommend the Legislativ­e Council approve the governor’s office request for the $104,000 appropriat­ion transfer.

Hickey said Tuesday in an interview that “I think the amount that is being paid” to Profiri is excessive, noting that Profiri is being paid more than any other employee in the governor’s office, including the chief of staff. The governor’s chief of staff, Gretchen Conger, is paid a salary of $160,000, according to the Arkansas Transparen­cy website. Sanders’ annual salary is $163,501 a year, according to the Arkansas Transparen­cy website.

In response to a question from Leding on Tuesday, state Department of Finance and Administra­tion Secretary Jim Hudson defended Profiri’s salary in the governor’s office.

“Secretary Profiri is very, very experience­d in correction­s, and [with] his career experience in correction­s it’s an appropriat­e salary for him,” Hudson said while noting that Sanders is comfortabl­e with Profiri’s salary level.

Hickey added Tuesday that “on a larger basis, I am one of those who is sitting back and watching what’s going on between the [Board of] Correction­s and the governor’s office, and I don’t agree with that, the way that has been handled.”

The Board of Correction­s’ decision to terminate Profiri came after two months of wrangling between the board and Profiri, whom Chairman Benny Magness and other board members have accused of being insubordin­ate and uncommunic­ative.

Profiri is named, along with Sanders and the Department of Correction­s, in a lawsuit filed by the Board of Correction­s. The board aims in the suit to maintain authority to supervise and manage the correction­s secretary, as well as the directors of the Department of Correction­s’ Division of Correction and Division of Community Correction.

Pulaski County Circuit Judge Patricia James has issued a preliminar­y injunction barring the enforcemen­t of Act 185 of 2023 and portions of Act 659 of 2023, which the board contends weaken the board’s authority under Amendment 33 to the Arkansas Constituti­on. Act 185 would require the secretary of correction­s to serve at the pleasure of the governor, and Act 659 would require directors of the Department of Correction­s’ Divisions of Correction and Community Correction to serve at the pleasure of the secretary.

Act 185 of 2023 was sponsored by Senate President Pro Tempore Bart Hester, R-Cave Springs. Act 659 of 2023 was sponsored by Sen. Ben Gilmore, R-Crossett.

Asked if he expects correction­s legislatio­n to be proposed in response to the court case, Shepherd, who is an attorney, said Friday that “it stands to reason that no matter what the outcome is that we take a look at it and determine are there things that need to be changed going forward, or it may be that everything is fine just the way it is.”

 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Stephen Swofford) ?? Arkansas state Sen. Kim Hammer, R-Benton, discusses a request by Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders’ office for a $104,000 appropriat­ion transfer during a meeting of the Arkansas Legislativ­e Council on Friday.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Stephen Swofford) Arkansas state Sen. Kim Hammer, R-Benton, discusses a request by Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders’ office for a $104,000 appropriat­ion transfer during a meeting of the Arkansas Legislativ­e Council on Friday.

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