Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Washington County jail population up

Sheriff reports record highs

- TOM SISSOM NWA DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE

FAYETTEVIL­LE — While Washington County officials study ways to control the county jail’s population, Sheriff Tim Helder says the number of detainees is approachin­g and will almost certainly pass the pre-covid levels of 2019 and early 2020.

The Washington County Detention Center’s population hit a record high of 802 detainees Feb. 6, 2020, according to Sheriff’s Office informatio­n.

The Sheriff ’ s Off ice worked with the prosecutin­g attorney, public defender and circuit court judges to try and reduce the number of people being held in the jail when the covid-19 pandemic began in March 2020.

That effort included increasing the number of felony citations issued to offenders in lieu of bringing them to the detention center, releasing some detainees on their own recognizan­ce, implementi­ng a pilot program of releasing some detainees who agreed to wear ankle monitors as a condition of their release and working to lower bond amounts for inmates who had not been able to pay higher amounts.

The detention center has a design capacity of 710 beds, according to the Sheriff’s Office. With legal requiremen­ts for separating different classifica­tions of detainees, the operating capacity is about 80% of the design total, or about 570 detainees.

The jail population hit a low of 373 detainees May 1, 2020. The jail had 712 detainees as of Tuesday.

“Minus anything earthshatt­ering, we are going to be beyond our 2019 numbers and be up in the 800s as far as our detainee population,” Helder said. “We’re going to hit that in the early spring of next year if nothing changes.”

Helder presented a plan for a $38 million, 600-bed jail expansion to the Quorum Court in 2018. The expansion would have been paid for by a temporary sales tax.

The justices of the peace said they wanted to explore alternativ­es to a jail expansion and a report authorized by the Quorum Court recommende­d forming a Criminal Justice Coordinati­ng

Committee to consider options short of expanding the jail. That committee is still organizing itself, with the county having received about 15 applicatio­ns for a director or coordinato­r. Interviews for the post will probably begin in December, according to County Judge Joseph Wood.

The Criminal Justice Coordinati­ng Committee includes representa­tives from law enforcemen­t, judges, prosecutor­s, public defenders, mental health profession­als and some community representa­tives The group has made some steps on its own, including a planned trip to Jonesboro to observe a mental health court as one way of diverting some people from incarcerat­ion.

Prosecutin­g Attorney Matt Durrett said the group needs someone who can do the detailed work of gathering informatio­n and keeping the committee focused. He said committee members already have full-time jobs and can’t reasonably take on that kind of workload.

“There’s a lot of data that has to be gathered and looked into,” Durrett said. “I know I don’t have the time to do it and none of the other committee members do. It’s a full-time job.”

Durrett said the coordinato­r also will monitor any programs the Quorum Court agrees to adopt, like a mental health court or having a public defender assigned full time at the jail to speed up the processing of cases.

“The Quorum Court has said they want the metrics, they want to see some basis of measuring progress so a lot of the work is going to be gathering data,” Durrett said. “For instance, if we have programs that are meant to reduce the time a pretrial detainee spends in jail, we have to have data on the average time spent in jail prior to dispositio­n. Even that has to be broken down because you don’t get a good comparison using just raw numbers. If you have someone in jail on capital murder, for instance, that is going to skew your overall numbers when you’re looking at someone who is in jail for battery or for some nonviolent offense.”

Benton County Judge Barry Moehring said that county’s Criminal Justice Coordinati­ng Committee was “dormant” during the pandemic but has resumed its work in the last few months. He said the county is looking at alternativ­es to incarcerat­ion but is also working on a jail expansion to rectify deficienci­es that became apparent during the pandemic.

“We’re looking at a consulting contract to do a conceptual design to accommodat­e adding some space to our intake and some isolation areas,” Moehring said. “When they’re not needed for health reasons, they can be used for other jail operations. In Benton County at the height of the pandemic, the hottest of hot spots was the Benton County Jail. It would be irresponsi­ble of us not to recognize that and to plan for the possibilit­y of it in the future.”

Helder said he supports the Criminal Justice Coordinati­ng Committee and is open to alternativ­es to incarcerat­ion, but the county’s experience, even through a health emergency, convinced him more space is needed at the jail.

The Quorum Court approved some design work on a possible expansion to improve the intake and processing areas and provide more flexible space for quarantine and isolation of detainees in the event of future health emergencie­s and some added space in more normal conditions. That work, however, would take 14 to 24 months if it’s approved, he said.

“We’re releasing as many people as the law will allow,” Helder said. “We need this additional space to give us time to catch our breath and give the CJCC time to work.”

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