The Sentinel-Record

Proposed county budget would add women’s unit at jail

- DAVID SHOWERS

Funding to open an additional women’s unit next year at the Garland County Detention Center received preliminar­y approval Wednesday, but jail officials are holding off on expanding men’s housing.

The $8,257,027 budget proposal for 2020 the Garland County Quorum Court Finance Committee recommende­d to the full quorum court would almost double the facility’s female capacity, creating another 60 beds for a population that’s been on the rise for more than a year.

The 68-bed women’s unit has been at or over capacity since last year. Intake restrictio­ns enacted in February often require inmates to be released before new ones can be booked, a policy the jail has said will remain in effect until the count drops below

58. A population report The Sentinel-Record obtained through a public records request showed an average female daily population of more than

94 from Sept. 4 to Oct. 7.

The policy was briefly adopted for men in July and reinstated in September,

but jail officials told justices of the peace Wednesday that more time is needed to determine if another unit for men needs to be opened. Intake restrictio­ns for men will remain in effect until the count drops below 252, according to jail policy.

Average combined daily population­s of men and women have regularly been over 400 since late spring, exceeding the jail’s operationa­l capacity of 365. The facility was built with the physical capacity to house close to 500 inmates when all eight units are open. Six are currently in use.

Chief Deputy of Correction­s Steven Elrod, the sheriff’s department’s head of detention, told JPs that as of Monday nine inmates were being housed in the booking area as a result of overcrowdi­ng.

“We want to continue to gauge the male population trends over the next six months or so, and then we’ll be happy to come back and report on how that’s going,” Elrod told the Finance Committee.

The wait-and-see approach comes as jail supervisor­s work to manage

inmate counts through a triage of sorts. They make judgments on which inmates present the greatest criminal liability or propensity for violence, releasing those they consider low risk to make room for arrestees posing a graver threat.

That calculus informed Dillon Wayne Orrell’s Sept.

29 release 16 hours after being booked on charges of misdemeano­r criminal trespass and theft of property, according to jail logs the newspaper obtained through a records request.

Three weeks later Orrell,

31, was one of three people arrested on a capital murder charge in the Oct. 18 death of a 58-year-old Hot Springs woman. He’s being held at the jail on a $500,000 bond.

The Sept. 29 jail log listed Orrell’s discharge as an “early release,” but the sheriff’s department said he was released on a citation under the state’s Rules for Criminal Procedure. They allow the ranking officer on duty to release misdemeano­r arrestees on a citation. Population reports showed the average male population was

311 and 305 on Sept. 28 and 29. “Dillon Orrell was issued a citation in lieu of continued custody due to nonviolent charges and nonviolent history,” the department said in an email response to the newspaper’s request for comment.

Court records showed Orrell has about half a dozen misdemeano­r conviction­s since December 2017. He was sentenced to a year in jail last year after he pleaded guilty to theft of property and misdemeano­r drug possession. A felony drug possession charge was withdrawn as part of his plea deal.

Tony Tedford was cite released 14 hours after being booked Sept. 1 on a charge of failing to appear in district court last November. Two weeks later he was arrested on charges of first-degree domestic battery and felony theft of property after allegedly stabbing his 71-year-old father in the face and neck and stealing a pickup on Ledgerock Road.

He led the sheriff’s department’s Tactical Response Team, other department personnel and Arkansas State Police on a manhunt that concluded when Tedford was taken into custody the following day at Walmart, 1601 Albert Pike Road.

Jail officials said Tedford’s profile, which included no felony charges, violent history or disruptive behavior at the jail, qualified him for a citation in lieu of confinemen­t.

Sheriff Mike McCormick told JPs Wednesday it’s likely the department will ask for additional funding to open another unit for men either next year or in 2021.

“I think there’s a high probabilit­y that we’ll be coming back for funding for that second unit if not later in 2020 than in 2021,” he said.

The jail fund’s projected 2020 revenue includes $400,000 for housing inmates awaiting transfer to the Arkansas Department of Correction and $20,000 in suspended inmate Social Security benefits. Both revenue sources currently accrue to the county general fund, where county officials have said they subsidize the sheriff’s department, juvenile detention center and prosecutin­g attorney’s office.

A consultant’s report issued in March recommende­d both revenue sources be used in support of adult detention operations.

The jail’s 2020 budget proposal includes five deputy positions transferre­d from the juvenile jail and a new deputy position. The six positions will enable the opening of the additional women’s housing unit. Elrod told the committee staffing concerns that gave the jail pause about expanding operations have been addressed.

“This time last year staffing was a big issue,” he said. “That was the main concern we had about opening up another unit. For the past 30 days we’ve been 100% fully staffed. We haven’t lost a single supervisor since January. Recruitmen­t and retention remain on the forefront.”

Per the consultant report’s recommenda­tion, the quorum court approved longevity pay in June that moved detention deputy salaries closer to the starting patrol deputy salary. Certified detention deputies who have worked at the jail for two years received an additional $3,000 a year. Those who have been there a year got an extra $1,000. Corporal, sergeant and lieutenant salaries were also increased, and Elrod was granted a $10,000 raise.

The $8.3 million jail budget advanced Wednesday accounted for 67% of the jail fund’s $11 million in projected 2020 revenue, which included a projected $5 million beginning balance.

 ?? The Sentinel-Record/Richard Rasmussen ?? BUDGET HEARING: From left, Justices of the Peace Esther Dixon, D-District 3, Thomas Anderson, D-District 2, and Ronald Hunter, R-District 11, listen to the county’s 2020 budget proposals during Wednesday’s hearing in the County Courtroom.
The Sentinel-Record/Richard Rasmussen BUDGET HEARING: From left, Justices of the Peace Esther Dixon, D-District 3, Thomas Anderson, D-District 2, and Ronald Hunter, R-District 11, listen to the county’s 2020 budget proposals during Wednesday’s hearing in the County Courtroom.

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