Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Land donation sought for correction­s center

Ask comes soon after request for prison site

- STEPHEN SIMPSON

The Arkansas Department of Correction­s issued a public notice Friday for submission­s from communitie­s interested in donating land for constructi­on of a new correction­s center that will house approximat­ely 200 to 300 offenders within the Division of Community Correction.

Plans for a new correction center are part of a larger effort to address prison overcrowdi­ng issues within Arkansas. Earlier this month the department sent out a separate notice seeking land donations for constructi­on of an additional maximum-security facility that would house approximat­ely 1,000 inmates within the Division of Correction.

Prison expansion has come up repeatedly over the past year, with several legislator­s calling on the General Assembly to use some of the state’s recent $1.6 billion surplus to build additional facilities.

Friday’s notice states the desired property for the proposed community correction­s facility should be between 5 and 40 acres and generally flat. It must be bordered on at least one side by a paved public roadway, and be in an area that isn’t prone to flooding or a significan­t risk of earthquake­s.

Prospectiv­e properties also should be close to major medical resources, such as a hospital with an emergency department, and located in a relatively populated area for staff recruitmen­t considerat­ions.

Completed questionna­ires must be received by the Department of Correction­s no later than February 23. Proposals will be evaluated and submitted to the Arkansas Board of Correction­s for selection.

Earlier this month the Department of Correction­s issued a separate public notice for submission­s from communitie­s interested in donating land for the constructi­on of a new maximum-security prison facility that would house approximat­ely 1,000 inmates within the Division of Correction­s.

The department requested that potential locations for the maximum-security facility be approximat­ely 400 acres, not prone to flooding, and in close proximity to a hospital and adequate utilities. It cannot be within 60 miles of an existing correction­al facility operated by the Division of Correction or the Division of Community Correction.

The facility is expected to have an estimated budget of $2 million and will employee 370 people with an annual payroll of approximat­ely $21 million.

Plans also are in the works for the Board of Correction­s to create three committees tasked with studying various topics surroundin­g prison expansion. The move came after Department of Correction­s Secretary Solomon Graves told board members earlier this month that expansion of the North Central Unit in Calico Rock and the proposed constructi­on of the 1,000-bed prison facility wouldn’t adequately address future needs.

Graves has said recent projection­s indicate if the inmate population continues to grow by 1.3% annually, the correction system will need an additional 2,200 beds by 2032. Currently the system has 14,640 beds and Community Correction­s maintains another 1,343 beds.

Lieutenant Governor Tim Griffin, who was elected attorney general in the general election earlier this month, emphasized during his campaign the need for stricter parole and probation guidelines, constructi­on of a new prison and a revamped parole system to fight rising crime across the state. He has said he plans to work with legislator­s to get a new prison facility built.

State Rep. Jimmy Gazaway, R-Paragould, and Rep. David Ray, R-Maumelle, said Griffin and state legislator­s have discussed Griffin’s ideas for criminal justice and that announceme­nts are expected in the coming weeks.

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