The Arkansas Board of Corrections voted on Thursday to create a new position meant to plan and implement what Department of Corrections Secretary Lindsay Wallace called a "seamless continuum of care for incarceration and transition to community."
The Arkansas Board of Corrections voted on Thursday to create a new position meant to plan and implement what Department of Corrections Secretary Lindsay Wallace called a "seamless continuum of care for incarceration and transition to community."
The Arkansas Board of Corrections voted on Thursday to create a new position meant to plan and implement what Department of Corrections Secretary Lindsay Wallace called a "seamless continuum of care for incarceration and transition to community."
As of May 1, 2024, there were 369 people listed as Columbia County inmates by the state Department of Corrections website. The inmates are distributed among several institutions across the
Arkansas Department of Corrections Secretary Lindsay Wallace said Friday the agency is looking into addressing a backlog in jails caused by placement of state inmates in county facilities by making use of "nontraditional beds" in such places as those used for work release programs.