Lawmaker raises specter of federal takeover of Tennessee prison system

Photo: John Partipilo / Tennessee Lookout / State Rep. Mike Stewart, a Nashville Democrat, asked Monday whether the state needed to take control of Tennessee's prison system.
Photo: John Partipilo / Tennessee Lookout / State Rep. Mike Stewart, a Nashville Democrat, asked Monday whether the state needed to take control of Tennessee's prison system.

Lawmakers blasted the Department of Correction on Monday for making a weak response to a 2020 audit, with one legislator questioning whether the federal courts need to take over Tennessee's prison system again.

Prison system officials contended they had solved nearly every problem raised by the Comptroller's Office two years ago, but they presented few details in a meeting of the Joint Government Operations Subcommittee.

Under questioning from outgoing Democratic Rep. Mike Stewart, system officials said CoreCivic, the state's private prison operator, paid more than $10.6 million in liquidated damages over the last two years compared to $7.3 million from 2018 to 2020 for failing to meet staffing requirements.

The state pays CoreCivic about $180 million a year to run four prisons, and the money is simply deducted from the amount the state pays. Yet the private operator has been dogged by statistics showing its homicide rate for prisoners is higher than that in state-run prisons.

Correction Department officials also acknowledged their vacancy rate for staff for state-run prisons is 29%, with some as low as 5%, compared to CoreCivic's, which ranges from 12% to 39%.

Officials said, however, staffing has increased since the legislature approved a 37% pay increase for correction officers.

Stewart, a Nashville attorney who is leaving office this year, requested internal audits for the committee to figure out how much improvement the department has made, since it provided few details Monday. He also noted the department faces two questions, first: whether the legislature will allow it to continue operating in 2023 as it tries to respond to a "terrible audit."

"The other question: Is it time for the federal courts just to take over our prison system again and clear house?" Stewart said.

Interim Commissioner Lisa Helton declined to respond to a reporter's questions about the need for a federal court takeover immediately after Monday's hearing. She issued a statement later saying, "I have confidence in the ability of the Tennessee Department of Correction to carry out our mission with professionalism and within the standards of the American Correctional Association."

The federal court system took control of Tennessee prisons in 1982 when a U.S. District Court found portions of the system unconstitutional and appointed a special master to run them. Overcrowding sparked violence and riots across the system in 1985, and the legislature responded with a special session to set up the Comprehensive Corrections Improvement Act, which established the Oversight Committee on Corrections, the Tennessee Sentencing Commission and the Community Corrections program. All three of those have been nixed or changed dramatically in the last three years.

Juvenile functions were removed from the Department of Correction in 1985, and Riverbend Maximum Security Institution in Nashville and the Wayne County Boot Camp started.

Seven years later, the state closed Tennessee State Penitentiary in Nashville and opened the first private prison run by Corrections Corporation of America -- now CoreCivic -- in Clifton. A year later, the prison system emerged from federal oversight.

(READ MORE: Praying for the incarcerated, Chattanooga group raises awareness during Lent)

Yet the 2020 audit found the Department of Correction leadership "failed to provide adequate oversight" of prisons in several areas dealing with inmates, prison staff and communities, affecting the department's ability to meet its mission of operating "safe and secure prisons" and providing effective community supervision to improve public safety.

Helton tried to smooth things over in Monday's hearing, saying the system has seen "remarkable enhancements for rehabilitative services." She also told lawmakers she appreciated their approval of pay increases and help from the Tennessee Higher Education Commission.

"I think it's a positive story," she said.

In addition to saying it responded to the comptroller's findings, the department started an interdiction unit to concentrate on keeping drugs, cellphones and weapons out of prisons, according to the presentation.

Committee members were not impressed.

Rep. John Ragan, who chairs the Joint Government Operations Committee, told Helton he received complaints via text message from other lawmakers who were watching the presentation online. The Oak Ridge Republican urged Department of Correction staff to do a thorough analysis of guards to figure out how to hire more officers.

"We need to do something, and we need to do something in a very short order," Ragan said.

State Sen. Mark Pody, R-Lebanon, was frustrated by the department's inability to brief him before the meeting so he would know what type of questions to ask.

"It certainly leaves me uncomfortable with the progress we're making," he said.

(READ MORE: Tennessee reviewing community corrections amid losses spurred by changes in contract process)

The 2020 audit called for improvement in numerous areas, including better reporting of information, correctional facilities staffing, inmate services such as medical and mental health care, and contracted services and procurements.

In addition, the audit determined the department's annual inspections didn't provide a "clear measure" of state and CoreCivic prison performance.

Public reporting of inmate deaths and other serious incidents also raised concerns, with the audit finding management did not ensure state and CoreCivic staff collected and reported complete and accurate information, something it determined to be "problematic."

The 2020 audit also found the Department of Correction failed to provide adequate probation and parole services.

(READ MORE: Community Corrections helps Tennessee clients change their lives)

Yet Gov. Bill Lee's administration is putting more inmates under the authority of state probation officers by rolling back the number overseen by the Community Corrections program. Despite opposition from the legislature, the Department of Correction took bids that undercut the ability of the 37-year-old Community Corrections program to function.

Community Corrections officials say dialing back the program and its intensive oversight for felons means more people will be sent to prison instead of being given a chance to change their lives and function outside a correctional facility.

The Department of Correction contends it didn't eliminate Community Corrections and is simply redirecting its efforts through day reporting centers, intensive outpatient treatment facilities and residential treatment. The cost of the program is to remain at $13.8 million for 14 grants, rather than 16.

Read more at TennesseeLookout.com.


Upcoming Events