County Jail
0001-203100
Division Overview
The Custody Division is charged with safely housing and rehabilitating inmates in our care and custody.
While in custody, staff provide inmates with essential services such as meals, clothing, bedding, laundry, toiletries, commissary, exercise, legal research, visiting and correspondence. Inmates receive medical, dental and mental health care services.
In an effort to reduce recidivism, we offer numerous programs such as counseling, education, addiction recovery, NA/AA, Bible Study, behavioral intervention, library, religious services, release plans, life skills and work skills.
Allocated Positions by Year
Adopted Budget By Year
* Each department is part of a "Fund". Many times, a department or even a fund may show greater expense then revenues for the current fiscal year. This does not account for money that was not spent in prior years, also known as "beginning fund balance". To see beginning fund balances for each fund click here. When creating the annual budget Counties are required by law to adopt a balanced budget, meaning the total expense cannot exceed the sum of revenue plus beginning fund balances.
Recent Departmental Accomplishments
The design and construction of the new jail (DDC) provides us with modern technology, updated equipment, efficient kitchen and laundry, improved medical/dental clinic, office space, inmate housing and program space, and overall a facility to meet our operational needs. This facility enhances our ability to provide safety and security for the public, inmates, custody staff, law enforcement/justice system partners, program volunteers and vendors.
Top Departmental Concerns
- Adequate staffing levels necessary to provide public safety, jail security and inmate services.
- Transition training from current jail facility to new jail facility (DDC).
- Continuing to safely navigate through the Covid-19 pandemic.
Looking Forward- Planning Goals
We continue to innovate and strategize toward providing more services to the jail population and the public while reducing the financial obligation to the county.