Kansas Department of Corrections

Agency of Kansas, U.S. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kansas Department of Corrections

The Kansas Department of Corrections (KDOC)[1] is a cabinet-level agency of Kansas that operates the state's correctional facilities, both juvenile and adult, the state's parole system, and the state's Prisoner Review Board. It is headquartered in Topeka.[2]

Quick Facts Kansas Department of Corrections KDOC, Agency overview ...
Kansas Department of Corrections
KDOC
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Agency overview
Employees3,549
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdictionKansas, USA
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El Dorado
Hutchinson
Lansing
Leavenworth
MJRCF
Topeka
Kansas Prisons — green=state, red=private (Hover mouse over pog to popup clickable link)
Map of Kansas Department of Corrections's jurisdiction
General nature
Operational structure
HeadquartersTopeka, Kansas
Agency executive
Website
doc.ks.gov
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Correctional facilities

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Lansing Correctional Facility

The Kansas Department of Corrections operates eight adult correctional facility sites, three satellite correctional facility sites, and one juvenile correctional facility.[3]

Community & Field Services

The community and field services division[5] has two units - parole[6] and community corrections.[7]

Victim Services

The Office of Victim Services (OVS)[8] provides confidential support and information to victims, survivors, and witnesses if the offender in the crime was sentenced to incarceration in the Kansas Department of Corrections. Services provided include victim notification,[9] safety planning,[10] victim restitution,[11] parole comment session advocacy, Victim/Offender Dialogue (VOD) program,[12] facility tours, and apology letters.[13]

Kansas Correctional Industries

The department uses inmate labor to produce products such as office furniture, park equipment, and clothing for state government.[14]

Staffing

The department has suffered staff shortages for many years.[15] In 2017, press reports indicated a turnover among KDOC officers of 46% per year. A 10% pay raise increased the hourly wage for uniformed employees to $14.66, but did not include non-uniformed staff.[16] The El Dorado facility was authorized a staff of 682, but about a quarter of the positions were vacant.[17]

By 2019, the department was forced to contract with CoreCivic to move six hundred prisoners to Arizona due to staff shortages. At that time, the department reported an overall inmate population of 10,002 indicating about ten percent of the population was to be moved out of state.[18]

See also

References

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