Jail population expected to place facility under plan of action
John Coffelt, Editor
Local officials are concerned that, if the population numbers continue on their present trend at the Coffee County Jail, the facility could get flagged during an upcoming inspection by the Tennessee Corrections Institute.
“Our population is growing and will continue to grow,” Sheriff Chad Partin said during the March 27 Law Enforcement Committee meeting. “We are currently at 392 inmates out of 400 beds. We have been over 400 a time or two.”
Partin said the TCI will not likely approve the jail inspection and could put the county on a plan of action.
One of the main concerns related to overcrowding is the female population, which is holding at 20% of the total population or 80 females.
“We’ve had a tremendous increase in female population,” Partin said.
A partial remedy for some of the crowding is to transfer state sentenced prisoners to other county jails. Jail administrators are currently searching through the inventory for inmates who can be transferred.
“County jails are designed for county inmates, 11 months 29 days is best,” Partin said.
Partin said that high jail populations increase the number of incidents and damage to the facility.
Sheriff Dept. to show stronger Bonnaroo presence
Partin said the county, under the direction of District Attorney General Craig Northcott, will be on the Bonnaroo grounds during the festival in June.
“(Northcott) has some concerns about enforcement, so we’re going back old school Bonnaroo,” Partin said.
Partin said the department will not be paid by the festival but will be there for enforcement.
“We are going to be visible,” he said. “Undercover stuff, we don’t do that. It’s pointless. We’re going to be there, visible and very active in drug enforcement.”
Partin said the atmosphere at Bonnaroo has changed for the better in recent years with it not being as bad as in the early years.
John has been with the Manchester Times since May 2011. John has won Tennessee Press Association awards for Best News Photo and placed in numerous other categories. John is a 1994 graduate of Tullahoma High School, a graduate of Motlow State Community College and earned a Bachelor of Arts in English from Middle Tennessee State University. He lives in Tullahoma, enjoys painting, dancing and exploring the outdoors.
