Skip to Content

Department Overview

The Tennessee Department of Correction supervises more than 20,000 inmates and employs more than 5,000 people. There are 14 prisons in the state system, three of which are managed privately. Female inmates are housed in two prisons, one in Nashville and the other in Memphis. Male inmates are housed in the 12 other prisons located across the state. Inmates in need of acute or continuing medical care are housed at the Lois M. DeBerry Special Needs Facility in Nashville.

Photo of Commissioner George M. Little

On September 8, 2005, Governor Bredesen appointed George M. Little as the new Commissioner of the Tennessee Department of Correction. Little most recently served as Director of Shelby County Division of Corrections, where he provided oversight of the administrative functions of the division, including the preparation of the division's operating and capital budgets and general oversight of the day-to-day operations of the division. Little said, "I appreciate the opportunity Governor Bredesen has given me to use by background knowledge and years of experience to lead this valuable state department. Governor Bredesen and I share a common vision for the role correction plays in our state, and I look forward to working with him and with the dedicated employees of the department in my new role." Little was sworn in as the new commissioner on October 3, 2005.

The Tennessee Department of Correction continues to be one of a few states to maintain its national accreditated status by the American Correctional Association.

In 2005, the department implemented two transition communities within our prisons which are designed to gradually prepare offenders to live successfully in a free world. They were a direct outgrowth of a previously federally funded reentry initiative that took place in 2002. Statistics show that 97% of all inmates eventually leave prison.

Photo of Governor and Commissioner

All Tennessee inmates are required to work or attend school during their incarceration. The overall goal is to assist them in learning a marketable skill to be used upon their release. Nearly a thousand inmates work in the state's prison industry program known as TRICOR. The remaining inmates work in support service roles throughout the institutions or participate in community work crews that assist neighboring communities. Since 1998, TDOC work crews have performed more than 12 million hours of community service. Approximately 2,635 inmates are attending adult education classes in an attempt to obtain their GED. 1,905 more are actively pursuing a vocational certificate.

It's important to note that juvenile offenders in Tennessee, with the exception of those who are sentenced as adults, are supervised by the Department of Children's Services. The Tennessee Board of Probation and Parole oversees those inmates who have been granted parole, as well as those who have been sentenced to probation in Tennessee. The Department of Children's Services and the Board of Probation and Parole function independently of the Department of Correction.

The department has also been recognized nationally for its cost savings measures in recycling and its unique managment organization of death row.

For more information about the TDOC, we have included the following links: