By Kelsey Cochran
One credit shy of receiving a high school diploma, an inmate at Arrendale State Prison for women will soon be the first Georgia Department of Corrections inmate to graduate while incarcerated as part of a collaboration between the GDC and the Mountain Education Center Charter School.
Graduation was made possible by new laws that allowed for more classroom education and job training for inmates.
At a Tuesday luncheon, Gov. Nathan Deal updated state lawmakers on the program’s progress to close out the Carl Vinson Institute of Government’s 29th Biennial Institute for Georgia Legislators at the University of Georgia.
The measures were designed to fight the state’s 30 percent recidivism rate in one of the largest prison systems in the United States, and Deal noted that of the 60,000 inmates across Georgia’s prisons, just 700 were engaged in continuing education opportunities while incarcerated before he appointed former Forsyth County Schools Superintendent Buster Evans as GDC Assistant Commissioner.
Published Dec 10, 2014 by Christopher Zoukis, JD, MBA | Last Updated by Christopher Zoukis, JD, MBA on Jul 10, 2024 at 9:50 am