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Secretary Mack
Jarvis Retires RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK Correction Secretary Mack Jarvis was congratulated by Gov. Jim Hunt and a chorus of more than 500 well wishers who gathered for his third attempt to retire from the North Carolina Department of Correction Sept. 18 at the Sheraton Imperial.
Those people who have been corrected, those people who have been protected and those people who have worked with you. I want to thank you personally for your exemplary service to North Carolina." Assistant Correction Secretary Lynn Phillips pointed out that Jarvis shares initials with another famous North Carolinian who is considering retirement. "Just as the Chicago Bulls wont be the same without Michael Jordan," said Phillips, "the Department of Correction wont be the same without Mack Jarvis." Jarvis has served as the departments secretary for the last two years, deputy secretary from 1993 to 1997 and a leader in the agency for the last five decades. Jarvis began his career with the department in 1959 at Caldwell Correctional Center in Hudson. During his 35-year career, Jarvis held numerous jobs in the department, including superintendent of Avery, Watauga, Stokes, Western and Piedmont correctional centers. He was a program director for the Western Area Office before becoming Area Administrator in 1977. During the past seven years, Jarvis has helped to transform an agency that was in need of help and failing to meet public expectations. Jarvis helped to rebuild and reorganize the agency into a national model. During this time, the prison population rose from 20,000 at the end of 1992 to 32,000 today. Paroles deceased from a high of 26,784 in 1993 to 9,328 in 1997. An important measure of success was that U.S. District Judge Earl Britt issued a court order February 20, ending 12 years of federal court jurisdiction over state prisons. During his tenure, Jarvis has broken ground and cut ribbons helping to open a number of new state-of-the-art prisons including the close security Pasquotank Correctional Institution and Polk Youth Institution; medium security Craven Correctional Institution, Hyde Correctional Center and Warren Correctional Institution; and minimum security Dan River Prison Work Farm and North Piedmont Correctional Center for Women. Under Jarvis leadership the department has increased the number of prisoners working to 21,000 a day. Many take part in the new community work program that puts minimum security prisoners to work for local government and public agencies. The department has doubled the number of drug and alcohol recovery treatment spaces and created new alcohol and chemical dependency programs. Jarvis also oversaw the creation of a new ethics for inmates program. Franklin Freeman, chief of staff of the Governors Office and former secretary of the Department of Correction, served as master of ceremonies for the luncheon. Mixing in a few of his famous mule jokes, Freeman kept the crowd laughing with his anecdotes on Jarvis career. Other speakers during the luncheon included Deputy Secretary Theodis Beck, Director of Community Corrections Robert Guy and R.O. Barbour, Jarvis long-time friend and retired correction employee. Jarvis son, Rev. Mack Jarvis III, delivered the invocation and Probation Officer Nikita Sutton provided the musical entertainment, singing Frank Sinatras "My Way." u |