The Hennepin County jail is fully staffed for the first time since 2020, and the state of Minnesota has lifted restrictions on its incarcerated population.
That progress is expected to save the county money on overtime staff and the housing of incarcerated people at other jails, which the county has spent more than $2 million on this year. But the Hennepin County jail will remain under additional state oversight due to concerns over well-being checks and living conditions.
“With this latest class, we’ve never had this many [detention] deputies,” Sheriff Dawanna Witt said.
Last October, the Minnesota Department of Corrections (DOC) placed the jail’s license under a conditional status for failing to meet a variety of legal standards, which put those incarcerated at risk. That came after seven people at the jail died between December 2022 and August 2024. All of the deaths involved violations regarding well-being checks, according to the DOC.
The state then ordered the jail to reduce its population to below 600 people, out of a total of 839 beds.
In the year since, the sheriff’s office focused on improving staff numbers, culminating last month when the agency swore-in 99 new detention deputies, bringing the department’s total to around 250.
The jail is now overstaffed by nearly 50 positions — a move made in anticipation of coming retirements, Witt said.
County pulls off hiring spree
The Hennepin County jail, similar to many incarceration facilities across the country, has struggled to maintain competitive wages, and officials have said the job has become more difficult in recent years as incarcerated people arrive more often with health issues.