PHOENIX β Gov. Doug Ducey said Monday he wants to change the culture at the Department of Corrections, a culture that resulted in the agency chief cut off from what was happening in the prison system by what a recent report called βyesβ men.
But the governor is refusing to criticize Charles Ryan, who announced his retirement as head of the prison system just before the release of a highly critical report on the agency last week, a report that said Ryan was βsurprisingly uniformedβ about what was going on in his department.
βIβm not piling on,β Ducey said when asked about the problems that were revealed not only in the report about security issues but also a history of lawsuits against the department over everything from inadequate health care for inmates to concerns about the safety of corrections officers.
βThis is someone who has served the public for 40 years,β Ducey said of Ryan.
And Ducey sidestepped questions about whether Ryan kept him in the dark about the extent of the problems in the prison system.
That includes not just was in the report last week by two former Arizona Supreme Court justices detailing problems with cells that did not lock and inmates wandering around units and starting fires and assaulting others. The report also mentioned other, more long-standing problems with morale, understaffing and salary issues.
Instead, Ducey said he would not blame Ryan.
βIf you look at the report, youβll see that there are some things that had not gotten to the director,β the governor said. βAnd, of course, what the director doesnβt know, he canβt get to me.β
But the justices, in their report, suggested Ryanβs apparent ignorance β and, by extension, Duceyβs lack of knowledge β may have been self-created.
They said some people they interviewed told them Ryan βcultivates a culture in which employees fear to tell him negative information.β
That leaves the question of what happens next β and who takes over the agency responsible for incarcerating more than 40,000 inmates when Ryan formally steps down next month.
The governor made it clear he does not want the current situation to continue.
βChanges are necessary,β Ducey said.
In their report last week, Rebecca White Berch and Ruth McGregor said it appears Ryan was βmisledβ about the lack of functioning locks in cell doors at the Lewis Prison in Buckeye.
Part of that, they said, may be because information on some incidents had been βfilteredβ to make a supervisor or unit βlook good.β
But the two former justices also said people they interviewed said Ryan surrounds himself with βyes menβ and that βsome dare not disagree with him and slant reports to meet his expectations for fear of discipline or termination.β
βWith the upcoming transition, it gives the opportunity for a fresh start,β Ducey said when asked about ensuring there is not a repeat performance when the governor chooses a new director.
βAnd that, in my experience, has always been a way to change the culture and most dramatically affect it.β
Ducey provided little in the way of hints as to who β or even what kind of person β he wants to take over the agency.
βThereβs a lot of people that want to be at the table and provide input,β he said.
βThereβs a lot of people who have a lot to say about criminal justice, reduction in recidivism, incarceration in the state of Arizona and in the United States for that matter,β the governor continued.
βSo we do want to hear those voices and that feedback to be part of the input in the decision.β
Ducey acknowledged that he already has some people βin mind.β
βBut, as Iβve said, weβre going to do a national search, weβre going to cast a wide net,β he said.
In the past more than three decades, the agency has been headed by directors from a wide variety of backgrounds. That includes people with experience in prison systems from other states as well as those with more academic backgrounds.
And for a time the department was run by a top officer from the Department of Public Safety.
Ducey, in response to that variety of prior directors, said heβs looking for the βbest possible leader.β
βAnd I think you can find leaders in all the backgrounds that youβre describing,β the governor said, saying he is looking for a βthoroughβ recruitment process.