Biographies
Presentations
Collaboration is the Key....
Increasing Public Safety &
Reducing...
Regional Summit Summary
Final
Session
2004
Summit
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Steering
Committee
Commissioner George Little
On September 8,
2005, Governor Bredesen appointed George M. Little,
veteran correction administrator for the state, as the new
Commissioner of the Tennessee Department of
Correction. The department currently has custody of
approximately 19,000 felony offenders in 15 prisons
located across the state and employs a workforce of more
than 5,000 employees.
From 2003 to
2005, Commissioner Little served as Director of the Shelby
County Division of Corrections located in Memphis,
Tennessee. In this capacity, 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.
From 1992 to
2002, Commissioner Little served as the Assistant to the
Executive Director of the Tennessee Board of Probation and
Parole in Nashville, Tennessee. He administered the
fiscal, personnel, and planning sections for the agency;
established a strategic management program for the Board
including performance measures and strategic goals; and
conducted research and program evaluation projects to
increase cost-effectiveness of agency operations.
Commissioner
Little has also served as the Regional Director for the
Tennessee Department of Correction in Memphis, the Warden
of DeBerry Correctional Institute, Assistant Commissioner
for Adult Institutions with the Tennessee Department of
Correction and Assistant to Governor Lamar Alexander,
Office of State Planning.
He holds a B.A.
degree in Economic and Business Administration from
Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia, which he received in
1977. He also conducted graduate study in Economics,
Urban/Regional Development at the University of Texas from
1977-1979.
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Gayle Ray
Deputy Commissioner Ray is no stranger
to the field of corrections. She has served in the
Deputy Commissioner position for the Department of
Correction since May 2004 and as former Davidson County
Sheriff. In addition, she has over twenty-five
years of experience as a community leader, elected
official, manager and teacher. From July 13 - October 3, 2005, Governor
Bredesen appointed Tennessee Department of Correction
Deputy Commissioner Gayle Ray to serve as Acting
Commissioner of Correction.
From 1994-2002, Ray served as the
Davidson County Sheriff. In that position, she was
responsible for managing one of the state's largest
jails with 600 employees and a budget of $46
million. Under Ray's direction, the jail was
accredited by the American Correctional Association,
which resulted in reduced liability from inmate
litigation. She also championed better treatment
for mentally ill inmates, which eventually led to better
local sentencing practices.
Prior to becoming Sheriff, Ray worked as
a program coordinator for Vanderbilt University, linking
colleges and public schools for the Tennessee Space
Grant Consortium. She held this position from
1992-94, while simultaneously serving as a member of
Metro Council, where she chaired the education
committee. In 2002, she also ran for Congress.
Ray has a Bachelor of Arts in English
from Middle Tennessee State University. She also
attended the University of Arkansas where she earned a
Master of Arts in English. Her education continued
at the Jack Massey Graduate School of Business at
Belmont University, where she earned a Masters Degree in
Business Administration. In addition, she is a
graduate of the Senior Executives in State and Local
Government Program administered by Harvard University,
Kennedy School of Government.
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Patricia B. Dishman (Pat)
With over 28 years of professional experience in
working with Tennessee state government, Pat Dishman has served in
four state departments and overseen numerous state efforts
to provide more efficient and effective direct and
contract services for the citizens of Tennessee. Pat
has directed contract/grant offices in both the Tennessee
Departments of Children's Services and Finance &
Administration and currently served as Director for the
Office of Criminal Justice Programs in the Tennessee
Department of Finance & Administration. She is
responsible for the development, review, awarding, and
administration of approximately 600 contracts for services
with state, local, and not for profit agencies.
Additionally, she directs the state's application for and
implementation of numerous Department of Justice and
Department of Health and Human Services grants. The
Office of Criminal Justice Programs is also the State
Administrative Agency for the Department of Justice.
Pat Dishman received a Bachelor of Arts Degree in
Psychology and Sociology from Middle Tennessee State
University in 1975, a Master's Degree in Public
Administration from the University of Tennessee in 1980,
and has completed required course work for her Doctoral
Degree in Public Administration from Tennessee State
University.
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Claire Drowota
Mrs. Claire Drowota has served as the Executive
Director of the Tennessee General Assembly's Select
Oversight Committee on Corrections since 1986, when the
joint Senate and House Committee was established during
the Special Session on Corrections in 1985. Prior to
holding this position, she worked on the ad hoc
legislative task force assigned the responsibility to
propose solutions to alleviate overcrowding and violence
in the corrections system in order to comply with a
federal court order. Prior to this work, at the request
of the Davidson County District Attorney General, she
helped establish the first Victim-Witness program in
Nashville and served as the volunteer coordinator for the
program.
Ms. Drowota has participated in numerous national
conferences on correction issues and has served on the
American Correctional Association's Legislative Affairs
Committee and as the Staff Chair of the National
Conference of State Legislature's Criminal Justice
Committee. In addition to writing impact statements
on all corrections bills, she has co-authored reports on
Tennessee corrections including comparisons of privately
managed and state managed prisons and jail and prison
population issues.
She attended Wellesley College from 1963-1965 and
received her B.A. from Vanderbilt University in 1967.
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James W. Kirby
Executive Director to the District Attorneys General
Conference
James Kirby was born March 16, 1947, in Louisville,
Kentucky. He attended Macon County High School and
received a bachelor's degree from Middle Tennessee State
University in 1969.
Mr. Kirby has held the following positions:
1975 Administrator, Tennessee Crime Lab
1972-76 Assistant District Attorney, 23rd District
1976-90 Senior District Attorney, 23rd District
1990-97 Deputy District Attorney, 23rd District
1997-99 Executive Director, District Attorneys
General Conference
In 1999, he was a member of the TBI Nominating
Committee, the Tennessee Judicial Council, and
secretary/treasurer for the National Association of
Prosecutor Coordinators.
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Elizabeth (Libby) Sykes
Elizabeth (Libby) Sykes currently serves as the Deputy
Director of the Tennessee Administrative Office of the
Courts. Ms. Sykes joined state government in
1986. Prior to joining the Administrative Office of
the Courts in 1993, Ms. Sykes served as a staff attorney
for both the Tennessee Departments of Correction and
Health. Libby lives with her husband in Clarksville,
Tennessee
Ms. Sykes is a graduate of Austin Peay State University
and holds a Doctor of Jurisprudence degree from the
University of Memphis School of Law.
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Charles M. Traughber
Charles M. Traughber began his career in the criminal
justice field in 1969, as an institutional counselor with
the Tennessee Department of Correction. He
progressed through the correctional ranks to Director of
Counseling and then Special Projects Coordinator. He
was appointed to the Tennessee Parole Board in 1972, and
now serves as Chairman of the Board of Probation and
Parole. Mr. Traughber currently sits on the
Governor's Commission on the Enhancement Factors for
Criminal Justice Sentencing, serves on the Conference
Criminal Justice Task Force, and is a Charter Member of
the Annual Tennessee Legislative Retreat and Training
Conference.
He has served on the Governor's Corrections and Law
Enforcement Training Committee and Conference for a
Drug-Free Tennessee; the Tennessee Sentencing Commission; served as Chairperson of the
Council for Chairs for the Association of Parole
Authorities International; the Juvenile Justice Reform Commission; the National
Criminal Justice/Mental Health Consensus Project; and the
Association of Paroling Authorities International, where
he served as Southern Regional Vice-President and member
of the Executive Committee for that body.
A graduate of Tennessee State University, he has earned
postgraduate hours in Guidance and Counseling and Criminal
Justice Administration from both Tennessee State
University and Middle Tennessee State University. He
has also received specialized training from the National
Institute of Corrections, the Association of Paroling
Authorities International, the American Correctional
Association, and the National Association of
Administrative Law Judges. In 1999, the Association
of Paroling Authorities International recognized Chairman
Traughber with its highest honor, the "Ben Baer
Award" for his many contributions to the field of
parole.
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Facilitator
Becki Ney
Becky Ney is a Principal of the Center for Effective
Public Policy where she has worked since 1982. Ms.
Ney has provided facilitation and technical assistance and
training for grantees of the Serious and Violent
Offender Reentry Initiative (SVORI) sponsored by the
U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs,
Bureau of Justice Assistance, and for jurisdictions
participating in the National Institute of Corrections' Transition
from Prison to Community Initiative (TPC).
Most recently, Ms. Ney has directed NIC's Improving
Community Responses for Women Offenders (ICRWO) and
has worked closely with Tulsa County, OK, Davidson County
(Nashville), TN, and Maui County, HI, over the past two
years to identify and implement gender responsive
approaches to women offenders. Ms. Ney also
coordinates the technical assistance component for the Center
for Sex Offender Management (CSOM) and works closely
with several jurisdictions throughout the country to
improve their community management of sex offenders.
She has directed a variety of other initiatives in the
field of criminal justice, with particular emphasis on
intermediate sanctions, community corrections, prison and
jail crowding, pretrial screening and release, probation
and parole supervision, transition and reentry, violations
and revocation decision making, and managing specialized
offender populations. Ms. Ney holds a Bachelor of
Arts degree in Psychology and Sociology from La Salle
University in Philadelphia, PA, and a Master of Science
degree in Criminology from the University of Edinburgh,
Scotland.
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