Maine Department of Corrections: Facilities, Programs, and Oversight
The Maine Department of Corrections (MDOC) is the executive agency responsible for the incarceration, supervision, and rehabilitation of adults and juveniles committed to state custody under Maine law. This page covers MDOC's institutional structure, facility types, programming framework, and oversight mechanisms. It also addresses the distinctions between adult and juvenile correctional populations and the boundaries of state correctional authority relative to county and federal systems.
Definition and scope
The Maine Department of Corrections operates under Title 34-A of the Maine Revised Statutes (Maine Legislature, Title 34-A), which establishes its mandate, organizational authority, and operational standards. The department reports to the Governor through the executive branch and is led by a Commissioner appointed by the Governor with consent of the Maine Legislature.
MDOC holds jurisdiction over:
- Adults sentenced to state incarceration (sentences typically exceeding one year)
- Juveniles adjudicated and committed to the Long Creek Youth Development Center or released under supervised community programs
- Adults and juveniles on probation, supervised release, or community corrections supervision statewide
The department does not govern county jails, which are administered by individual county sheriffs and county commissioners under separate statutory authority. Maine's 16 counties each operate their own detention facilities for pre-trial detainees and individuals serving sentences under one year. Federal correctional facilities located within Maine's geographic boundaries are not administered by MDOC and fall under the jurisdiction of the Federal Bureau of Prisons.
Scope limitation: This page addresses MDOC and state-level correctional authority exclusively. County jail operations, federal detention facilities, and the tribal justice systems of Maine's federally recognized tribes — addressed separately under Maine Tribal Governments — fall outside this page's coverage.
How it works
MDOC operates a network of adult correctional facilities classified by security level, matched to the assessed risk and programming needs of the incarcerated population.
Adult facility classification:
- Maine State Prison (Warren) — The only maximum-security adult facility in the state, housing the highest-risk male population. Capacity and conditions are subject to oversight by the Maine Legislature's joint standing committee on criminal justice and public safety.
- Maine Correctional Center (Windham) — A medium-security facility that also functions as the primary intake and classification center for adult males. Located in Windham, Maine.
- Charleston Correctional Facility — A minimum-security adult male facility emphasizing work programs and reentry preparation.
- Bolduc Correctional Facility (Warren) — A minimum-security facility co-located near Maine State Prison, housing adults in the lowest-risk classification.
- Maine Correctional Center, Women's Center (Windham) — The primary facility for adult women, providing gender-responsive programming and medical services.
- Long Creek Youth Development Center (South Portland) — The sole remaining secure juvenile facility operated by MDOC, located in South Portland. Maine closed the Mountain View Youth Development Center in 2018, consolidating secure juvenile capacity at Long Creek.
Classification decisions are made at intake using standardized risk and needs assessment instruments. Placement determines programming access, housing unit, and supervision level. Transfers between facilities occur when classification status changes or when specialized programming is required.
MDOC's community corrections division supervises probationers and individuals on supervised release through district offices distributed across the state. Officers in these offices conduct field contacts, verify compliance with conditions, coordinate with treatment providers, and report violations to the courts.
Common scenarios
Correctional involvement with MDOC typically arises under defined legal circumstances:
- Sentencing by Superior Court or District Court — When a Maine court imposes a sentence of incarceration exceeding one year, the individual is committed to MDOC custody. The department does not determine sentence length; that authority rests with the judiciary under the Maine Judicial Branch.
- Probation supervision — Individuals sentenced to probation in lieu of or following incarceration are supervised by MDOC probation officers. Conditions are set by the court; violations are reported back to the court for determination.
- Juvenile commitment — Juveniles adjudicated delinquent and committed by the District Court's Family Division may be placed at Long Creek or, where appropriate, in community-based alternatives managed through MDOC's juvenile community corrections program.
- Reentry and supervised release — Individuals nearing the end of a sentence may be released under supervised conditions, subject to reentry planning that includes housing verification, employment coordination, and substance use treatment linkage through MDOC's reentry services unit.
- Revocation proceedings — Alleged violations of probation or supervised release conditions trigger revocation hearings before the originating court. MDOC staff prepare violation reports; the judiciary retains authority to revoke, modify, or continue supervision.
Decision boundaries
MDOC operates within boundaries set by statute, the courts, and external oversight bodies. Understanding where departmental authority begins and ends is essential for practitioners and researchers working in this sector.
What MDOC controls:
- Facility classification and housing assignment post-sentencing
- Internal discipline, including segregation placement, subject to constitutional and statutory standards
- Programming access and participation requirements
- Parole-equivalent supervised release conditions within statutory limits
- Staff hiring, training, and certification under civil service standards (Maine Government Employment and Civil Service)
What MDOC does not control:
- Sentence length or release dates set by statute (mandatory minimums are set by the Legislature)
- Parole decisions — Maine abolished traditional parole for crimes committed after June 1, 1976; no Maine Parole Board currently issues discretionary release decisions for that population
- Pre-trial detention, which remains under county sheriff authority
- Conditions of probation, which are set exclusively by the sentencing court
Legislative oversight is exercised through the Joint Standing Committee on Criminal Justice and Public Safety, which reviews MDOC's budget, policy, and compliance. The Maine State Auditor (Maine State Auditor) conducts financial audits of the department. Constitutional compliance, particularly regarding conditions of confinement, is reviewable by the Maine Superior Court and the federal District of Maine under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments.
Researchers and practitioners seeking broader context on Maine's executive branch structure should consult the Maine Executive Branch reference or the site index for full departmental coverage.
References
- Maine Department of Corrections — Official Site
- Maine Revised Statutes, Title 34-A — Corrections
- Maine Legislature — Joint Standing Committee on Criminal Justice and Public Safety
- Maine State Prison — MDOC Facility Page
- Long Creek Youth Development Center — MDOC
- Federal Bureau of Prisons — Facility Locator