Skip to the content
InmateAidInmateAid
  • Ask the Inmate
  • Letters & Photos
  • Postcards & Greeting Cards
  • Discount Calls
  • Ask the Inmate
  • Letters & Photos
  • Postcards & Greeting Cards
  • Discount Calls
InmateAidInmateAid
  • Ask the Inmate
  • Letters & Photos
  • Postcards & Greeting Cards
  • Discount Calls

GDC – Charles D. Hudson Transitional Center

  • Post author By user
  • Post date June 16, 2020
  • Reentry & Treatment Facility
  • Georgia
  • 706-845-4018
  • Official Website
Arrest
Records
Discount
Calls
Send Photos
& Letters
Send
Postcards
Send
Magazines
Send
Money
Registered
Offendres
Second
Chance Jobs
  • Featured

GDC – Charles D. Hudson Transitional Center basic information to help guide you through what you can do for your inmate while they are incarcerated. The facility's direct contact number: 706-845-4018

This facility is for adult inmates.

After serving time within the state's prisons, selected offenders are slowly reintegrated back into society with a job and enhanced prospects for stability through placement within one of the state's Transitional Centers. Research has shown that offenders who have the opportunity to reenter the community after a stay in a Transitional Center are up to 1/3 more likely to succeed in maintaining a crime-free life.

There are 13 Transitional Centers in operation statewide, two of which are designated to house female offenders. A total of 2,674 transitional beds are available, of which 346 are designated for female offenders. To have the opportunity to transfer to a Transitional Center, an offender must receive a referral from either the Board of Pardons of Paroles or the Classification Committee within a state prison. The decision about which offenders are selected is based on criminal history, behavior while incarcerated, release date, and a number of other factors.

One function of Transitional Centers is to provide "work release", allowing the offender to obtain and maintain a paying job in the community while requiring him or her to conform to the structure of the program. The offender lives in the center participates in a number of programs and completes assignments to contribute to the upkeep of the center. The wages earned by work release offenders are sent directly to the center.

Employers are required to deduct taxes as appropriate. A portion of the wages is applied to room and board and another portion to any outstanding fines or fees. If the offender has minor children, he or she is required to provide family support for them. The offender may have a small allowance for transportation and incidentals, but all other funds are placed in an account until he or she is released from the center. Most offenders stay in a work-release program for approximately six months and are then released on parole. Those who are not eligible for parole will be released when the entirety of their sentence has been fulfilled.

Transitional Centers also provide housing for low-risk maintenance workers. These residents are not participants in the work release program although they may have access to the other programs in the centers. The maintenance residents are assigned full-time to maintain the facility or other state facilities in the area. For example, approximately half of the residents assigned to the Atlanta Transitional Center are maintenance workers who provide details to the Governor's Mansion, the State Capitol Complex, and the State Highway Patrol Headquarters. These residents are not paid any wages. They may stay at the facility for longer periods of time than work release residents.

The daily cost to house an offender in a Transitional Center is off-set by the offender's contribution to their room and board provided by the state. In addition, offenders on work release contribute to the local tax base and to their families' support.

HOUSING – Two dormitories consisting of four man rooms.

WORK DETAILS – 9 permanent residents provide food service, buildings and grounds maintenance and sanitation. The remaining residents are assigned to work release.

PROGRAMS:

  • Academic: General Education Diploma (Prep/Testing), Technical College
  • Counseling: Individual And Group Counseling, Bridge Assessment, Motivation For Change, Detour, Re-Entry Skills Building, Basic World Of Works, Family Reintegration, Residence Planning, Substance Abuse Education, Alcoholics Anonymous/Narcotics Anonymous, Matrix-ERS, Fatherhood/Child Support Services, Life Skills
  • Recreation: General Recreation
  • Religious Activities: Various Worship Services, Bible Study, Pastoral Counseling
  • Vocational/OJT: Job Readiness, Budgeting, Job Search Techniques, Custodial Maintenance, Food Preparation, Grounds Keeper

visitation Info

GDC – Charles D. Hudson Transitional Center – Visitation

Time of Visits

  • 9:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.
  • Saturday, Sunday & State Holidays

← Manatee Regional Juvenile Detention Center → Clinch County Jail

  • Jobs
  • Contact Us
  • Testimonials
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Advertize with Us

InmateAid © 2025

To the top ↑ Up ↑
Close Bitnami banner
Bitnami