Deputy Director Josh Smith told the Transparency Talks podcast that the Federal Bureau of Prisons has prioritized practical, frontline‑driven reforms to improve safety and operations.
Smith said agency teams, working with facilities staff, have condensed and modernized policies that had become overly long or outdated. "We scaled it down to nine," the Presenter said describing one rewrite; Smith credited field staff for identifying what made sense and what needed removal.
Smith described a discipline example where a frontline employee who cursed a coworker had been held back from promotion under an older approach. After listening sessions and negotiation with unions, Smith said the agency changed that process to allow proportionate consequences and clearer paths forward for frontline workers.
On communications, Smith said the agency’s open channels generated substantial input — he referenced receiving more than 2,000 emails to a designated inbox — and that short video messages have helped the agency reach staff directly and solicit candid feedback.
Facilities operations were another early focus. Smith credited bringing in Justin Thornton and streamlining procurement and facilities work so that problems can be routed to a single point of contact and fixed faster. "If we got a problem with facilities, we call one person. That thing's fixed," Smith said.
Smith said these changes are meant to empower wardens and line staff, hold leaders accountable and reduce friction from outdated processes. He described the approach as "common sense" fixes driven by listening to people who do the daily work.
No new regulations, budget allocations or formal deadlines were announced in the interview; the examples Smith gave describe internal operational reforms and cultural changes the bureau is implementing.