Retirement
The Corrections1 Retirement topic page is a dedicated platform for all matters related to the retirement of correctional officers and staff.
Learn how one officer rediscovered her identity and found a new purpose after an injury forced her into early retirement in her 30s
From staying active to finding purpose, these tried-and-true strategies will help you navigate and enjoy life after retirement
Modern amenities to keep you productive and healthy
The Oregon Department of Corrections is struggling to hire new employees as nearly one-fifth of its workforce becomes retirement eligible in 2018
The pull of such post-police jobs extends nationwide
State troopers, COs and other ‘hazardous duty employees’ would not be moved into the new plan
Here are some strategies about how you should start preparing for retirement now
Recently released report card by the the institute took stock of 151 municipal pension plans across the state, updating a previous assessment done in 2011
Bexar County Sheriff’s Office Lt. Victor Quintanilla remembers his first day on the job at the Bexar County Jail on Sept. 17, 1974
Working for 33 years as Berks County Prison warden was like living in a pressure cooker that George A. Wagner just couldn’t take anymore
Robert Valls has seen a lot of juveniles over the 23 years he has been chief juvenile probation officer for Limestone County
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