In the foothills of central Arkansas, Renewal Ranch is quietly leading one of the most effective, life-changing reentry and recovery efforts in the state. What began in 2011 with just eight men has grown into a ministry that now serves more than 100 men and their families every year. Renewal Ranch not only helps its residents heal and rebuild, but also restores lives broken by addiction, reduces recidivism, and saves taxpayer dollars in the process.
A Faith-Based, Results-Driven Model
Executive Director James Loy knows the struggle of addiction firsthand. He battled substance abuse for more than two decades before experiencing transformation through a Christ-centered program. His testimony shapes Renewal Ranch’s mission: not simply to treat addiction as a behavioral issue, but to confront its spiritual roots.
Men at Renewal Ranch progress through two phases. In Phase One, they live on campus for six months, immersed in biblical teaching, counseling, and life skills training. In Phase Two, they re-enter the workforce or school, while still benefiting from accountability, drug testing, mentoring, and community. This structure provides what one participant called a “residency for recovery”, a safe environment to practice what they’ve learned before fully reintegrating into society.
The Ranch also extends its impact beyond residents: families participate in counseling and classes, while alumni stay connected through ongoing aftercare programs. This creates ripple effects that stabilize households, strengthen communities, and break cycles of generational harm.
Smarter than Incarceration
Arkansas faces a pressing challenge: overcrowded prisons and stubbornly high recidivism rates. Too often, the default response to addiction-related crime has been incarceration. But as Renewal Ranch and similar ministries prove, we cannot arrest our way out of this problem.
The math is clear. Housing someone in the Arkansas Department of Corrections costs roughly $2,200 per month. At Renewal Ranch, the cost of holistic care—including housing, counseling, education, transportation, and mentorship—is about $1,500 per month. And unlike incarceration, Renewal Ranch produces outcomes that last: men leave not just sober but spiritually renewed, vocationally equipped and relationally restored.
Policy Lessons for Arkansas
As Blake Polston of EveryArkansan noted during the Renewal Ranch tour, Arkansas has an opportunity to rethink how we support recovery. Just as Gov. Sanders’ Educational Freedom Accounts give families the freedom to choose the best education for their children, Arkansas could explore similar models in recovery. Allowing individuals to direct state funds to effective, faith-based programs like Renewal Ranch would expand access without compromising quality or outcomes.
This approach would empower proven ministries to grow their reach, reduce the strain on the criminal justice system, and honor taxpayer stewardship—all while delivering what truly matters: lives and families transformed.
Right On Crime’s Perspective
Right On Crime exists to advance conservative solutions that prioritize public safety, victim support, and second chances. Renewal Ranch embodies all three. It reduces crime by addressing addiction at its roots. It restores families and communities torn apart by substance abuse. And it does so at a fraction of the cost of incarceration.
As Arkansas debates prison expansion and corrections funding, Renewal Ranch stands as proof that effective alternatives already exist. Instead of investing in more beds behind bars, policymakers should strengthen the programs that get people out of the cycle of crime altogether.
At Right On Crime, we’re committed to spotlighting ministries like Renewal Ranch that embody accountability, compassion, and conservative stewardship. Because real public safety is built not by warehousing people but by rebuilding lives.