Jefferson County Arkansas Landlord-Tenant Law: Pine Bluff, the Saracen Casino Era, and What Landlords Need to Know About Southeast Arkansas’s Largest City
In 1908, the Arkansas River rose with enough force to threaten the Jefferson County Courthouse in Pine Bluff. The building had stood since 1838 on a bluff above the river — the same high ground covered with pine trees that had given the city its name. As the floodwaters pushed closer to the foundation, local officials made a decision that remains unique in the history of Arkansas government: they deliberately tore apart a significant portion of the courthouse — the judges’ chambers, the jury room, parts of the sheriff’s and assessor’s offices — and threw the debris into the river to reduce the weight and drag on the remaining structure. It worked. After the flood receded, engineers permanently altered the course of the river to protect what was left of the building. The current courthouse stands on the same ground today, a physical embodiment of a city that has adapted, sometimes drastically, to forces beyond its control.
That adaptability is still very much a part of Pine Bluff’s story in 2026. The city has faced severe population loss, economic stagnation, and infrastructure challenges over the past two decades — but it has also seen meaningful reinvestment, led by the Saracen Casino Resort, Go Forward Pine Bluff, the Pine Bluff Arsenal’s continued evolution, and a substantial healthcare and education employment base that has never left. For landlords operating in Jefferson County, understanding this context is not just interesting background; it is essential to making sound decisions in a market that rewards careful screening and penalizes shortcuts.
A City With an Outsized History
Pine Bluff was one of Arkansas’s most important cities in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. By 1890, it was the state’s third-largest city, its economy built on cotton commerce, river traffic, and the railroad connections that made it a regional hub. The Cotton Belt Railroad established its main engine maintenance shops here in 1894, making it the county’s largest industrial employer for decades. In 1914, Dollarway Road — the first named highway in Arkansas — was completed, and at its opening it was the longest continuous stretch of concrete road in the United States. The city had the first radio broadcast in Arkansas in 1922. World War II brought the Pine Bluff Arsenal, a munitions manufacturing facility that reshaped the county’s employment landscape and continues to operate today as an Army chemical demilitarization installation.
During World War II, the Arkansas Delta and Pine Bluff area contributed more oral histories of formerly enslaved people to the Federal Writers’ Project than any other county in Arkansas — approximately 780 interviews — a collection that became part of the most significant archive of first-person slave narrative material in American history. The University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff, founded as Branch Normal College in 1875, is one of the nation’s historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs), and its presence has shaped the cultural and educational identity of Pine Bluff for 150 years. The Quapaw Nation’s ancestral connection to the Jefferson County area — Chief Saracen, for whom the casino is named, is buried in Pine Bluff’s St. Joseph’s Catholic Cemetery — runs deeper than almost any institution in the city.
The Five Major Employers and Tenant Profile Breakdown
Jefferson County has five employers each exceeding 1,000 workers, a concentration of large-employer presence that is unusual for a county of its size and provides landlords with a reasonably defined set of tenant income profiles to understand.
Jefferson Regional Medical Center (1,575 employees) is the county’s largest single employer and the healthcare anchor for southeast Arkansas. Hospital employees — nurses, technicians, therapists, pharmacists, and administrative staff — represent the most stable and reliably documentable income profiles in the county. Screen using standard documentation: recent pay stubs, employment verification letter from the hospital’s HR department, and confirmation of full-time status. Traveling nurses contracted through staffing agencies appear in the Pine Bluff market; use lease terms matching the assignment length for these applicants.
Tyson Foods (1,500 employees) operates a major processing facility in Jefferson County. Tyson production workers are W-2 hourly employees with regular pay schedules. Verify base hourly rate multiplied by standard 40-hour week as the qualifying income rather than overtime-inflated gross pay. Confirm full-time vs. part-time status with consecutive pay stubs.
Arkansas Department of Correction (1,430 employees) operates correctional facilities in Jefferson County. State corrections employees are W-2 workers with fixed pay grades and defined-benefit retirement plans. Verify position classification directly with the Arkansas Department of Corrections. Among the most predictable tenant profiles available.
Evergreen Packaging (1,040 employees) operates a paperboard mill in Jefferson County. Industrial mill workers are W-2 hourly employees; verify base wages and full-time classification using consecutive pay stubs.
Saracen Casino Resort (1,100+ employees) is the newest major employer and the most complex from a screening perspective. The casino’s workforce spans a wide range of positions with very different income profiles. Gaming floor supervisors and dealers, hotel and facilities management, security supervisors, and administrative staff typically receive stable base wages and can be screened using standard documentation. Food and beverage servers and bartenders may have tip income that significantly exceeds their base wage but is not consistently documentable. For tipped casino hospitality workers, evaluate the verified base wage only — do not include claimed tip income in the qualifying calculation. The casino also employs seasonal or event-based staff whose hours fluctuate with the entertainment and events calendar; confirm year-round vs. event-driven employment status for any applicant in a hospitality role.
The Pine Bluff Arsenal and Federal Employment
The Pine Bluff Arsenal is an active US Army installation responsible for chemical weapons demilitarization and other defense-related activities. Federal civilian employees at the Arsenal are among the highest-compensated and most employment-stable workers in Jefferson County. GS-scale federal employees have fully documented income through LES (Leave and Earnings Statements), defined pay grades, and employment protected by federal civil service protections. They represent excellent tenant profiles, particularly for longer-term leases. Military personnel stationed at the Arsenal may require shorter lease flexibility tied to Permanent Change of Station orders; SCRA (Servicemembers Civil Relief Act) protections apply to active duty military tenants and should be understood before executing any lease with an active duty service member.
In early 2026, the US Army announced an enhanced-use lease of Arsenal land to Hanwha Defense USA, a South Korean defense company, to support US munitions production. This deal, if fully executed, could bring significant additional defense industry employment to Jefferson County over the coming years, with potential for new contractor and support employment that would feed into the local rental market.
Screening in a High-Vacancy Market
Pine Bluff’s rental market has a well-documented vacancy challenge. Years of population decline have left a significant stock of vacant housing units — approximately one in three housing units in Pine Bluff is a rental, and of the total housing stock, a meaningful portion sits vacant. In this environment, the pressure to fill a vacancy quickly can be acute, and that pressure is one of the most reliable sources of poor screening decisions in any rental market.
In a high-vacancy market, maintaining consistent screening standards is not just ethically required — it is economically rational. A problematic tenancy in Pine Bluff can cost far more in legal fees, lost rent, property damage, and eviction expense than the rental income lost during a legitimate vacancy period. Establish a written screening policy that applies equally to all applicants, verify income and employment directly with employing organizations rather than relying on self-reported information, run background and eviction history checks on every adult applicant, and do not waive security deposits or income requirements under vacancy pressure. The best protection against a costly tenancy is the initial application review, and that review is especially important in markets where the cost of turnover is high.
Arkansas Landlord-Tenant Law in Jefferson County
All residential rental relationships in Jefferson County are governed entirely by statewide Arkansas law. The governing statutes are A.C.A. §§ 18-16-101 through 18-16-108 and the Arkansas Residential Landlord-Tenant Act of 2007, A.C.A. §§ 18-17-101 et seq. There is no local rent control, no just-cause eviction requirement, and no landlord licensing requirement in Pine Bluff or Jefferson County.
For nonpayment of rent, serve a written 3-day notice to vacate after rent is at least 5 days past due. For lease violations other than nonpayment, provide a 14-day written notice to cure or quit. Month-to-month tenancies require 30 days’ written notice to terminate; week-to-week require 7 days. Security deposits are capped at two months’ rent for landlords with six or more rental units and must be returned with written itemized deductions within 60 days of lease termination. Arkansas imposes no default implied warranty of habitability; tenants have no repair-and-deduct remedy. Abandoned property may be disposed of after lease termination. Self-help evictions are prohibited.
All evictions in Jefferson County are filed with Circuit Clerk Flora Cook Bishop, 101 W. Barraque St., Suite 104, Pine Bluff, AR 71601, (870) 541-5306. Jefferson County is a wet county.
This guide is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Arkansas landlord-tenant law is governed by the Arkansas Code Annotated and applies statewide, with no local rent control or just-cause eviction requirements in Jefferson County. Consult a licensed Arkansas attorney or contact the 11th West Judicial Circuit Court Clerk at (870) 541-5306 for guidance specific to your situation. Last updated: March 2026.
|