I would like to thank James Bell and Sheriff Phil Miller
for responding to my May 1st "Letter to the Editor" (Douglas County Sentinel) in regards to the
use for SPLOST funds to build a new jail.
I especially want to express an additional appreciation to Sheriff Miller's
May 11th "Letter to the Editor" providing additional information in
support for a new jail. I feel better informed
now that the facts are being published, which draws them away from the shadows
of speculation and innuendo.
As I understand the situation, based on the information
supplied by Sheriff Miller, the current jail is structurally sound but lacking
in infrastructure, such as kitchen, laundry and medical space, to support the
current inmate load. This deficiency must be minor because it was not addressed
in the $7 million Jail Annex just finished.
Surely, the health and welfare of the charges would take precedence over
the office space for the enforcement function, but then again, maybe not.
Sheriff Miller indicated that the inmate population has
increased by about 245 beds over the last ten years. This growth is reflective of the county's
population growth during that time frame.
With this in mind, we should expect the current 660 inmate bed
population to grow to about 900 beds over the next ten years. This would put the jail about 100 beds short
with its current capacity of 800 beds.
The proposed new jail of 1500 beds would meet this 10 year growth demand
and have an extra 600 beds to boot. All
of the inmates would have private cells and the State would have 600 beds to
rent.
According to recent articles in the Sentinel, the last
Jail SPLOST lost because the new jail was to be located on the property of the
current jail. Apparently, the current jail
is a blight on the marketability of the Historical Downtown Douglasville area,
and should be moved. The "City"
even tried to get it in writing that the new jail would be moved in the Jail
SPLOST proposal. Thus the story goes,
the County Maintenance
will take over the current jail site with its hundreds of walk- in closets; or
is it to be sold to some developer to build some housing amendable to the
Historical Downtown Area? The new jail
is to be located adjacent to I-20, becoming the identifying beacon of
Douglasville. Who knows, they could even put billboards on its sides for the
advertising income.
With construction costs of $87,000 per bed, did the
Governments take a serious look at all options available in meeting the jail
bed demand? Is it more feasible to add
onto existing facilities at a third of the cost, or is it more cost effective
to start from scratch? What will be the
cost to remove or adapt the old jail for an alternative function, and who pays
for that? Do we keep the Jail Annex for
the additional 18,000 square feet of office space, or do we sell it? Was a real feasibility study conducted, or
just a private backroom agreement? Well,
Mickey (Thompson) and Tom (Worthan), are you tickled or fickled? Care to comment or inform?
SPLOST has become the local governments funding drug of
choice, and is being sought after with a junkie's abandon, without proper
forethought or justification. I think it is time we just say "no" to
SPLOST.
Bob Stilz
Douglasville,
GA
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