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Closing Middletown jail

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Vivian Moon View Drop Down
MUSA Council
MUSA Council


Joined: May 16 2008
Location: Middletown, Ohi
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (1) Thanks(1)   Quote Vivian Moon Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Topic: Closing Middletown jail
    Posted: Aug 31 2015 at 10:30am
Bill
Middletown can not survive much longer with 72% of our general budget going to public safety, it is just that plain and simple.
And Middletown can not continue to raid the sewer fund to repair the roads.
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MUSA Citizen
MUSA Citizen


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Bill Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Aug 31 2015 at 8:50am

While I don't know if his plans will work or not, Adkins couldn't win with some on this board.  If he didn't make plans to reduce public safety spending and allowed it to remain at or above 72% some would be bashing him for allowing the unions to rule the city.  Vet's point about the black hole of the general fund may prove true with whatever savings are gained, but the status quo was not an option.  In my mind Adkins will have failed if we don't see signficant infrastructure spending in the coming years.

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Perplexed View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Perplexed Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Aug 31 2015 at 1:19am
The frustration and concern of good people like Viet Vet, Acclaro, Vivian Moon, Over The Hill, etc. speak volumes regarding the wasteful, indifferent current senior employees of One Donham Abbey and most of the local elected officials. It's doubtful that real change will ever take place in Middletown. There's very little difference between Judy G. and Atkins.
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VietVet View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote VietVet Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Aug 30 2015 at 6:12pm
All of you Adkins supporters.....still think he is good for Middletown? How about the clowns on council and the key leaders in the city building? Just a continuation of the Gilleland nonsense isn't it?

Freeing up money by eliminating citizen aiding programs, for the purpose of placing more money into the black hole known as the General Fund. The money is then distributed to the city pet projects and the friends of city hall and used for non-announced internal raises. The money trail is concealed from the general public by "confused finances" and is untraceable by the average citizen. The city monies are moved from fund to fund to accomodate the city pet project needs. They have been for years. The basic needs like roads and infrastructure are not on the pet project list, hence the poor conditions.

Overdue on gutting council and the city building occupants. Need to ask Adkins to leave. His time is up as we are destined to follow the same path as we did with Gilleland if he stays. Adkins, council and the key players like Kohler and Hamet are not good for this city. They either cause problems of don't perform. They are here because of the controlling voting block sponsored by Cohen, Mulligan and their little band of MMF town destroyers. Their plan has been in place for years and it will be difficult to dissolve their control, but if this town is to get off the critical list, the people responsible for the ghetto town known as Middletown all need to be ousted......and that will take the help of the people who are fed up with the way this town is run as well as the people who now don't care and decent candidates who actually care about the city, are not intimidated by MMF and have some logic about them. What is the answer to get those people to participate to overcome the numbers of the controlling voting block who always win?
I'm so proud of my hometown and what it has become. Recall 'em all. Let's start over.
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Vivian Moon View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Vivian Moon Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Aug 30 2015 at 9:47am
One of the goals of city administration is to reduce public safety spending from the general fund from 72 percent to 60 percent over a five-year period....Then add to the 72% the salaries of those at City Hall and you quickly will see why Middletown has no money to spend on the needs of the citizens.
As you can see the majority of your tax money never leaves City Hall.
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Vivian Moon View Drop Down
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Vivian Moon Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: Aug 30 2015 at 9:42am

Posted: 9:00 a.m. Sunday, Aug. 30, 2015

CLOSER LOOK: MIDDLETOWN

Closing Middletown jail, dispatch center could bring savings

City wants to reduce public safety spending 12 percent over a five-year period

By Ed Richter

Staff Writer

MIDDLETOWN 

Middletown city officials are already crunching numbers and reviewing operations in an effort to find ways to save taxpayer dollars as they begin the budgeting process for the coming year.

One of the goals of city administration is to reduce public safety spending from the general fund from 72 percent to 60 percent over a five-year period. Meeting that goal is going to require a continual review of how public safety services are delivered, officials say, which could mean taking a closer look at the city jail and dispatch center.

The city could save as much as $2.2 million dollars by closing its jail and transferring its dispatch operations to either Butler or Warren counties. While those moves could save Middletown some money — some officials say that amount wouldn’t be the entire $2.2 million — they could create more problems than they solve.

Middletown is one of only five cities in Ohio to have a full-service jail. The vast majority of lock-ups in Ohio are run by counties. Some cities, villages or townships across the state have temporary holding facilities where they can detain offenders for anywhere from six to 12 hours.

Middletown spends a little over $1 million a year to operate the city jail, and those who support the continued existence of the facility say it is a needed deterrent to crime.

Middletown Municipal Judge Mark Wall said closing the Middletown City Jail would cost the city more in the long-term. Wall said people arrested by police know they could be going to jail and end up in his courtroom to face possible consequences. It is one of the advantages Middletown has over other area cities such as Hamilton, he said.

“I don’t see any cost benefit for closing the jail, and I see this as a detriment to the community,” Wall said.

Middletown police Chief Rodney Muterspaw said budget discussions about closing the jail and/or the communications center happen every few years. He said closing the jail would become a logistical challenge for the court and local law enforcement who utilize it.

Some potential costs to closing the jail could include adding transport officers and vans to shuttle prisoners from the county jail to the municipal court, Muterspaw said. The city jail, which doesn’t double or triple bunk inmates, houses an average of 60 to 70 prisoners a day, Muterspaw said.

“It’s convenient to have a jail here,” he said. “No one wants to come down here.”

Middletown Mayor Larry Mulligan said continuing to operate a full-service jail and a communications center is something for the city administration to look at. But he cautioned that it would not be a straight-on savings of $2 million to $3 million.

“We’re always looking for ways to save money, and if we can get those services through neighboring communities, that would be something to look at and consider,” the mayor said. “It’s a question of service and costs and trying to balance both.”

Councilman Dan Picard said the jail and dispatch center have been actively looked at and discussed during budget time each of the six years he has been on council. To him, it’s “not a pressing issue.”

“If it was financially beneficial to the city, it needs to be considered,” Picard said. “But it has to have significant savings for me to go along with it.”

City Manager Doug Adkins has said that the national average of city spending for public safety is about 57 percent of its operating budget. If the city could reduce its public safety spending to 60 percent of the general fund, that could free up more than $3.57 million that could be used for other needs such as roads, sewers and other aging infrastructure, Adkins said.

Several communities around the state have closed jails and consolidated or outsourced dispatching, Adkins said. Hamilton has not operated a city jail in decades and it transferred its dispatching center to the Butler County Sheriff’s Office in 2013.

Hamilton police Chief Craig Bucheit said the cost savings of the dispatch center has come in close to $700,000 in the last two years alone.

“The new dispatch center has fielded tens of thousands of calls since the consolidation, and for the average citizen calling 911, the transition has been seamless,” Bucheit said.

Geography could be a complicating factor for Middletown in closing the jail or transferring the dispatch center. The city straddles both Butler and Warren counties.

“If we give up dispatch and/or the jail, do we have two separate dispatches and jails depending on where the call originated, or does one entity cross into another county to cover all of Middletown?” Adkins said. “How do we pay for that? Do we transport jail defendants to both Warren and Butler county jails and back? There are local court questions as to the availability and cost of video arraignment.”

Adkins also said any change with operating the jail may also have an impact on how Middletown Municipal Court operates and could require changes in when court is in session, with the judge’s permission, or how it handles bail/bonds and probation. He said it could also impact changes in court costs as well as transportation and technology costs.

“We will be addressing all of these issues over time, but with multiple jurisdictions and/or departments involved, it will be a slow and methodical review and final recommendation to City Council,” Adkins said. “We have to get it right the first time.

“Once the dispatch and/or jail are transferred, it is likely a permanent move. We need to make sure we understand the financial and operational effects of such a change and too many of the variables can’t be accurately quantified at this time,” he said.

 

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