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published Monday, July 19th, 2010

Murray budget woes freeze jail move-in

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    Staff Photo by Tim Barber/Chattanooga Times Free Press Murray County Sole Commissioner David Ridley, right, says the county's budget for the rest of 2010 is so strapped, Sheriff Howard Ensley, left, will have to hold off on moving into the new $11 million county jail.

CHATSWORTH, Ga. — Murray County spent $11 million on a state-of-the-art jail expansion, but now can’t pay for the 15 to 20 positions needed to open it.

Like many counties, Murray is struggling to make it out of 2010 with a budget that is in the black. Sole Commissioner David Ridley is trying to shore up a projected $800,000 budget shortfall.

Meanwhile, plans to move into the jail, which was paid for with proceeds from a special 1-cent sales tax, are on hold.

“We hope we can get into it by the end of the year when more revenue starts coming in,” said Murray County Chief Deputy Ray Sitton. “We’re ready to move in now.”

The expansion will boost the current jail’s capacity by 120 inmates, Chief Sitton said, which means the department needs more guards.

Right now, Murray County’s jail can house 160 inmates. With more than 280 beds, the county will be able to house not only its own inmates but those from other counties, Chief Sitton said.

But instead of hiring, the county must make serious budget cuts and find more revenue, Mr. Ridley said.

“We met with all the department heads and gave them budget worksheets and said they had two weeks to come up with some cuts,” Mr. Ridley said.

Department heads trimmed $417,000, but that still leaves a hole. County workers already have been asked to take six furlough days over the next five months, Mr. Ridley said.

With the budget cut to the bone already, Mr. Ridley is pretty much ruling out any chance the county will soon occupy the new jail unless sales tax revenue sees a fourth-quarter spike.

“It’s a month-to-month situation,” Mr. Ridley said. “It would be really nice if we were up $200,000 to $300,000 by the end of the year, but we could also be down that much.”

If the county finds itself in that kind of hole, Mr. Ridley could get a loan based on future tax collection estimates, but that’s not ideal.

“When you borrow money, you have to pay it back with interest,” Mr. Ridley said. “And right now, if we borrowed half a million dollars, we aren’t sure we’d collect that much.”

So far, according to Mr. Ridley, most folks have been patient about the move-in delays.

“For the most part, people understand the crisis we are in,” Mr. Ridley said.

about Adam Crisp...

Adam Crisp covers education issues for the Times Free Press. He joined the paper's staff in 2007 and initially covered crime, public safety, courts and general assignment topics. Prior to Chattanooga, Crisp was a crime reporter at the Savannah Morning News and has been a reporter and editor at community newspapers in southeast Georgia. In college, he led his student paper to a first-place general excellence award from the Georgia College Press Association. He earned ...

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DrinkSlinger said...

Hey... I know a great start to staffing the new addition to the jail! Pass liquor by the drink! Seriously. Liquor, at least in Dalton, has two separate taxes. The 7% sales tax that is split between so many things that you have a hard time controlling what it is used for (mainly the state) and a 3% sales tax that goes straight to the city. Seems like a great place to start to me...

July 19, 2010 at 8:57 a.m.
SeaIsland said...

May the fool endeavor never open

July 19, 2010 at 7:03 p.m.
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