Spring 2020 County Lines

Page 32

AAC

FEATURE

The new Franklin County Detention Center is located on Airport Road in Ozark.

Franklin County dedicates new detention center

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ranklin County’s new 104-bed, 17,500-square-foot detention center on Airport Road in Ozark is now open. The county held a dedication ceremony for the new $8 million center on March 10 at the Franklin County Agriculture Extension Office, which was followed by a ribboncutting ceremony and open house at the jail next door. Ceremony speakers included Franklin County Judge Rickey Bowman, Gov. Asa Hutchinson, Attorney General Leslie Rutledge, Sen. Gary Stubblefied, Rep. Sarah Capp and Franklin County Chief Deputy Travis Ball. It’s “an investment in the future of this county and the entire state,” Rutledge said at the dedication ceremony. The previous jail, according to Bowman, was built in 1974 and was determined by the 5th Judicial District Criminal Detention Facilities Review Committee not to meet minimum state jail standards. One of the problems with the previous jail over the years was overcrowding. Bowman said the old jail’s capacity was around 35 inmates, but it had held more than 60 at times. The new facility is also home to the sheriff’s office, a new dispatch center, and a morgue, among other features such as a control room that gives jailers the ability to monitor every cell from a single spot through windows and security cameras. The new jail is safer for inmates and jailers, and it allows the sheriff’s office to segregate the different types of inmates in the facility as well, Bowman said. The bid for the project was about $7.9 million. The funding was derived from two sales-and-use taxes that were approved by Franklin County voters during a special election in August 2017. The taxes add up to a half-percent, with a three-eighths percent tax going toward repaying construction bonds, and the remainder going toward the operation and maintenance of the facility. The one-eighth percent sales tax is shared with the county’s cities, Bowman said. The new taxes took effect Jan. 1, 2018. 32 cl_Spring_ 2020.indd 32

Above, top: Franklin County Judge Rickey Bowman talks with Gov. Asa Hutchinson and Arkansas Auditor of State Andrea Lea before the dedication ceremony. Above: A detention center officer monitors the jail from the facility’s new command center.

COUNTY LINES, SPRING 2020 7/14/20 1:13 PM


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