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From YouTube: Kankakee County Criminal Justice Meeting 7/10/2019
Description
Kankakee County Criminal Justice Meeting 7/10/2019 7:30AM
A
B
A
Have
not
received
anything
for
public
comment.
Is
there
any
public
comment
at
this
time?
Any
public
comment
moving
on
for
the
approval
minutes
from
the
June
12th
2019.
Take
a
motion
to
approve
mr.
altough
second
by
mr.
Lee
Jess,
all
in
favor,
say
aye
opposed
same
sign.
Motion
carries
up
next,
we
have
Tammy
Peterson
from
the
ETS
be
board
good
morning.
C
So
I'm
Tammy
Peterson,
the
9-1-1
coordinator,
I've,
been
with
the
board
for
almost
as
long
as
it's
been
in
existence,
so
I'm
here
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
what
the
ETS
bee
is
and
what
can
come
is
our
board
is
made
up
of
nine
members.
Those
appointments
are
made
by
by
the
entities
that
are
highlighted
here
and
that
makeup
is
defined
in
a
County
Board
resolution
that
was
created
when
the
initial
referendum
to
establish
the
911
system
was
passed.
Jim
Lamont
serves,
as
our
chairman
and
chief
Johnston
from
Bradley
serves
as
our
vice
chairman.
C
The
responsibilities
of
the
board
are
defined
by
statute
and
that
those
include
things
like
planning
the
9-1-1
system,
coordinating
the
implementation,
upgrades
and
maintenance
of
the
system
receiving
the
surcharge
dollars
and
authorizing
the
expenditure
of
those
funds
that
are
on
deposit
with
the
treasurer's
office.
I'm
in
1988
the
initial
referendum
passed
in
1992.
We
went
live
with
our
9-1-1
system
in
1994.
We
started
receiving
cellular
calls,
but
it
wasn't
until
2004
that
we
actually
started
getting
location
of
those
callers,
but
that
came
in
the
way
of
latitude/longitude
information.
C
The
responders
were
literally
running
back
and
forth
with
information
for
each
other,
and
that
was
the
same
year
that
can
come
was
formed
in
2007.
Our
fire
paging
system
was
updated.
We
went
from
a
single
transmitter
to
a
simulcast
system
with
5
transmitters
throughout
the
county,
and
that
was
primarily
funded
through
some
grant
dollars
that
sheriff
Bukowski
obtained
at
that
time.
In
2013,
our
original
911
equipment
was
replaced
that
has
allowed
for
us
to
prepare
for
a
next
generation
911
or
the
ability
to
receive
text
messages
and
other
data
in
2016
bourbon.
C
So
our
revenue
comes
from
two
sources.
On
the
ETS
B
side,
it
comes
from
the
surcharge
back
in
1989,
the
surcharge
rate
was
established
by
a
local
referendum
in
2001.
The
wireless
rate
was
set
by
state
legislation
and
in
June
of
2015
legislation
was
passed
that
revoked
the
local
referendums
and
created
a
uniform
surcharge
rate
across
the
state
for
both
wireline
and
wireless
subscribers,
and
on
January
1st
of
2018.
C
That
rate
was
changed
to
a
dollar
50
per
line
that
is
due
to
sunset
in
December
of
next
year,
and
it's
also
important
to
note
that
we
don't
receive
that
full
dollar
50.
There
is
a
formula
that
allows
for
each
of
the
9-1-1
systems
to
receive
the
same
wireline
revenue.
They
were
receiving
back
in
2013,
the
rest
of
those
funds
go
into
a
pool
and
once
everything
that's
those
dollars
have
been
allocated
for
have
been
pulled
out.
C
C
C
That
same
legislation
that
was
changed
that
provided
us
that
dollar
50
surcharge
revenue
also
required
some
other
things,
including
reducing
the
number
of
piece
apps
throughout
the
state
and
making
911
across
the
state.
So
currently
11
of
the
13
counties
either
have
or
will
soon
have
9-1-1
service,
and
those
were
the
unserved
counties
that
didn't
have
911.
Prior
to
this
legislation,
64
ET,
SBS
and
72
piece
apps
have
been
consolidated.
C
The
state
is
currently
reviewing
proposals
for
the
backbone
for
the
next
generation
9
1
1
network,
as
I
said
earlier,
a
portion
of
the
surcharge
dollars
fund
that
and
then
grants
are
also
funded
through
those
dollars
collected.
We
received
about
a
hundred
and
forty
five
thousand
dollars
in
grants
when
Bourbonnais
consolidated
with
us,
and
we
currently
have
an
application
in
for
a
grant
for
about
a
hundred
and
sixteen
thousand
dollars
and
that'll
be
used
towards
GIS
work.
Preparing
for
the
new
requirements
that
are
going
to
be
needed
to
route
calls
to
the
appropriate
piece
apps.
C
C
So
we
continue
to
encourage
the
state
legislators
not
to
sweep
the
funds
that
are
collected
at
the
state
build
out
of
the
next
generation,
9
1
1
Network.
You
know
at
this
time
those
costs
are
unknown,
so
we
don't
know
if
enough
funds
are
being
collected
to
do
that,
and
Illinois
is
only
one
of
ten
states
that
do
not
require
telecommunicators
to
be
certified
locally.
We're
committed
to
training
our
staff
goes
through.
C
The
city
and
the
county
negotiated
for
nearly
10
years
for
dispatch
consolidation,
the
port
can
come,
was
formed,
and
when
that
happened,
there
was
a
creation
of
the
Oversight
Committee
and
their
purpose
is
really
to
have
input
on
policy
and
procedures
in
the
operation.
It
can
come
by
making
recommendations
to
the
ETS
be
and
by
creating
those
policies
that
all
agencies
adhere
to
the
dispatch
job.
C
C
This
reflects
our
annual
9-1-1
call
volume
for
both
Bradley
and
can
come
for
2018.
That
orange
portion
represents
the
cellular
call
volume.
So
you
can
easily
see
that
the
largest
number
of
our
calls
are
coming
from
those
cellular
users.
All
cell
calls
route
2
can
come
when
we
get
those
calls
that
are
in
Bradley's
jurisdiction.
If
they're
in
progress,
we
take
the
information,
we
can
put
it
into
our
shared
CAD
system.
We
do
have
the
ability
to
dispatch
those
users
if
necessary,
and
then
we
can
transfer
the
calls
to
that.
To
that
piece.
App.
C
This
breaks
down
our
daily
call
volume
can
comm
handles
about
a
hundred
and
thirty-five
911
calls
each
day
in
addition
to
the
911
calls
we
handle
what
we
call
administrative
calls
and
those
can
be
both
in
going
or
out
going,
and
they
include
things
like
a
fire
department.
Calling
in
for
runtimes
could
be
general
information.
What
time
does
the
parade
start?
C
D
C
C
There
were
over
a
hundred
and
ninety
five
thousand
calls
for
service
that
were
generated.
It
can
come
last
year
that
includes
those
911
calls
the
administrative
lines
or
that
officer
initiated
traffic.
Aside
from
the
officer
initiated
calls
ambulance,
accidents,
domestic
and
disorderly
conduct
make
up
our
largest
number
of
requests
for
service
at
full
staffing.
We
would
have
twenty
eight
telecommunicators.
C
Unfortunately,
we've
been
trying
for
two
years
to
reach
that
full
staffing
level.
Today
we
have
twenty
six
full-time
telecommunicators
with
two
two
currently
going
through
our
training
program.
I
would
just
note
that
Bradley
has
ten
full-time
dispatchers,
but
can't
come,
has
no
responsibility
for
the
personnel
at
Bradley.
Each
dispatcher
rotates
positions
daily
so
that
they
stay
proficient
in
both
fire
and
police.
Dispatching
today
the
responsibilities
for
our
on-duty
staff.
C
It
takes
approximately
two
years
to
become
proficient
with
this
job.
Almost
a
quarter
of
our
staff
has
less
than
two
years
experience,
but
on
average
we
have
12
years
of
experience,
but
I
think
even
the
most
experienced
person
would
tell
you
that
they
learn
something
new
every
day,
working
together
as
a
team.
C
It's
very
important
in
this
job
and
overall,
our
dispatchers
do
a
fantastic
job,
Birds
difficult
as
this
job
is,
and
then
I
just
wanted
to
finish
up
with
a
few
comments
on
the
things
that
we're
currently
working
on,
we've
been
using
our
current
radio
system
for
almost
20
years
as
technologies
change.
The
manufacturers
discontinue
support
on
that
legacy
equipment.
C
We
were
faced
with
our
controller,
which
is
the
brains
of
our
radio
system,
no
longer
being
supported.
We
did
get
budgetary
quotes
for
a
standalone
system
and
those
figures
ranged
from
6
to
7
million
dollars,
and
that
was
money
we
didn't
have.
Starcom
is
a
system
that
was
built
out
by
Motorola
for
the
state
of
Illinois.
It's
very
much
like
a
cell
phone
that
you
pay
a
flat
dollar
amount
for
usage
of
that
system
each
month.
I
think
the
current
rate
is
about
$34
per
month
per
radio.
The
maintenance
costs
for
the
system.
C
Infrastructure
of
that
system
are
built
into
those
user
fees.
We
were
able
to
negotiate
moving
to
Starcom
at
a
read
at
some
reduced
rates.
We
provided
tower
sites
and
frequencies
into
the
star
comm
pool
to
make
that
happen,
so
we
will
continue
to
be
able
to
communicate
not
only
with
the
agencies
within
Kankakee
County,
but
any
other
agency
throughout
the
state
that
is
part
of
the
star
comm
system.
C
C
We
did
upgrade
our
9-1-1
equipment
several
years
ago
to
be
prepared
for
the
ability
to
receive
text
messages
with
the
requirement
of
next
generation
in
the
legislation
for
2020.
We
really
needed
to
be
prepared
for
that
transition
with
a
growing
number
of
security
risks.
Text
messages
allow
for
communicating
more
discreetly.
We
understand
the
value
of
that
and
wanted
to
move
forward
and
didn't
want
to
wait
for
the
state.
For
that
2020
timeline.
We
did
complete
testing
with
our
final
carrier
last
week,
so
that
is
something
that
we'll
be
rolling
out
very
soon.
C
We
still
want
people
to
call
9-1-1
if
they
can
texting
off
often
lacks
the
emotion
or
some
background
information
that
can
be
beneficial
when
those
calls
are
taken,
but
we
also
know
that
there's
times
when
it's
safer
for
an
individual
to
text
and
then,
finally,
with
our
paging
project,
we
will
be
transitioning
from
five
to
treble
five
to
seven
transmitters
throughout
the
county.
Those
will
activate
simultaneously
to
transmit
those
notifications
to
the
fire
departments.
C
Our
current
system
isn't
capable
of
ensuring
that
those
transmitters
activate
at
the
same
time,
so
we've
struggled
with
some
voice
quality,
so
the
fire
departments
should
see
huge
improvements
when
that
goes
into
effect,
and
we
anticipate
that
happening
in
the
next
few
months.
So
that
is
a
brief
overview
of
what
goes
on
in
our
department.
If
there's
anybody
that
would
like
a
tour
of
our
Center,
we
welcome
you
and
invite
you
in
just
give
our
office
a
call
and
schedule
that,
for
you.
E
F
F
F
G
G
C
C
A
I
Okay,
I
shortened
up
the
report
so
that
you
could
just
see
what
we've
done
through
June
I
just
showed
me
in
June,
going
forward
on
the
local
debt
recovery
Harrison
Harris
report.
So
we
did
one
hundred
and
two
thousand
three
hundred
twenty-eight
dollars
this
last
month
and
our
total
for
the
year
so
far
is
eight
hundred
forty-four
thousand
seven
hundred
and
forty-three
and
then
with
the
state's
attorney
Court
call
I'm,
not
sure
I
didn't
talk
to
Desiree
to
ask
her
why
she
thought.
Maybe
do
you
know
Jim
why
it
was.
J
I
I
I
I
So
I
wanted
to
outline
that
in
the
CFC
M
and
J
D,
which
are
the
criminal
felony
criminal,
felony,
sealed
misdemeanor,
misdemeanor,
sealed
and
the
juvenile
delinquent,
those
were
all
for
expungement
fee
waivers.
What
I
did
is
I
ran
each
category
in
the
system
to
see
what
how
many
cases
were
filed
and
how
many
filings
in
those
cases
and
then
what
the
dollar
amount
was
that
went
for
those.
So
the
expungement
fee
waivers
were
a
hundred
and
forty-one
dollars
each.
So
that's
how
we
got
to
those
totals
in
the
adoption.
I
Chancery,
divorce,
family
law,
law,
magistrate,
miscellaneous
remedy,
probate
and
small
claims.
Those
were
either
filing
fees,
appearance,
fees,
motion
to
reinstate
or
motion
to
vacate,
and
then
there
was
an
anomaly
there
with
an
order
of
protection.
Someone
thought
that
they
could
petition
to
have
that
expunged.
Orders
of
protection
never
have
a
fee
anyway,
no
matter
what
they
do
in
the
case,
so
they
filed
the
fee
waiver,
not
I,
guess
not,
knowing
that
they
didn't
have
to
do
it.
We
can't
tell
people
what's
a
file
or
what
not
to
file.
I
So
we
let
them
file
the
petition
to
expunge
and
let
it
go
before
the
judge
and
then
the
judge
of
course
said
the
orders
protections
are
not
eligible
to
be
expunged.
So
are
there
any
questions
about
this
chart
so
then
moving
forward?
What
I'm
going
to
do
on
a
monthly
basis
is
just
see
what
the
difference
is
with
the
new
waiver
fees
that
can
happen.
I
It
could
be
in
any
case
it
could
be
a
portion
or
all
of
the
clerk's,
the
counties
portion
and
the
state's
portion,
with
the
exception
of
any
of
the
traffic.
The
goes
under
the
vehicle
Illinois
Vehicle
Code,
so
that
would
be
felony
DUI
misdemeanor
DUI,
a
major
traffic
minor
traffic
in
the
overweight
tickets.
Those
would
not
be
eligible
for
waivers
of
fees
and
then
the
it
would
also
exclude
some
conditional
assessments
because
they
are
reimbursements
of
some
of
the
service
provider
costs.
A
H
A
I
So
July
1st
was
the
big
day
for
the
criminal
traffic
in
Assessment.
Act
I
want
to
thank
Paula
Spaulding
for
all
her
hard
work,
working
with
the
vendors
Odyssey,
which
is
Tyler
technologies
in
court
view,
to
make
all
the
changes.
There
was
a
lot
of
work,
putting
the
spreadsheet
together,
applying
the
codes
into
court
view
and
then
mapping
and
testing
to
be
assured
everything
connected
properly.
While
we
tested
there
probably
a
still
room
for
some
glitches
somewhere.
I
So
we
always
expect
that
and
then,
if
we
don't
get
that
and
we're
happy
also
in
the
main
office
led
by
chief
deputy
Debbie
colas,
our
desserts
key
they've
done
a
wonderful
job
with
the
transition
helping
the
law,
offices
and
self
represented
litigants,
I'm
still
working
on
the
fee
sheet
for
the
law,
offices
and
others
to
use
as
a
guide
in
reference.
So
they
know
that
they
are
making
the
right
choices.
When
they're
doing
the
e
filing
the
legislators
were
making
changes
right
up
to
the
last
minute
on
Friday
before
the
July
first
start.
I
So
that
was
kind
of
why
I
was
waiting
for
that
to
and
the
traffic
supervisor
Laurie
Johnson
reports
that
there
have
been
few
violators
that
have
paid
their
their
new
tickets
after
July
1st
right
after
court,
so
they're
experienced
with
the
changes
will
probably
be
later
in
the
month
or
in
the
next
there
so
and
it
seems
like
the
courtrooms
are
adjusting
smoothly
with
the
transition.
I
haven't
heard
any
backlash
yet
so
I'm
guessing,
but
we
were
light
with
court
activity
last
week
anyway.
So
it
was
probably
a
good
week
to
start
this
whole
process.
I
The
integration
was
put
on
hold
because
it
was
all
hands
on
deck
between
Odyssey
and
Tyler
Court
view
in
our
office
for
this
criminal
traffic
assessment
project
we'll
be
getting
back
on
track
with
that
soon
and
then
for
the
court
view.
Maintenance
agreement,
Andy
did
a
good
job
explaining
that
yesterday,
at
the
county
board
meetings.
If
there's
any
other
questions
about
that,
okay,
thank.
A
J
Up
to
four
hundred
ninety
six
felonies
gone
through
the
grand
jury
this
year,
you
can
see,
apart
from
controlled
substance
cases.
Still
the
highest
number
are
the
felony,
domestics
and
I
talk
about
that.
Every
meeting,
but
I
remind
you,
those
are
strangulation
and
repeat
offenders,
so
those
are
very
serious
cases.
J
H
J
Is
that
a
question
you
have
so
first
offender
domestic
battery?
That's
a
misdemeanor,
so
it's
punishable
by
less
than
one
year
in
jail
on
your
second
offense.
It's
an
automatic
class
four.
As
you
accumulate
multiple
offenses.
It
can
go
up
a
strangulation
as
a
class.
Two,
so
you're,
looking
at
more
serious
possibility
of
prison
time.
They
get.
They
get
lengthy
sentences
when
it's
a
felony
domestic
battery,
most
first-time
offenders
are
put
into
I.
J
Think
there's
been
a
system,
a
program
in
place
for
many
years
in
the
county,
a
domestic
violence,
diversion
program
where
they
start
to
learn
to
correct
those
behaviors.
They
address
drug
or
alcohol
issues
that
they
may
be
dealing
with.
So
and
that's
a
lengthy
program.
It's
not
a
you!
Take
a
class
or
two
it's
a
first.
You
have
to
address
the
drug
or
alcohol
addiction
issue
by
counseling,
inpatient,
outpatient
and
then
you
go
in
through
what
is
it
time?
Do
you
know
a
twenty
seven?
J
Twenty
eight
twenty
six
week
program,
so
it's
a
lengthy
program
and
if
they
successfully
complete
that
they
are
not
convicted
of
that
domestic
battery,
so
the
recidivism
rate
they've
done
some
studies.
I
met
with
judge,
Elliot
I
think
it
was
late
last
year
early
this
year
about
what
is
the
recidivism
rate
for
those
offenders,
and
it
is
significantly
less
than
someone
that
has
not
participated
in
that
program.
So
I
wasn't
really
too
fond
of
sending
people
that
are
accused
of
domestic
violence
into
some
diversion
program.
F
J
J
Of
criminality
so
kinky
and
hero
I
have
a
Joint,
Task,
Force
kinky
Iroquois,
a
human
trafficking
task
force
they
meet
on
a
regular
basis.
They
have
combined.
They
brought
basically
all
the
service
providers
in
the
community
and
volunteers
together
to
address
that
issue.
We've
not
had
any
human
trafficking
cases
come
through
the
office
for
prosecution.
That
doesn't
mean
it's
not
happening
in
our
community,
though
you
know
those
are.
Those
are
difficult
cases
when
you
have.
You
know
prostitution
a
lot
of
times.
Those
are
cases
of
human
trafficking.
You
sometimes
have
forced
labor.
J
It's
tough
for
people
to
report
those
crimes.
I
know
that
the
Sheriff's
Department
does
a
great
job.
They've
worked
closely
with
that
task,
force
and
I
believe
Sheriff
when
people
are
entered
into
the
jail.
If
there's
any
suspicion
of
that,
they're
interviewed
that's
one
of
the
questions.
I
think
that
is
asked
in
connection
with
certain
offenses,
so
County's
been
very
vigilant
on
human
trafficking
and
trying
to
help
people
if
they're
involved
in
that
situation,
but
thus
far,
we've
not
had
any
cases
come
through
for
prosecution.
A
J
Jump
is
a
juvenile
mentoring
program.
We
just
got
word
a
couple
weeks
ago
that
we
were
awarded
a
grant
from
AmeriCorps
it's
approximately
one
hundred
and
eighty
six
thousand
dollars.
This
allows
us
to
fund
a
mentoring
program
that
ideally
will
take
every
juvenile
when
they
enter
the
juvenile
justice
systems
when
they're
charged
with
an
offense
and
we'll
pair
them
with
a
mentor
that
mentoring
program
is
approximately
21
months.
J
That's
two
academic
years,
nine-month
academic
years
and
then
the
three-month
summer
in
between
so
we
matched
the
juvenile
with
the
mentor
they
meet
regularly,
either
in
the
school
during
school
hours
or
at
the
YMCA.
During
after
hours,
both
the
mentor
and
the
mentee
in
this
program
receive
a
free,
YMCA
membership,
so
that's
sort
of
a
neutral
space
where
they
can
meet
participate
in.
Why
focused
activities
we're
using
the
YMCA's
national
model.
For
this,
it's
a
successful
model
we're
not
trying
to
reinvent
the
wheel
on
mentoring.
J
We
want
something
that
works
and
will
Welsh
at
the
YMCA.
Penny
Greenlee
have
been
great
in
bringing
that
model
to
the
forefront,
they're
willing
to
train
our
mentors
under
the
Y
training
model
and,
of
course,
full
and
complete
background
checks
for
everyone.
When
the
student
is
paired
with
the
mentor
we're
looking
to
reduce
truancy
among
the
juveniles,
you
know
the
statistics
bear
out
that
if
a
child
is
truant
they're,
eight
times
more
likely
to
be
either
an
offender
of
a
violent
crime
or
a
victim
of
a
violent
crime.
J
So
if
we
can
just
keep
them
in
school,
those
numbers
go
down
significantly
and
if
they're
in
school,
hopefully
their
academic
performance
improves
as
well,
and
we
want
to
start
engaging
with
the
kids
on
their
career
goals,
some
of
their
long-term
goals
and
also
short
term.
You
know
what
type
of
dangerous
activities
are
they
involved
in
in
their
life
and
our
community
that
we
can
get
them
out
of
during
the
summer
months.
J
The
focus
is
on
building
those
life
skills,
so
we're
looking
for
area
employers
to
set
some
jobs
aside
for
the
juveniles
in
jump,
so
that
in
the
summer
they
can
work
there.
They
are
in
a
paycheck
like
anyone
else.
Would
ideally,
maybe
they
can
get
job
even
where
their
mentor
works?
So
you
can
keep
that
relationship
going
during
the
summer
and
continue
to
mentor
them
while
you're
in
a
working
environment.
We
want
to
get
them
to
a
community
events
where
they're
at
tables
and
they're
engaging
with
professional
individuals.
So
they
can
learn
those
conversational
skills.
J
How
to
you
know,
work
in
a
social
setting
just
to
improve
some
of
their
opportunities
and
abilities
in
the
community
that
program.
The
funding
for
that
program,
funds
approximately
21
positions
that
individuals
who
will
receive
a
stipend
for
their
work,
so
that's
18
mentors
which
are
receiving
a
stipend,
so
those
18
individuals
are
going
to
be
called
upon
to
mentor
a
number
of
students
each
and
then,
in
addition
to
the
stipend
they
receive
there.
J
Also
because
the
state's
attorney's
office
is
now
a
regional
site
for
AmeriCorps
they're,
also
able
to
obtain
up
to
a
six
thousand
dollar
voucher
for
college
per
year.
So
it's
helping
them.
You
know
pay
for
their
tuition
as
well.
Two
of
those
21
positions
are
court
liaisons.
These
are
individuals
who
are
going
to
be
responsible
for
going
to
court.
Keeping
the
juvenile
judge
up
to
speed
on
how
the
juvenile
is
participating
in
their
program
working
with
juvenile
probation.
We
have
put
a
lot
on
grace
and
I
apologize.
J
Stipends
under
the
grant,
they're
also
eligible
for
the
$6,000
tuition.
Voucher
outside
of
those
21
positions
volunteer.
Mentors
that
come
forward
can
receive
the
$6,000
tuition
stipend.
So
we're
really
hoping
that
we
compare
every
kid
that
comes
into
the
system
with
a
mentor
and
get
them
back
on
the
right
path.
So
they
don't
end
up
upstairs
in
the
300
court
rooms.
J
F
F
This
is
not
so
much
a
question
as
it
is
a
commendation
because
I
work
in
the
school
system
so
ever
and
then
had
to
deal
to
high
school.
It's
kind
of
irregular
for
a
state's
attorney
to
kind
of
get
involved.
A
lot
with
with
youth
and
Jim
took
the
opportunity
to
do
that,
and
not
only
do
it,
but
he
took
on
a
challenging
student
very
challenging
where
he
he
had
to
go
from
state's
attorney
to
being
that
kid's
dad
to
being
his
friend
Rito
the
whole
nine
yards,
and
so
he
was
tough
with
the
kid.
F
F
And
then
he
had
this
heart-to-heart
talk
and
the
whole
nine
yards
and
to
take
that
approach
and
to
be
involved
in
the
school
systems
and
to
take
that
approach
to
be
involved
in
someone's
life,
the
individual
was
able
to
correct
and
cross
the
stage
and
at
that
time
and
they
had
Jim
on
the
stage
or
whatever,
because
that
was
a
student.
He
was
there
to
give
them
a
hug.
F
It
brought
a
half
of
two
to
my
eye,
but
it
can
I
mean
it's.
It's
commendable.
When
you
start
seeing
you
stepping
on
Saturday
ops,
they
really
care
about
these
kids
who
ever
are,
and
that's
like
a
passion
outside
of
what
you
do,
that
you've
included
within
that
state's
attorney's
office
and
I,
say
and
say
it's
you
know
from
the
scooters
111
who
kind
of
applause
you
as
well
as
two
parents
and
some
of
the
people
in
the
community.
We
hear
your
name
a
lot.
D
G
J
G
H
A
Okay
in
your
package,
you
have
a
copy
of
the
public
defenders.
Monthly
report
I'll
take
a
motion
to
put
it
on
file.
Mr.
Smith
second
by
mr.
Bern,
all
in
favor,
say
aye
opposed
same
sign
motion
carries
probation
mr.
Latham
and
your
copy.
You
also
have
a
copy
or
in
your
package
you
have
a
copy
of
the
probation
monthly
report.
Take
a
motion
to
approve
Miss
Parker
Sykes
might
miss
direct
off
comments
on
your
report.
A
K
K
K
They
just
put
a
drug
person
that
just
collects
drug,
does
drug
testing
in
our
office
three
days
a
week,
so
we've
been
able
to
kick
up
the
amount
of
growth
testing
we're
doing,
and
the
only
other
stat
is
the
same
time.
Last
year
we
had
a
total
of
two
thousand
thirty
one
detention
days
and
this
year
a
little
over
1500,
so
about
475
less
days
so
I
thought
they
were
kind
of
jumped
out
at
me.
Just
one
reported
bits.
A
K
Only
other
thing
I
have
this
month
is
related
to
pretrial
supervision,
which
we've
talked
about
here
before
as
a
result
of
the
bail
Reform
Act.
That
requires
basically
non-monetary
bail
for
a
long
list
of
offenses.
People
are
just
basically
released
rather
quickly.
A
OIC
is
soon
gonna
require
that
we
provide
supervision
for
these
people.
Actually,
supervision
standards
are
being
finalized.
Now,
brandy,
Turner,
who
oversees
our
adult
division
and
the
kinky
office,
sits
on
one
of
those
committees.
K
The
issue
we
have
is
the
numbers
that
we
have,
so
we
need
we'll
need
for
additional
people.
Three
to
four
additional
people.
I
was
gone
last
week.
This
all
started
last
Wednesday
and
I
had
found
the
case
where
we
had
a
conference
call
with
the
state
and
I
laid
it
out
that
any
chance
of
this
moving
forward
these
positions,
they
have
to
be
a
hundred
percent
funded.
K
The
conversation
was
rather
positive,
I
even
heard
the
term
funded
mandate
and
one
point
in
the
conversation
which
I
never
heard
that
term
before
I,
don't
Google
it
actually
and
see
what
it
yeah.
So
this
is
very
early.
I
had
him
and
I've
been
gone.
I
haven't
even
had
a
chance
to
sit
down
with
the
Chairman
talk
about
him,
achieve
judges
out
of
town
but
they're
pushing
this.
K
A
L
Hopefully
what
Tom
just
talked
about
will
will
help
alleviate
some
of
that,
where
we
can
get
some
individuals
who
could
be
out
of
jail
and
be
supervised,
there's
a
big
difference
when
they
just
get
out
of
jail
and
they're
running
around
with
no
supervision.
That
makes
a
huge
difference
so,
hopefully
that
moves
forward
Tom
might
be
one
of
the
few
departments
that
gets
a
funded
mandate,
wouldn't
know
what
that
is.
L
We
are
averaging
approximately
five
thousand
dollars
more
per
day,
mainly
because
of
the
rate
increase
that
we
have
through
the
federal
government.
We
only
have
federal
inmates
and
detainees.
Now
we
have
nobody
from
Cook
County
and
the
erotic.
County
numbers
have
remained
consistent
so
and
I
don't
see
that
changing.
In
fact,
we
are
turning
people
away
because
of
our
jail
population.
Right
now,
so.
L
As
far
as
the
number
of
criminal
verse
non
criminal
detainees
that
we
have
with
ice
and
that
number
for
June
I
believe
the
number
for
May
was
I,
don't
even
remember,
but
it
was
780.
It
was
eighty
percent
in
I'm,
sorry
and
for
May
and
in
June
it
was
sixty
percent.
So
that's
a
number
that
is
ever
evolving
and
moving
halfway
through
the
month.
Our
number
was
upwards
of
eighty
and
as
we
get
people
back
from
Chicago,
that
number
moves
a
little
bit
so
so
far
in
July.
L
Right
now,
it's
at
72,
so
I
would
anticipate
that.
That
number
is
gonna,
be
anywhere
from
sixty
to
eighty
to
even
ninety
percent.
At
some
in
some
cases,
I
know
that
there's
some
question
as
to
what
validates
a
criminal
charge.
When
we
look
at
these
charges
that
they
have
the
majority,
all
of
them
are
legitimate.
Felonies.
L
So
you
can
call
it
a
misdemeanor
and
think
it's
not
a
serious
crime
until
a
drunk
hits
you
then
it
becomes
serious
so
and
then
there's
also
some
question
about
how
ice
determines
their
criminal
record
and
that's
a
you
know,
there's
always
an
excuse
for
you
know
why
we're
housing,
immigrants
and
you
know
all
the
criminal
records
not
right
or
we
have
what
we
have.
The
information
we
have
is
what
I
provide
you
guys.
So
it
is
what
it
is
questions
on
the
corrections
side
of
it.
F
F
Basically,
no
matter
what
so,
if
I
go
to
the
country
and
I'm
undocumented,
and
they
do
something
to
me,
it
would
be
part
of
their
protocol
to
protect
the
safety
of
the
people
of
their
country
and
let
make
sure
that
you
are
actually
doctor.
That's
correct.
Yes,
whether
I
go
anywhere.
So
that's
just
all
I
wanted
to
say,
because
I
think.
A
L
A
E
L
L
They
also
list
what
they
abbreviate
as
NC,
which
would
be
no
charge,
and
then
there
is
also
illegal
entry
about
remember,
illegal
entry
and
I've
said
this
before.
If
you
cross,
the
border
gets
get
deported
and
then
come
back
again.
That's
an
automatic
deportation.
That's
that's
not
our
rules.
Those
are
you
know.
Washington
DC's
rules
so
well,
they're,
not
criminal.
That
means
that
they've
come
twice
or
more
and
and
they
get
sent
back.
So
that's
again,
that's.
H
L
H
L
L
L
We
are
responsible
for
the
transportation
of
those
juveniles
back
and
forth
to
River,
Valley
and
I
can
tell
you
that
through
our
calendar
year
so
far,
if
my,
if
my
math
is
right,
which
sometimes
is
a
little
suspect,
there
have
been
a
hundred
and
twenty
four
business
days
through
June
of
2019
in
the
calendar
year
we
have
made
a
hundred
and
sixty
four
trips
to
River
Valley.
So
that's
about
1.3
trips
per
day.
Sometimes
we
go
three
times
a
day.
Sometimes
we
go
twice
a
day.
Sometimes
we
go
once
a
day.
L
L
G
L
L
If,
let's
take,
for
example,
the
village
of
Bradley,
if
the
village
of
Bradley
makes
a
juvenile
arrest
and
juvenile
probation
I
mean-
and
there
are
criteria
that
juvenile
probation
has
before
they
detain
someone
if
juvenile
probation
says
yes,
he
is,
he
meets
the
criteria
to
be
detained,
I
guess
statutorily.
The
village
of
Bradley
should
be
responsible
for
transporting
him
to
River
Valley.
L
Our
mentality,
though
throughout
all
of
this,
for
the
last
ever
since
I
can
remember
about
30
years,
is
that
it
is
beneficial
for
us
being
corrections
to
transport
him
or
her
to
leave
those
police
officers
on
the
street
in
the
county.
I
think
that's
just
you
know
a
benefit
that
our
citizens
of
this
county
deserve,
and
so
we've
always
done
it.
You
know,
that's
one
trip,
so
you
know
work
once
once
they
go
to
their
initial
court
session
or
their
initial
court
appearance.
Rather
then,
it's
our
responsibility
anyway.
L
M
L
A
L
L
D
L
L
And
lastly,
on
the
report:
our
revenue
for
housing.
If
you
look
at
housing
alone
under
Section,
three,
the
under
number
one,
the
bed
rentals,
we
are
looking
projecting
approximately
twelve
million
dollars
in
housing
revenue
alone
for
fiscal
year.
2019
our
budget
for
the
corrections
and
patrol
division
are
on
pace
with
our
budget
numbers,
which
is
a
good
thing,
and
one
of
the
glaring
things
that
sticks
out
for
me
and
our
budget
right
now
is
that
we
have
spent
more
through
June
right
now.
L
A
L
And
lastly,
and
and
the
Chairman
and
I
have
discussed
this
and
we're
trying
to
be
cognizant
of
all
of
the
county's
money
and
we
are
through
Steve
McCarty
and
Amy
lucky
in
our
office,
working
through
where
we're
at
with
our
leases.
And
ideally,
we
would
like
to
have
one
lease
in
before
we
started
another
lease
so
that
we're
not
spending
additional
money
and
that's
our
goal.
So
that's
where
we're
trying
to
get
to
right
now,
but
hopefully
I,
don't
believe
we'll
bring
it
to
finance
at
the
end
of
this
month.
L
I
think
we'll
bring
it
back
here
as
far
as
a
request
for
cars
and
a
timeline
of
where
we're
at
so
that
we're
not
spending
we're
not
taking
out
another
lease,
we're
just
basically
offsetting
a
lease
that
comes
to
an
end
as
opposed
to
creating
another
lease
that
costs
the
county
more
money.
So
we'll
have
that
information
for
you,
probably
next
month
at
this
meeting,
as
opposed
to
the
finance
me.
A
L
A
vehicle-
yes,
that's
a
vehicle,
and
that
includes
from
when
I
say
that
I
when
I
talk
about
the
leases,
we're
talking
about
both
patrol
and
corrections,
because
our
corrections
fleet
does
put
miles
on
their
vehicles.
One
of
the
things
that
really
has
helped
us
over
the
past
in
the
past
couple
of
years
has
been
taking
a
couple
of
those
old
squad,
cars
and
and
using
those
for
in
town
transports,
weathers
to
the
hospital
weathers
to
the
courthouse.
A
L
Yes,
that's
what
causes
us?
Yes,
yeah!
The
last
group
of
cars
I
mean
originally
was
we
had
eleven
twelve
and
thirteen
s,
and
then
we
I
think
our
most
recent
purchase
was
a
sixteen.
So
you
had
eleven
s
that
obviously
ran
through
those
five
years
and
I
and
with
the
miles
we
put
on
cars
because
of
the
size
of
the.
A
That
we,
during
the
lean
years
we
sort
of
slacked
off,
because
we
were
around
a
program.
I
mean
this
is
going
back
quite
a
few
years.
We
were
supposed
to
buy
twelve
cars
every
year.
That
way
we
kept
the
rotation
going
and
to
kept
the
maintenance
costs
down.
But
during
the
lean
years
we
sort
of
got
out
of
that
program
and.
F
L
F
L
F
D
M
L
A
N
Reads
the
our
statistics
why's
there
when
he,
when
he
talks
about
the
total
number
of
calls
like
in
June
100
and
105
at
corners
15?
That's
that's
where
the
coroner
gets
involved
with
the
case,
and
it
takes
probably
sometimes
anywhere
from
two
or
three
weeks
up
to
a
month
before
all
the
information
that
we
can
get
as
far
as
medical
records
and
stuff
like
that.
So
that's
that's
a
coroner's
case.
N
We're
looking
pretty
good
on
the
budget
wise
with
into
July
already
so
we're
doing
pretty
on
the
average
of
that
hanging
on
what
we
did
last
year.
So
autopsies
are
down
a
little
bit
there
other
than
that.
That's
where
we're
at
and
I
I
just
want
to
take
a
one
I
like
to
express
my
gratitude
towards
a
couple
of
people:
Chief
Jim
spoon
from
the
member
and
his
members
of
the
moments'
Fire
Department
district,
also
Louie,
jenin
Farber,
the
conservation
officer
and
his
staff
they're
involved
in
our
recent
drowning.
N
That
was
in
the
Illinois
Indiana
State
Line
from
June
8th
all
the
way
to
June
20
at
the
fore.
We
recovered
the
body,
the
members
of
the
moments'
Fire
Department
district
at
numerous
occasions,
to
respond
to
this
location,
to
search
and
help
and
recovery
along
with
the
conservation
officer.
They
were
in
really
dangerous
situations.
There
we
had
a
log
jam
that
was
in
12
feet
of
water.
The
current
was
running,
probably
triple
the
amount.
It
was
three
nights,
it's
up
to
12
knots.
N
The
reason
why
divers
couldn't
go
in
there
we
had
sonar
looking
both
the
moments',
Fire
Department
and
the
conservation
to
be
able
to
find
the
body
in
12
feet
of
water
underneath
all
that
stuff
they
had
to
tear
that
apart
and
the
amount
of
work
that
they
did
out
there
to
find
that
body
was
unbelievable.
I
was
out
there,
probably
out
of
the
8
days.
We
were
out
there.
Our
excuse
me
12
days
that
they
were
out.
N
We
were
at
one
point,
didn't
know
how
we
were
ever
gonna
get
it
out
of
there
in
a
log
jam
that
was
unbelievable.
You
could
walk
across
it
and
so
NARS
we'll
be
able
to
go
down
and
we
could
see
the
body,
but
we
couldn't
get
to
the
body,
so
it
was
unbelievable
for
what
they
what
they
did
in
my
my
gratitude
goes
out
to
them.