►
From YouTube: Highway & Buildings Committee Meeting 3/15/2018
Description
Highway & Buildings Committee Meeting 3/15/2018 9:00 AM
A
A
B
A
C
A
D
Okay,
good
morning,
the
first,
the
proposal
we
have
this
morning
is
for
Janiero
district
section,
1,
8,
0,
4,
0,
0,
0,
0,
0
GM
as
well
and
shep.
Work
to
be
done
in
the
township
proposed
I
have
this
morning
is
from
Grasso
construction
company
Pepa
cashier's
check
in
the
amount
of
$1,000
as
a
proposal
guarantee,
and
they
have
an
atc
attached.
D
D
D
D
B
D
A
A
E
B
D
Next
I
have
just
a
few
payments
this
morning.
The
first
one
is
for
our
county
general
maintenance
for
2018
payable
to
compass
materials
America.
This
is
for
salt
that
we
purchased,
that
stored
down
at
the
yard,
and
that
motto
is
forty:
five
thousand
five
hundred
four
dollars:
forty
cents
Nessus
for
the
county's
general
maintenance
for
2018,
payable
to
kinky
Valley
construction.
This
is
for
coal
patch
picked
up
at
the
plant
in
that
amount
is
$1,390.
Thirty-Five
cents
and
last
is
Kankakee
Road
district
for
their
2018
general
maintenance
payable
to
compass,
minerals.
A
F
B
D
First
resolution
I
have
is
a
resolution
appropriating
County
bridge
funds
for
the
repair
of
the
Kankakee
River
Bridge
aroma
park.
We
discovered
some
damage
to
the
deck.
It
appears
that
something
very
heavy
was
dropped
on
the
deck.
There
is
a
an
area
that
we
need
to
repair.
We
have
no
idea
what
happened.
We
had
our
structural
engineer
come
up
and
take
a
look.
He
prepared
a
little
set
of
plans
for
us
to
hire
somebody
to
do
it,
I'm
asking
for
to
appropriate
about
$25,000
in
County
bridge
funds
to
repair
that
I.
E
E
B
A
A
Now,
therefore,
it
be
resolved
by
the
Kankakee
County
Board
that
mark
R
Rogers,
hereby
reappointed
county
engineer
for
Kankakee
County
for
term
of
six
years,
effective,
April,
10th
2018.
We
had
further
resolved
by
the
Kankakee
County
board
that
the
salary
of
the
county
engineer
shall
be
102
percent
of
the
recommended
salary
of
the
county
engineer
to
be
determined
annually
by
the
Illinois
Department
of
Transportation
for
each
year
of
the
six-year
term
in
office,
plus
all
benefits
provided
by
the
caking
by
the
county
of
KP
and
state
statutes.
A
We
had
further
resolved
by
the
Kankakee
County
Board
that
there's
hereby
appropriated
some
of
eighty
nine
thousand
seven
hundred
seventy
one
dollars
sixty
six
cents
from
the
county.
A
lot
County
is
allowed
when
a
motor
fuel
tax
fund
for
the
purpose
of
paying
the
County
engineer's
salary
from
April,
tenth
2018
to
December,
31st
2018
and
be
it
further
resolved
that
the
county
clerk
is
hereby
directed
transmitted
to
certificate.
A
Certified
originals
of
this
resolution
to
the
district
office
of
the
Illinois
Department
of
Transportation,
approving
the
crudest
adopted
and
through
this
10th
day
of
2018
I,
mean
a
motion
to
accept
this
resolution.
This
Peters
and
mr.
Trippe
now
need
a
second
for
that
and
then
we'll
have
a
discussion.
All
right,
discussion.
C
A
A
G
It's
basically
I
believe
you
were
at
ninety
eight
percent.
They
were
paying
you,
you
were
100,
but
previously
you
were
at
ninety
eight.
So
no
is
that
100
percent
the
last
contract
person,
okay,
the
last
one-
was
a
hundred
percent,
so
you
were
exactly
with
the
state,
say:
okay,
so
we've
met
on
this
and
we
talked
I
thought
at
one
point
you
were
at
ninety
eight,
but
maybe
that's
the
range
you
have
seen.
Yes,
that
was
it.
There
was
a
range
you
have
seen
anywhere
from
98
to
120,
120
percent.
G
G
It
was
relevant
to
give
the
two
percent
that
we're
giving
to
everybody
else
to
the
county
engineer
as
well,
also
knowing
that
this
is
not
general
fund,
it's
motor
fuel
tax
paid
for
so
the
rationale
was
to
be
consistent
across
the
board
as
much
as
we
possibly
can.
Obviously,
there
are
a
couple
of
contracts
that
aren't
ago
she
ated
by
the
county
board,
but
we
tried
to
do
the
same
with
the
county
employees
this
year
we
gave
them
2%
if
they
didn't
get
a
non-union
employees.
A
D
I
D
A
A
B
D
A
A
F
E
G
F
D
D
They
said
that
they
thought
that
they
could
get
federal
funds
to
do
the
retrofit
and
then-
and
so
they
took
the
lead.
So
we've
been
dealing
with
this
for
quite
a
few
years.
Finally,
I
think
in
around
2000
we
had
to
close
the
bridge
because
it
it
was
structurally
insufficient
to
even
carry
any
vehicle.
So
the
structures
been
closed
since
2000
as
you.
D
D
Two
options
and
the
two
options
are
on
page
2
there
at
the
top
of
the
letter
that
the
road
remain
closed,
the
bridge
remain
in
place
and
that
the
bridge
remain
at
its
present
site
without
any
effort
or
expenditure
of
monies
for
its
preservation
or
the
bridge
is
dismantled.
Inventory
and
storage
to
another
agency
can
reassemble
the
bridge
to
be
used
in
a
public
setting.
I
know
this
was
a
public
safety
issue
back
when
this
whole
thing
started.
G
Thank
you
for
that
history.
You
know.
Obviously
some
a
few
of
us
were
here,
but
not
not.
Everybody
was
here
at
that
time
to
remember
what
had
happened
and
we
did
learn
some
things
in
this
letter
that,
like
you
said,
we
didn't
know
that
there
was
the
lighting
and
all
of
that
I
had
to
go
to
the
to
this
committee,
because
I
need
your
direction.
G
We
cannot
afford
the
10%
of
the
7
million
dollar
price
tag.
That's
a
lot
in
the
recommend
it
to
me,
like
lake
lake
county
is
saying
we
just
want
them
off
all
this.
We
can't
afford
this
either,
but
they
want
to
rillette
it
again,
I
believe
just
to
check.
You
know
to
just
take
the
toe
in
the
water
and
make
sure
that
that
is
a
valid
I
quote.
D
That
yeah
I
think
that
iNDOT
is
going
to
relight
it
in
dot
is
okay
but
I.
Don't
know
that
even
Lake
Lake
County
wants
to
stop
that
relighting
right.
According
to
this
letter
and
I,
think
that's
what
they
want
to
sit
down
and
discuss
is
hey.
We
need
to
do
something
different
here
and
those
are
their
two
options
of
paper.
Post-Its.
G
G
There's
there
is
an
issue,
but
then
there's
also
an
issue
with:
how
much
does
it
cost
to
take
down
a
bridge
and
mothball
that
we
don't
really
know
what
that
is
either
it
could
be
as
much
as
the
two
hundred
thousand
or
talk
we
wouldn't
we
had.
You
know
that
these
are
a
lot
of
unknowns,
so
going
into
this
meeting,
I
can
bring
back
information,
but
I
just
want
to
kind
of
sense
the
tenor
of
what
was
going
on
in
this
committee.
G
F
You,
mr.
chairman,
basically
on
recall
and
previous
meetings,
the
problem
there
is
the
various
agencies
have
put
so
many
restrictions
on
rebuilding
that
bridge.
The
contractor
has
to
stay
within
the
footprint
of
the
existing
bridge
and
cannot
use
any
land
to
the
east
or
to
the
west,
so
to
move
their
equipment
to
store
gravel
and
materials.
F
They
have
to
make
a
long
trek
back
to
near
to
route
114,
and
that
was
one
of
the
problems
that
added
to
the
cost
they
had
to
find
a
storage
area
not
within
that
footprint,
to
store
all
their
equipment,
material
and
stuff.
Okay,
so
that
added
drastically
to
the
cost.
So
I
just
thought
I'd
remind
the
board
of
that
was
one
of
the
issues
when
the
when
the
issue
came
up
originally.
Thank
you.
C
H
H
Then
we
keep
the
road
closed
or
we
dismantle
the
bridge.
I,
don't
know
how
we're
prepared
to
make
an
intelligent
recommendation
unless
we're
supposed
to
say
Andy,
you
can
go,
and
maybe
our
county
engineer
go
to
this
committee
and
see
what
the
process
is.
But
these
are
two
distinct
options,
either
or
either
or
usually
is
not
a
good
solution.
D
I'll
just
say
the
other.
The
other
comment
that
they
had
in
here
was
the
road
to
the
south
and
I
know
it's
flooded
four
to
six
months
out
of
the
year,
and
they
they
make
that
question
whether
you
know
it
C.
Is
it
economically
feasible?
The
concern
that
I
can
think
of
and
that
I've
been
told
other
times
is:
if
we
remove
that
bridge,
there
will
never
be
another
one
there
that
that
that
was
a
concern,
but
it's
up
to
this
the
board
really
of
what
direction
you
want
to
go.
I
Stress,
thank
you.
Mister
chairman
I'm,
not
on
the
committee
anymore,
but
I've
been
here
for
quite
a
while,
since
this
bridge
project
to
come
up
and
it's
in
my
district
to
start
with.
If
we
don't
do
something
pretty
quick,
there's
not
going
to
be
much
of
the
bridge
left
because
there's
been
people
out
there
scavenging
metal
off
of
it.
Really!
Oh,
yes,
the
rails
are
gone
and
everything,
and
right
now
with
a
high
water,
there
is
a
bunch
of
logs
up
against
it.
I
I
I
A
I
F
Mark
brings
up
a
mark
brings
up.
Thank
you
again.
Mr.
chairman
mark
brings
up
a
good
good
point.
I
drove
down
there
in
my
four-wheel
drive
the
other
day
and
I
want
to
tell
you
something
you
can't
get
I
couldn't
get
to
the
bridge.
Okay
because
of
the
water
I
mean
yeah.
I
could
have
maybe
okay,
but
let
me
tell
you,
there's
a
lot
of
water
there
and
I
got
just
so
far
as
I
thought,
I
could
go
and
I
turned
around.
Thank
goodness
there
was
a
spot
there.
F
I
could
turn
around
so
really
what's
down.
There
is
just
a
bunch
of
hunters
and
there's
a
few
residences
that
are
underwater
or
most
of
their
properties,
underwater
and
I
I
couldn't
get
to
the
bridge
from
the
south,
so
I
think
from
the
north.
You
could
I
could
try
that,
but
from
the
south
there's
just
no
way
to
get
to
that
bridge
right
now.
I
not
only
is
the
bridge
a
problem,
but
that
approach,
as
you
mentioned,
mark
it
becomes
our
responsibility
or
a
shared
responsibility
with
Indiana
or
that
this
are
the
counties
they're
just.
F
I
D
A
H
D
The
letters
requesting
a
meeting
if
we
would
be
open
to
a
meeting
to
meet
in
the
in
the
memorandum
the
there
is
they
want
to
amend
them.
The
memorandum
and
basically
that
section
of
the
the
agreement
says
any
signatory
of
this
Memorandum
of
this
agreement
may
request
that
it
be
amended,
whereupon
the
party
show
consult
to
consider
the
proposed
amendment
and
that's
what
they're
requesting
okay.
G
When
we
go
to
this
meeting
I'm
sure
the
other
parties
would
expect
to
have
some
sort
of
at
least
decision
on
which
way
we're
going
and
whether
you
know
I
bring
back
information.
I
was
kind
of
looking
for.
What's
the,
what
is
the
the
thought
this
this
committee
has?
Is
there
any
parameters
you
want
to
put
on
the
actions
that
we
take,
or
obviously
we
to
prove
any
Memorandum
of
Understanding,
but
in
order
to
have
a
discussion,
I
needed
to
know
where
everybody's
head
was
on
this?
Oh
my.
G
Heston
and
Vickery
would
like
to
see
it
open,
but
at
what
cost
and
under
what
terms
and
viability
of
the
structure
is
in
question,
as
is
the
approach
you
know
so
this
this
is
this.
Is
this
a
situation
where
it
would
be
good
money
put
towards
something
that
could
be
useful
or
is
it
bad
money
after
bad
money?
That's
kind
of
where
my
head
is
I'm
I'm,
not
taking
a
position
because
I
don't
know
the
history
and
I
frankly
have
and
out
there.
Yet
I
was
hoping
that
I
could
get
that
perspective
here.
Yep.
A
D
We
would
have
to
have
an
agreement
in
place.
The
statute,
the
the
Illinois
statutes
say
that
we
participate
up
to
50%.
Well,
if
the
the
feds
are
paying
80%
and
the
local
ages
are
gonna
50/50,
that
would
mean
that
we
would
be
paying
10%
if
they
can
use
federal
funds.
Now,
I,
don't
know
that
you
use
federal
funds
to
take
the
bridge
down.
You
know
so
that
would
all
probably
have
to
be
5050
local
money.
A
F
F
I
A
I
D
F
Thank
you
again.
Mr.
chairman
the
and
at
one
time
we
did
agree
to
spend
I
think
$100,000.
That
just
sticks
in
my
mind
that
we
in
some
conversations
here
and
everything
that
when
Jim
came
back
with
that
agreement,
we
had
agreed
to
spend
I
think
or
appropriate
a
hundred
thousand
dollars
into
that
into
that
program.
But
that
was
at
a
time
when
two
bids,
the
apparent
up
yeah
the.
D
A
F
A
J
First
thing
I'd
like
to
bring
to
light
here:
I
received
information
from
Lori
buyers.
They
sell
free
on
our
22
refrigerant
all
of
our
equipment
in
the
county.
All
of
it
is
our
22
Bria
by
2020.
It
was
supposed
to
be
outlawed
in
the
United
States
they're
now
talking
about
extending
that
to
2030,
but
that's
still
questionable.
J
We
need
to
remember
that
the
transition
on
every
piece
of
equipment
here
will
be
a
huge
cost
to
the
county,
so
replacing
equipment
as
it
breaks
down,
would
probably
be
a
smart
thing
to
start
start
incorporating
into
our
plan
our
long-range
plan,
as
it
stands
right
now.
2020
is
the
deadline
for
our
22.
Now.
J
That's
FYI
yeah
okay
facility
report,
a
hundred
twenty
five
work
orders
for
last
month.
That
number
was
down
a
little
bit.
So
that's
a
good
thing
we'll
go
on
to
the
financial
report.
If
you
look
at
your
financial
report,
you
see
I've
added
some
pages
on
to
this.
If
you
look
at
your
front
page,
there's
service
contracts
per
building
office
and
rent
miscellaneous
building
equipment
and
auto.
J
So
if
you
refer
to
the
through
the
pages
as
you
move
forward,
for
example,
building
equipment,
you
will
see
exactly
what
I've
spent
at
every
building
and
these
and
these
all
these
invoices
are
processed
and
and
we'll
go
through
service
contracts,
for
example,
all
the
filters
we
bought
for
the
county
this
year,
seven
hundred
and
twenty
two
dollars
I
believe
it
was
a
little
over
seven
hundred
dollars
per
building.
We
just
split
it
up
between
the
buildings
for
the
filters,
so
that's
divided
up
equally
and.
A
J
So
if
you
have
any
questions,
I,
don't
typically
give
you
guys
these
pages
and
always
tell
you,
but
but
I
just
wanted
to
give
you
a
heads
up
here
and
you
can
take
a
closer
look
at
where
we're
spending
our
money.
Pcs
supply
is
our
provider
of
all
the
cleaning
supplies
toilet
paper
what-have-you
through
for
the
county,
precision
piping,
of
course,
Lang
Lloyd's
roofing
for
their
repairs.
Effie
Moran
is
our
sprinkler
inspections
and
standpipe
inspections
for
the
county
and
again
you
it's
a
it's
a
better
breakdown
of
what
I
typically
give
to
you.
J
So
it's
just
another
FYI
and
if
you
have
any
since
don't
hesitate
to,
let
me
know
we
had
the
county
building
inspected
here
last
month
by
the
fire
department.
That's
an
annual
inspection.
We
do
in
every
one
of
our
buildings
and
I
received
this
letter
from
them.
The
other
day
an
inspection
was
made
of
the
above
premises
on
March
1st
2018.
At
that
time,
the
fire
department
members
noted
no
serious
violations
of
fire
prevention
code.
We'd
like
to
commend
you
for
the
excellent
job
of
fire.
J
Prevention
is
being
carried
out
on
your
premises
and
for
your
cooperation
with
us.
If
you
have
any
questions,
please
let
us
know
it's
a
nice
letter.
We
got
from
them.
Our
buildings
typically
only
carry
about
10
violations
that
and
their
emergency
lights
out,
minor,
minor
repairs
that
we
make
right
after
we
get
this
fire
inspection
completed
in
all
of
our
buildings
and
and
this
building
this
year
was
was
a
100%.
So
we're
thanks
to
our
staff,
did.
J
Good
well
start
off
with
the
building
report.
Here,
189
I
met
with
the
architect
about
the
roof
out.
Here
we
were
getting
ready
to
do
the
bid
package
they'll
be
coming
back
here
at
1:30
today
to
go
over
this
here's
a
situation
we're
in
with
this
roof
the
roof
was
put
on
flat.
We
have
no
flaw
and
that's
the
reason
for
leakage.
J
This
roof
by
code
has
to
be
raised,
eight
inches
for
drainage
on
the
ends
and
start
running
the
water
back
down
to
those
drains.
That's
why
they're
coming
back
here.
The
problem
we're
gonna
have
now
is
all
those
curbs
that
the
equipment
sitting
on
there's
12
air
handling
units
out
there
or
condensing
units
all
have
to
majority
of
them
will
have
to
be
raised
up,
which
will
require
some
additional
costs
for
the
heating
air
conditioning
companies
to
raise
those
lines
up
and
we'll
get
a
better
idea
this
as
we
move
forward.
J
So
we
are
meeting
with
them
today
at
1:30
and
the
architect
will
go
over
some
of
this
and
I'll
get
better
answers
on
it.
But
that's
where
we
are.
We
do
have
the
courthouse
rotunda
roof
ready
to
go
out
to
bid
we're
gonna,
try
and
go
to
bid
at
the
end
of
this
month
and
then
have
these
bid
packages
back
for
the
April
meeting
to
open
and
and
approve
so
I.
Think.
G
J
G
J
K
J
H
E
G
G
H
F
Roofs
twenty-two
years
old
and
it
was
probably
done
under
those
codes
and
those
engineering
aspects,
probably
high
these
flat.
We
just
went
through
this
with
a
church
project.
I
want
to
tell
you
something:
if
we
don't,
if
we're
looking
ahead,
25
years,
the
life
of
the
roof,
there's
no
reason
not
to
do
it
right.
Okay,
we
can
cut
cost,
but
if
you're
gonna
make
a
25
year,
investment
here
I
think
we
need
to
do
something
about
the
pitch
on
that
roof.
F
Only
not
only
does
that
affect
rainfall
that
affects
snow
and
when
recently,
when
we
had
a
lot
of
this
rain
on
top
of
a
six
inch
snowfall
I
mean
that
water's
got
to
get
off
that
roof,
because
it's
going
to
come
up
over
the
flashing,
so
I
mean
I
have
only
been
involved
in
one
of
these
projects.
So
but
after
the
exposure
I
had
to
that,
when
you're
looking
at
a
25
year,
investment,
you
you've
got
to
do
it
and
do
it
right.
Thank
you.
Yeah.
J
We
completed
the
five-year
stands
pipe
inspection
of
this
building
and
Jerome
clumsy
tension
center
that
pushes
us
into
the
five
years
to
about
2020
on
our
on
our
stand,
pipe
inspections,
so
we're
up
to
code
on
that.
We
did
have
to
make
some
more
repair
for
leaks
over
here
on
this
roof
again
here
last
week.
With
that
rain
we
had,
it
was
3.7
inches
I
think
it
was.
J
So
we
can
get
the
cars
in
and
idea
to
pick
up
their
election
booths.
So
there's
a
process
here
we're
going
through
as
soon
as
this
election
is
over,
we'll
move
those
boosts
back
into
the
garage
and
get
the
files
relocated.
We're
working
on
that
the
north
heating
unit
of
the
treasures
building
has
been
on
again
off
again.
The
South
unit
is
all
see
it,
no
longer
it
no
longer
works
and
I.
Don't
think
we
want
to
expend
funds
to
repair
it.
I'll
keep
the
North
unit
run
as
best
we
can.
J
Once
we
relocate
those
files,
we
should
be
able
to
be
okay
with
not
I
got
to
keep
it
heated,
while
those
files
are
in
that
building
or
there
they'll
mold
out
on
us,
so
I'll
take
care
of
that
as
we
move
forward
last
week
at
the
courthouse,
the
old
jail
and
the
annex
building,
we
had
a
single
fades
comment.
Outage
I
got
a
call
about
ten
minutes
to
three
that
the
courthouse
was
single.
Phasing
I
immediately
went
in
and
shut
the
courthouse
down
without
permission
from
anyone.
J
By
leaving
that
courthouse
running,
we
would
have
single
phased
all
those
motors.
There
is
no
single
face
protection
at
the
county
courthouse
the
switch
gears
as
old
as
the
building,
so
that
update
is
gonna,
be
very
costly,
so
I
shut
the
building
down.
We
waited
till.
We
got
word
from
comment
that
everything
was
back
in
order
and
then
we
reenergized
the
building
I
did
that
without
anybody's
permission
and
I
didn't
even
waste
the
time
to
tell
anybody,
we
shut
it
down
and
we
did
it
for
a
very
good
reason.
J
A
J
J
A
J
J
The
annex
building
both
those
generators
kicked
on
like
they
were
supposed
to
all
transfer
services
transferred.
Everything
worked
just
like
it
was
supposed
to,
but
I
will
tell
you
this.
The
transfer
switch
at
the
annex
building
is
the
original
transfer
switch
from
45
years
ago.
One
of
these
days,
it's
not
going
to
transfer
anymore.
It's
just
not
gonna.
Do
it
the
thing
I
can't
believe
it
still
operates.
J
It's
another
something
else
on
a
list
that
I
have
that
needs
to
get
replaced
that
it's
costly,
probably
probably
close
to
ten
thousand
dollars
to
replace
that
transfer
switch,
at
least
so
it's
something
that
needs
to
get
done
and
it's
on
a
longer
long-range
list,
the
old
jail.
As
you
probably
heard
on
the
radio,
there
was
a
fire
at
the
old
jail
last
Thursday
night
3/8
in
the
laundry
one
of
the
laundry
dryers
caught
fire.
That
was,
they
were
washing
rags.
A
couple
of
them
were
shredded
as
it
turned
out
rag
caught
fire.
J
Let
the
let
the
fire
shot
out
out
of
the
out
of
the
ductwork
on
the
roof.
We
immediately
went
there
fire
departments,
there
did
a
great
job
put
everything
in
order
more
smoke
damage
than
anything
we
went
back
the
next
day.
The
roof
had
to
be
the
roof.
Vent
had
to
be
ripped
off
by
the
fire
department,
make
sure
we
didn't
have
fire
spreading
through
the
roof
lines.
All
that
was
taken.
J
Care
of
I
immediately
got
a
whole
language
roofing,
who
can't
capped
and
patched
that
I
got
a
hold
the
insurance
company,
the
appraisers
came,
we've
met
with
all
of
them,
I
have
two
new
dryers,
ordered
and
on
the
way
the
laundry
room
was
served.
Pro
came
did
all
of
the
cleanup
that
needed
to
get
done
for
the
smoke
damage.
I
have
all
this
approved
through
the
insurance
company.
Again
we
now
had
uniforms.
J
There
was
about
eleven
thousand
dollars
in
uniform
loss,
shelving
units
I'll,
replace
and
we're
working
on
that
right
now,
everything's
everything's
in
order
Houlihan
heating
in
sheet
metal's
over
there,
putting
the
new
vent
on
the
building
now
so
everything's,
putting
order
we're
hoping
in
less
than
two
weeks
we'll
have
that
laundry
back
up
and
operational,
we're
currently
moving
clothing
to
drum
combs.
To
stay
on
top
of
that,
so
the
insurance
company's
been
great
with
us
and
as
soon
as
we
get
this
all
updated
I'll.
Let
you
know
where
we're
at
with
that.
J
We
we
installed
a
video
arraignment
room
at
that
jail
which
cut
back
on
costs
through
the
Sheriff's
Department
for
transporting
inmates.
I,
don't
know
all
the
details
on
any
of
that.
I
stay
out
of
that
area,
but
the
video
arraignment
room
was
remodeled.
If
you
will
we,
we
tore
out
some
carpeting
and
it's
a
few
things
in
there
got
Rooter
Electric
they're,
now
doing
video
arraignment
between
the
courthouse
and
there,
which
again
cuts
back
cost
per
tree,
inmate
transport.
So
that's
in
operation
as
well
and
I'll.
J
Let
the
sheriff
or
chief
Cal
winds,
who
explain
more
if
you're
interested
last
night
I
got
a
call
about
no
I,
don't
know
I!
Guess
it
was
about
6
o'clock.
We
lost
the
inmate
elevator
at
the
old
jail
they're,
telling
me
that
the
jack
and
the
bottom
of
the
elevator,
the
hydraulics,
the
hydraulics,
is
screwed
up
on
this
elevator
I
have
coney
elevator
coming
here
for
an
assessment
a
little
bit
after
12
o'clock
today,
they'll
be
here.
They'll.
Take
a
look
at
this
and
I'll
have
a
better
idea.
J
What
this
is
going
to
take
the
fix
from
the
sounds
of
things
if
the
jacks
bad,
this
is
going
to
be
a
very
expensive
fit
repair.
I,
don't
think
we
can
insurance.
This
I
can
ask,
but
I
think
this
is
just
45
year
old
equipment
gone
bad
I'll
have
better
answers
on
this
again
today,
after
lunch
of
where
we
are
and
how
we
have
to
proceed,
we're
currently
using
the
elevator.
That's
on
the
administration
side,
it's
a
smaller
elevator
we're
going
to
be
very
careful
at
weight
loads
of
what
we
move.
J
We
move
all
the
food
up
and
down
with
those
that,
with
that
inmate,
elevator
and
inmate
transport,
so
we're
gonna
have
to
be
very
careful
what
we
do
with
that
other
elevator
as
we
move
forward
and
I'm
working
with
the
jail
chief
as
well
to
to
get
through
all
that
Jerome
combs
detention
center.
We
had
a
water
line,
break
two
and
a
half
inch
water
line.
Main
happened
on
a
Saturday
morning
started
leaking.
J
We
pulled
the
insulation
off
as
it
turns
out
about
twenty
feet
of
two
and
a
half
inch
water
line
had
two
or
three
leaks
in
it.
We
had
that
cut
out
and
we
had
to
come
in
last
Thursday
night
at
midnight
they
shut
the
water
down,
cut
that
piece
of
pipe
out
of
there
replaced.
It
has
since
been
reinstated
and
put
back
in
order.
So
we
got
that
working
C,
dorm
exhaust
fan
issues.
We
got
that
repaired.
J
This
is
something
that
has
to
get
done
this.
We
can't
let
this
go
this
equipment
if
we
let
it
go
in
the
capacitors
fail,
there'll
be
a
blackout
in
between
transfers,
which
the
last
thing
anybody
wants
to
see.
Some
lights
go
off,
so
I'm
gonna
need
approval
to
move
forward
with
the
capacitor
replacement
and
I
there's.
This
is
another
project
that
we.
J
F
J
I
believe
they
are
I,
think
everything
was
the
same.
Just
the
price
in
the
equipment.
I
think
everything
else
was
the
same.
They
come
and
do
an
annual.
They
do
their
annual
on
these
things.
You're
in
and
you're
out,
I
haven't
come
check
those
things
every
year,
batteries
and
all
that
equipment,
so
I
think
it'll
be
fun.
C
G
J
G
J
I
can
just
go
purchase
the
capacitors
off
a
wine
and
then
give
them
to
them
to
install.
They
know
they
would
make
no
company
I'll.
Let
you
do
that
for
general
repairs
in
the
county
and
some
things
I
have
concerns
about.
Are
the
loop
road
and
curbs
in
the
courthouse
loop
road
are
growing
progressively
worse
the
foundation
wall
on
the
east
side
of
the
building
and
the
retaining
wall
on
the
south.
The
port
just
continue
to
deteriorate
and
parking
lots
at
189
and
Jerome
combs
Detention
Center.
J
The
cracks
are
opening
up
again
and
those
are
all
of
our
Lots
need
to
be
cracked,
sealed,
sealed
and
striped.
We've
talked
about
this
and
put
it
off
for
a
couple
of
years
and
I,
don't
know
how
much
longer
we
can
do
that
we're
gonna
it'll
start
even
the
next
prime
and
and
the
courthouse
Loop
Road
is
a
prime
example.
It's
even
it's
starting
to
break
apart,
and
this
will
continue
to
go
on.
If
we
don't
make
these
repairs,
it's
something
else.
We
need
to
talk
about.
J
I
have
paperwork
from
the
last
time
it
was
done
in
2010
at
Jerome
combs.
A
complete
redo
was
about
twelve
thousand
dollars
for
Jerome
combs.
That's
not
including
these
two
lots
and,
of
course,
the
one
over
at
Asbury,
so
something
else
that
that's
out
there
again
the
roof
around
the
rotunda,
so
we'll
be
working
on
what
else
do
I
have
missed
earlier?
You
would
ask
me
about
finding
pricing
from
precision
piping.
We
talked
about
that
in
2017.
It
was
twelve
thousand
ninety
five
dollars.
Those
repairs
were
not
AC
repairs.
These
are
strictly
water.
J
Sewer
repairs
that
my
guys
couldn't
make
no
backflow
backflow
is
another
thirty
one
hundred
dollars
a
year
that
we
have
to
do.
There's
twenty
eight
back
flows
in
the
county
typically
takes
about
a
hundred
dollars.
A
back
flow
runs
about
$3,100
I.
Take
that
out
of
our
vendor
contracts,
which
I
budget
for
ninety
six
thousand
a
year
for
our
vendor
contracts,
so
back
flows
are
included
in
that,
but
twelve
thousand.
Ninety
five
dollars
was
a
it's
for
just
repairs.
J
Next
thing
this
this
one
of
these
past
snowfalls
about
two
snowfalls
ago,
the
Silverado
which
we
talked
about
replacing
2000
with
over
200,000
miles
on
it,
the
plow
a-frame
broke
so
I
took
it
out
to
be
si.
The
SI
had
replacement
parts,
they
weren't
the
correct
parts,
but
they
went
ahead
and
jury-rigged
that
plow
force,
so
we
could
at
least
keep
moving
snow
for
the
rest
of
this
winter.
In
the
meantime,
he
got
me
a
price
to
repair
with
replacement
parts
for
that
plow
was
about
two
thousand
dollars.
I
haven't
done
anything
with
this.
J
J
J
A
J
J
H
While
Brian's
up
there,
you
might
when
you're
talking
about
the
elevator,
they
have
pitless
elevators
that
fit
the
same
box
depending
on
the
cost
of
removing
that
elevator
and
putting
in
a
new
cylinder.
You
may
ask
about
pitless
elevators,
which
new
site
lifts,
see
what
the
cost
may
or
may
not
be
a
cost
savings.
A
C
J
Other
thing
I
want
to
commend
my
staff.
These
guys
are
working,
as
you
well
know,
short-handed
and
they're
doing
a
heck
of
a
job
keeping
up
here
that
I
commend
every
one
of
them
they
booked
there
they're
doing
the
best
they
can
and
we
we
do
have
a
Dan
is
gonna,
send
out
an
email
for
us.
March
23rd
I
have
about
five
people
going
to
CPR.
J
First
aid
training,
along
with
their
OSHA
10
safety
class,
that
we
that
we've
doing
through
KCC
I
will
be
short-staffed
on
that
Friday
for
their
CPR
first
aid
training
class
and
we're
gonna
send
out
email.
Everybody
know
there
won't
be
any
custodians
in
the
building
that
day
so
keep
an
eye
on
think.
A
L
Morning
morning,
okay
I
just
wanted
to
kind
of
give
an
update.
I
want
our
a
da
issues
our
and
how
we're
doing
what
they
were
doing
pretty
well.
Everything
in
green
are
things
that
we've
completed.
The
yellow
are
things
that
are
in
transition
should
be
completed
very
very
shortly
and
the
red
of
some
long-term
things
that
we
need
to
kind
of
work
on.
L
As
you
see,
we
sign
the
ad
a
coordinator,
that's
me:
I've
started
the
transition
plan.
The
transition
plan
is
something
that's
ongoing.
It's
not
just
something
that
we
it's
ever-changing.
We
had
to.
We
subtract
to
it's
just
as
we
go
through
and
we
notice
things
or
we
fix
things
or
we
find
that
we
can
better
make
better
accommodations.
We
make
those
changes
within
that
plan.
It's
kind
of
keeps
track
of
what
we're
doing
throughout
the
years.
L
Okay,
the
equal
and
effective
communication,
those
are
our
sign
language,
interpreters
or
all
the
interpreters
and
hearing
so
as
well
as
a
mobility
type
things
that
we
can
call
people
into
help
with
and
those
are
all
those
are
all
in
place.
With
the
coordinator
over
the
courthouse,
Adrienne
Haley,
she
pretty
much
had
those
in
place
already,
but
we've
kind
of
joined
forces
and
together
we
have
a
running
list
of
people.
We
can
call
for
help
for
that.
L
The
next
thing
is
that
we
devised
an
exit
plan
to
include
people
with
disabilities.
If
they're
in
the
courthouse,
how
do
we
get
them
out?
How
do
we
know
that
they're
there?
That
kind
of
thing
we
have
that
exit
plan
that
has
been
approved
from
the
attorney
general's
office
and
we've
also
decided
what
kind
of
equipment
evacuation
equipment
we
were
going
to
purchase
to
put
into
the
courthouse
and
installed
right
now,
there's
a
little
bit
of
a
miscommunication
and
he
thought
I
had
bought
him.
L
I
thought
he
had
to
prove
this
so
this
week
we're
going
to
get
on
that
and
get
everything
ordered
and
get
it
in
and
get
it
installed
into
the
courthouse
and
get
the
training
done
for
the
staff
and
so
that
they
know
how
to
use
the
evacuation
equipment.
Should
somebody
with
a
mobility
disability
be
in
the
courthouse
during
an
evacuation.
Okay,
we
devised
a
plan
as
far
as
if
somebody
is
in
a
court
proceeding
who
needs
to
use
accessible
restrooms.
How
do
we
get
them
there?
L
You
know
how
do
we
let
somebody
know
that
they
need
to
have
those
have
a
accommodation
that
kind
of
thing
again:
it's
gonna,
be
some
training.
That's
gonna
be
involved
in
that
as
far
as
whether
the
bailiffs,
if
there
are
bailiffs
you
know,
some
of
the
courtrooms
do
not
have
bailiffs,
but
we've
got
that
in
place
and
it
was
approved
by
the
attorney
general's
office.
L
Okay,
Brian.
Thank
you
very
much
for
you
and
your
staff
for
helping
me.
We
had
this
just
last
couple
of
weeks
when
you
finally
got
the
signage
in
for
all
the
restrooms
in
the
courthouse,
and
the
problem
was
with
it.
There's
15
16
bathrooms
in
the
courthouse
now,
some
of
them,
you
don't
know
where
they
are
because
they're
in
judges,
they
just
change
chambers
and
kind
of
thing,
but
the
only
ones
that
are
actually
accessible
over
the
106,
the
106
C.
L
On
the
first
floor,
so
we
had
to
go
and
replace
all
the
signage
on
every
bathroom,
so
that
had
Braille
next
to
and
then
also
put
routing
silence
and
an
informational
sign
saying
where
those
accessible
restrooms
are
located.
Should
somebody
be
in
the
courthouse
and
they
stumble
upon
these
restrooms
that
are
so
not
compliant.
They
know
where
to
go
to
find
a
compliant
one
and
Brian,
and
his
staff
had
to
help
me
particularly
bill.
L
Okay,
we
finally
got
done
with
our
brochures
been
printed.
I
should've
grabbed
some
actual
final
copies
to
bring
out
today,
but
we
we
do
have
it.
It
looks
nice.
It
was
approved
by
the
Attorney
General,
so
that's
taken
care
of.
We
got
to
put
some
into
the
courthouse
and
gonna
hang
some
hangers
on
the
wall.
So
when
people
come
in,
if
they
need
to
figure
out,
you
know
where
and
how
to
get
accommodations.
That
kind
of
thing
it's
all
in
that
brochure.
Okay,
the
circuit
clerk's
office.
Okay,
there
was
a
door
that
was
non-compliant.
L
It
was
not
wide
enough.
It
was
one
of
the
double
swinging
doors
that
was
replaced
by
Brian
and
his
staff
I
believe
it
was
the
end
of
December,
beginning
January
that
was
taken
care
of
and
as
far
as
the
floor
space
was
concerned,
there
was
just
some
things
within
the
floor
space
where
the
counter
is
for
people
with
disabilities
to
access.
It
was
just
a
matter
of
kind
of
moving
some
things
around
them
there.
So
that's
taken
care
of
baselet
toilet
rooms.
We
kind
of
overlook
the
signage
there.
L
We
just
need
to
order
a
couple
signs,
because
we
have
the
signage
on
the
other
floors
stating
where
the
accessible
restrooms
are.
We
did
order
signage
for
the
to
replace
the
current
signage,
but
we
did
not
have
the
sign
it
saying
we're
those
restrooms
that
are
accessible
or
located.
That's
a
matter
of
just
ordered
a
couple
signs
and
get
them
put
up.
L
L
Of
course,
the
parking
lot
Brian
took
care
of
that
a
long
time
ago,
with
back
in
October
I,
believe
it,
the
parking
lots
were
restriped
in
accessible
parking
was
a
sign
and
the
proper
signage
was
hung.
The
proper
height,
the
two
big
things
that
we
have
are
the
ADA,
a
compliant
rap
that
needs
to
go
in.
We
were
planning
on
running
it
from
the
rear
of
the
courthouse
up
the
side
of
the
east
side
of
the
courthouse
to
the
front.
Okay,
we
need
new
plans
that
we
need
a
new
estimate
for
that.
L
C
L
And
estimates
and
they're
supposed
to
be
done
by
September
of
this
year,
which
is
you
know
for
large
projects?
That's
not
much
time.
So
that
being
said,
what
I
would
like
to
see
done
is
I'd
like
to
try
to
form
a
subcommittee
as
far
as
with
these
a
DA
to
make
you
know
if
the
main
two
projects,
then
there
are
very,
very
many
more
issues
that
are
in
from
the
state's
attorneys
or
the
attorney
general's
office.
L
That
says
said
we
need
to
think
things
need
to
get
fixed,
but
once
this
courtroom
is
put
in
and
everything's
accessible
and
once
the
ramp
is,
in
those
other
things,
I'll
be
taking
care
of
a
go
away.
Those
are
the
two
main
things
just
like
the
bathrooms.
We
had
I,
don't
know
34
38
action
items
on
bathrooms,
once
the
totally
accessible
restrooms
were
put
in
and
the
signage
was
up.
Those
went
away,
there'll
be
kind
of
same
thing
with
the
ramp
and
as
well
with
the
accessible
courtroom.
A
G
You
thank
you,
mr.
chairman,
just
to
kind
of
wrap
up
by
the
way
great
job
appreciate
all
you're
doing
on
this.
It's
it's
it's
very
meticulous.
We
have
to
document
everything
we're
doing
you
know
the
photos
like
of
the
signs
have
to
be
sent
to
the
attorney
general's
office,
so
they
see
like
with
a
tape
measure
showing
you
know
exactly
where
stuff
is
so
they
don't
have
to
come
here
and
inspect
all
this
stuff.
The
other
thing
is
is
by
the
end,
by
this
next
building
and
grounds
meeting.
G
G
You
know
the
Attorney
General's
office
seems
seem
to
think
that
the
ramp
was
going
to
be
the
most
costly
part
of
this,
which
kind
of
shocked
me
that
we
will
always
thought
the
courtroom
would
be
the
most
costly
part
of
this
and
I
think
that
people
that
were
here,
we
were
kind
of
told
that
on
the
board
at
that
time,
that
it
was
going
to
be
in
the
millions
we
might
be
able
to
just
you
know.
I
might
don't
hold
me
to
this,
but
it
we
might
be
able
to
do
this
for
under
a
million.
G
But
that's
still
a
million
bucks.
We
don't
have
okay,
so
I'm
working
on
that
part
of
it,
and
there
are
some
things
that
may
allow
us
to
be
able
to
do
that.
But
I
don't
have
that
definitive.
Yet
so
I
think
a
subcommittee
will
help
keep
us
focused
on
that,
but
we
will
need
to
identify
an
architect
which
there
are
people
that
specialize
in
this
stuff.
As
I
told
everybody
before
be
prepared.
This
ramp
is
not
going
to
be
something
that
is
going
to
be
just
the
most
beautiful
ramp.
G
You've
ever
seen,
it's
gonna
be
what
we
can
afford
and
then,
when
we
do
have
money
we
can
always
rebuild
and
do
another
something
more
permanent
that
will
last
as
long
as
we
can
have
that
courthouse.
So
I
want
to
prepare
the
public
for
that
and
everybody
else,
because
it
is
a
historic
structure.
We
can't
mess
with
the
structure,
but
outside
of
that
structure
is
we're.
Gonna
have
to
make
do
the
inside
will
do
it
right?
G
The
good
thing
is:
is
that
these
these
date,
certain
things
I've
been
assured
and
and
by
the
state's
attorney
or
by
the
Attorney
General,
who
met
with
me
in
the
state's
attorney?
Their
representatives
have
said
once
this
is
done,
you
guys
have
complied
with
what
we
need
to
have
you
do
as
long
as
you
have
a
transition
plan
to
address
everything
else.
That
makes
sense
so,
basically
we're
not
out
of
the
woods
both
the
lawsuit
will.
Probably
we
are
told
this.
This
will
conclude
the
action
by
the
attorney
general's
office.