Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

New jail to cost $245 million

Spokane County’s proposed new jail complex will cost $245 million and $8 million more a year to operate than the jail costs now, potentially requiring two new taxes to foot those bills, according to project estimates.

A report from Integrus Architecture detailing those costs was given to county leaders earlier this month. Officials discussed the new projections at a meeting Wednesday morning and asked if a sales tax – on top of a property tax increase – would be needed to pay the operational costs.

“It will do us no good to build a facility we can’t afford to operate,” said county Commissioner Todd Mielke.

Sheriff Ozzie Knezovich said that given the new numbers, he hopes a vote on a new jail system will be delayed. Commissioners have until Aug. 12 to decide whether the jail will go on the November ballot.

“I do not think that I have enough time between now and November to educate the public on what these costs are, why these costs are the way they are and the philosophies behind the costs,” Knezovich said.

Initially, county officials estimated it would cost about $100 million to build a new complex.

Just last month, the Kootenai County Commission learned the jail it hopes to build will cost $147 million. At Wednesday’s meeting, Knezovich asked whether officials should explore a partnership with Kootenai County. He and others, however, agreed that differences in state law and other factors would make a single jail campus for Spokane and Kootenai counties difficult.

Spokane County officials had wanted to ask voters for a new property tax in November in hopes that the expansion could be ready by 2013, when the lease expires on the county’s low-security lockup, Geiger Corrections Center. Jail, court and other officials have been meeting for three years in hopes of overhauling the county’s justice system.

Plans call for the current jail to be remodeled and maintained for high-security inmates. Inmates deemed less dangerous would be housed in a new tower adjacent to the jail. It would replace Geiger, a former World War II-era Army barracks on Spokane International Airport property.

The project also would create a “community corrections center,” emphasizing job and parenting training and alcohol and drug counseling. Officials say the center is the key to reducing recidivism.

“What people need to know is we’re not just building a new jail, but we’re building a new criminal justice system,” said county Commissioner Bonnie Mager. “We’re not just looking to warehouse people.”

Knezovich said he will explore different designs and other options that could trim costs.

Officials said they are hesitant to put a sales tax on the ballot on top of a property tax. County CEO Marshall Farnell said to create enough revenue to make up for the operational shortfall, the county would need a two-tenths of 1 percent tax – 2 cents on a $10 purchase. That’s twice the amount authorized by voters in May for new emergency communications equipment – an increase that voters turned down the first time it was on the ballot.

“Times are hard, and I just don’t think that the voters are going to want to go there,” Mager said. “We’re going to be beating the bushes looking for other income.”

Commissioner Mark Richard said he’s hopeful the county could get state or federal funding to defray the operational costs.

He added he’s open to hearing scaled-back options for the project, but he’s hesitant to approve a “piecemeal approach.”

“It’s not the long-term solution that we’re after,” Richard said.

Richard said the county shouldn’t delay a jail vote longer than a year, given current overcrowding and the likelihood that airport officials will remain reluctant to renew Geiger’s lease past 2013.

“I don’t see how we could wait more than a year, and even that is pushing it,” Richard said.