Officials get
first
look at new jail
Published
Wednesday, May 7
By Brant Sappington
Staff Writer
Local officials
got their first chance to review plans for the county's new regional
jail and justice center on Tuesday as the process of refining and
finalizing the design of the complex got underway.
Irb Benjamin with MCM Jail Development, Management and Consulting,
spent much of Tuesday morning going over the design for each segment
of the complex with the Alcorn County Board of Supervisors and the
heads of each department to be housed there.
The department heads were given the opportunity to help refine the
layout and design of their segments of the multi-million dollar complex
set to be constructed on Harper Road near the Alcorn County Juvenile
Detention Center.
The plans, created by The LeBlanc Group of Lafayette, La, call for
a multi-jurisdictional facility that will house state and local inmates
in separate areas, along with offices for the Alcorn County Sheriff's
Department, Corinth Police Department, Corinth-Alcorn County E-911,
Alcorn County Emergency Management, Alcorn County Justice Court, Corinth
Municipal Court and others.
The state wing of the complex will serve as a Mississippi Department
of Corrections Regional Jail and funds from an agreement between the
county and MDOC for the housing of state inmates will be used to finance
a large portion of the construction project. Additional funding comes
from money received from the sale of a formerly county-owned nursing
home and an agreement between the county and the city of Corinth to
lease space for use by the police department and housing of city inmates.
A major issue addressed during Tuesday's design review was dealing
with the large amount of vehicle traffic and visitors who will be
coming to the complex. Because of the large variety of offices housed
at the facility it is expected to be an extremely busy location and
properly controlling traffic will be vital.
"Dealing with all of the traffic is the big issue," said
Benjamin.
Among the ideas being considered are the creation of a separate, direct
public entrance for the E-911 office in order to accommodate the large
number of people who visit the office each day to make address changes.
There was also discussion of ways to deal with the large number of
people paying fines in Justice Court or attending Justice Court sessions.
Sheriff Charles Rinehart, who will be responsible for operating the
jail, and Corinth Police Chief David Lancaster, also spent an extended
amount of time with Benjamin discussing ways to make the most efficient
use of the space available for their departments.
Rinehart and Lancaster both asked for a redesign of the county jail
space to provide more beds for female prisoners. Lancaster said the
female inmate population in the city and county continues to grow,
primarily because of drug crimes and property crimes such as passing
false checks.
Benjamin said he will take all of the changes discussed Tuesday back
to the LeBlanc Group and he expects to be able to present a draft
of the plans incorporating these changes in approximately three weeks.
The consultant told supervisors he believes it will take two or three
more review sessions before a design can be finalized and they hope
to be able to advertise for bids and award a construction contract
by mid to late September.
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