Jail's in, farms are out in 2011 capital plan

Amid budget talks, the Dutchess County Legislature has also been working to finalize the 2011 Capital Improvement Program, which outlines priorities and recommends projects to be undertaken in the coming year. Once the program is adopted, the Legislature then considers each project throughout the year to determine cost and scheduling. Inclusion in the plan does not guarantee projects will advance or if funding will be made available.

For the second year in a row no money has been allocated for open space and farmland protection. A 2008 bond allows payments for existing open space and farmland preservation projects to proceed, but the county is not currently accepting new applications. This is noteworthy to district residents because of the 20 Dutchess County conservation easements covered by the 2008 bond, 13 of them reside within our borders (seven alone in Amenia).

Of the capital expenditures slated for 2011, 55 percent will go toward bridges and roadwork, 13.6 percent for vehicle purchases, 11.5 percent toward public buildings, with the remainder split among aviation, parks, planning, security and information resources, Dutchess Community College and the Water and Wastewater Authority.

Highlights include a new taxiway extension and LED-lighting at the airport, as well as a new corporate hangar in 2012 that may benefit locally-owned Millbrook Aviation. Numerous county buildings are scheduled for energy-efficiency improvements as well as several roof replacements; a new medical examiner’s office is again on the radar; and repair work at Bowdoin and Wilcox parks will proceed alongside Dutchess County Rail Trail Stage IV. Phase II of the Eastern Government Center in Millbrook is also scheduled.

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The only amendment considered (and passed) was to finance a jail expansion study. This is significant. The county has long since outgrown space at the jail, and it’s been 15 years since the last expansion. Efforts during the last decade to expand the jail were ill-fated when politics and party made the subject taboo. The result has been a burdensome cost to house out inmates.

Sheriff Butch Anderson wrote in his 2009 annual report that the county had spent more than $12 million in 2006-09 in housing out inmates to out-of-county jails. This same report calculated that correction vehicles transporting inmates to out-of-county jails have “traveled the equivalent of more than nine times the circumference of the earth and enough miles to reach the moon.â€

Service calls to the sheriff have risen 25.25 percent in the past four years. Robberies are up 12.65 percent from 2008 to 2009, while murders went from five to four and rapes from 45 to 34. Down also in 2009 from 2008 is aggravated assault (1.18 percent), property crimes (11.28 percent), burglaries (12.7 percent), larcenies (10.3 percent) and motor vehicle theft (23.2 percent).

While 2010 data is not yet available, the inmate population has risen substantially in 2010 such that the number of inmate days in out-of-county jails for 2010 is estimated to be at 44,200, up considerably from 2009’s record high of 34,613.

The Legislature’s proposed jail expansion study is a welcomed policy change. Now if only we can also reignite interest in farmland protection.

Michael Kelsey represents Amenia, Washington, Stanford, Pleasant Valley and Millbrook in the Dutchess County Legislature. Write him at KelseyESQ@yahoo.com.

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