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1-20-14 Large, Expensive Courthouse for Oconee County -Considerations

Does Oconee County need a new $ 25 Million Courthouse?

AVOC

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January 20, 2014 - By Wendell Dawson, AVOC, Inc

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Does Oconee County need a new $ 25 Million Courthouse?

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The Oconee County Courthouse has been on this site since Oconee County was created in 1875 and

before that was the courthouse site for Clarke County which included Oconee County.

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1.The present courthouse was extensively renovated with a ribbon cutting in November 1998;

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Longtime officials posed for this picture when the renovated courthouse was reopened and dedicated in November 1998.

L-R, Wendell Dawson, BOC Chair; Judge James Barrow, Clerk of Court, Sandra Glass, Probate Judge Reba Hammond, Sheriff Charles Holcomb, and jailer, Willie Mae Carson.

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2.The present courthouse includes a suite for a Superior Court Judge behind the courtrooms on the third floor;

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3.The Courthouse Renovation in the late nineties had considerable input from the Sheriff and Chief Judge Joseph Gaines;

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4.Many citizens do not want the courthouse moved from downtown Watkinsville, the County Seat;

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ISSUES RAISED:

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            A.Security Concerns;  

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            - The renovation of the late 90’s left the Old Jail and cells for entrance and holding inmates transported to the courthouse;

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            - The renovation of the late 90’s had a dedicated elevator in the rear of the courthouse for transport of inmates and secure passages were built around the courtrooms for movement of inmates to court;

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            B.Parking and Access:

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-          A more long-term solution for parking is a parking deck in the courthouse parking lot;

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-          Acquire the adjacent 8-10 acres for sale on the south side of the existing complex;

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Booth-Marable Tracts Viewed from Old Jail

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-          Water street or a new route should be upgraded to allow traffic to flow from Main St at the Traffic Light at Hardin Hill Road behind the complex to a revised intersection at Main St and GA 53;

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FOR DETAIL, SEE:Oconee County Courthouse Complex Details 10.12.08.pdf x

-          Build an Administration Building on the adjacent properties and move the non-court functions to the new Administration Building;

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-          Pending construction, some administrative functions could be moved to the houses on the adjacent property to avoid the cost of financing and debt for the Courthouse;

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C.   Downtown:

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-          Courthouses were traditionally built at the center of town;

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-          Courthouses that have moved have had a detrimental impact on local businesses and the downtown areas, see Walton-Monroe and Jackson –Jefferson;

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-          Courthouses remain in the center of town in most area counties;

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-          Courthouses have remained downtown in Athens-Clarke, Fulton County, DeKalb County, Newton County, Henry County, etc;

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-          Downtown can allow walking to restaurants, etc during court breaks;

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D.   PRIORITIES:

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-          Does a new courthouse rank higher in importance than increased library space, improved roads, waterlines, sewer improvements;

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-          New Structures have name plaques on the building and that is a perceived legacy of some elected officials;

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-          What impact do large, new facilities have on future Property Taxes paid by local citizens for maintenance and operation needs;

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            E.FUTURE PLANNING:

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-          Often one hears that a new facility will provide for “next fifty years” but is that really       what happens?

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            a.The current jail was built less than twenty years after the one that was torn down;   the 1980’a model had modal expansion (Pods) possibilities;

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“Old 19 Year Old Jail” Torn Down for New Jail

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            b.   The current leaders seem interested in replacing a courthouse that was extensively renovated and expanded in the late nineties, or less than 20 years ago;

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            c.    Do current officials presume to be smarter than past and future county officials – really something to think about!

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F.   POLITICS:

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-          Often times new facilities are driven by egos and politics;

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-          Who benefits from sale of land for a courthouse- are there political connections?Where?   Will it be more accessible to major traffic arteries?   State law requires the courthouse to be located in the county seat, i.e. City of Watkinsville;

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-          Do citizens really see public facilities as Memorials to current officials?

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E.   TIMING OF SPLOST VOTE:

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-          We started hearing about SPLOST 15 in the middle of 2013, a much longer period than earlier SPLOST referendum planning;

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-          Do our ‘approaching retirement” leaders really desire a personal legacy by having a General Obligation bond be part of the vote to allow them to build the courthouse before leaving office?

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F.   PLANNING:

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-          How much behind the scenes planning and politics have preceded this perceived rush for a new Courthouse?

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-          Do we want the same leaders planning the courthouse that located a $1-2 Million Farmington Fire Station on a single lane country road out of sight of taxpayers and hard to access?

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9-27-13 Farmington, GA, has new Landmark- a ‘State of the Art’ Fire Station

       http://www.avoc.info/info/article.php?article=4265

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Old Farmington Road Looking North –Fire Station on Left

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G.   SPLOST PROJECTS:

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-    Many county roads remain subpar for the population, and age in which we live:   a number need long-range planning and improvement: i. e.; Colham Ferry Rd is narrow and substandard; Hog Mountain Rd from Butler’s Crossing to US 441 is narrow and substandard; Hodges Mill Rd was built for farm-rural traffic of the 50’s; and there are many others throughout the county;

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-          It is hard to make mistakes on road and infrastructure improvements so they may last longer than our “so-called 50 year projects”;

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-          SPLOST was created by the Legislature in the 80’s to help local governments provide for infrastructure and capital project needs but seems to many to have become a SLUSH FUND for local officials with large egos and lack of vision;

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-     Oconee County has considerable needs that rank higher in priority than a $ 25 Million Courthouse; i.e.Roads, Bridges, Water lines in areas needing more fire plugs and protection; expansion of sewer capacity;


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