Supervisors no longer interested in converting old STC middle school into jail
In stark contrast to last week’s meeting, only about seven people showed up for Monday’s Tama County Supervisors Meeting. Although the popular subject of public health was touched on briefly by one citizen during public comments, the supervisors had other items on their agenda to deal with this week.
One of the more interesting topics from the meeting was once again the old South Tama County Middle School. The supervisors have been exploring the idea that the county would acquire the building and repurpose it as the county jail. After an allotment of supervisors toured both the middle school and the Marshall County Jail, they used this time to discuss their thoughts going forward. A few different ideas were thrown out, including building onto the existing jail, building new, or if a new jail is even necessary.
“What do our numbers look like? Numbers for the jail are trending downwards. Do we need a new jail? The jail we have right now is only thirty years old; that’s not that old for a jail. We needed more space because we were sending so many people out of county and paying a lot of money for that,” Board of Supervisors Chairman Mark Doland said. “Do the numbers right now justify even looking into building a new jail? I don’t think that they do. We need to probably look at the trend lines over the next couple of years and find out. What do those numbers look like? Why are they going down? And those kinds of things.”
At the end of the discussion, the only thing that was agreed on by all supervisors was that the old STC middle school was not a cost effective step forward. Supervisor David Turner was nominated to let school district officials know that they will be passing.
Supervisor Curt Kupka stepped in for Ben Daleske, the former Tama County Engineer, and read this week’s report, which stated that they’ve been doing brush cutting. They’ve been stockpiling road rock at Traer and Chelsea, and they will look at stockpiling in Gladbrook when Traer fills up. As for current openings, Gladbrook has a motor grader position open, two truck driver positions, and one excavator position open.
Nicholas Amelon, the engineer for Iowa County, was approved to be the shared engineer with Tama County for the next six months.
The policy for secondary roads concerning GPS location was approved. The supervisors approved the release of a forgivable mortgage. Claims totaling $171,919.04 were approved.





