UPDATE: The committee will meet at 2:30 Wednesday at City Hall for further discussion of the issue.
By Tre Lyerly
By Tre Lyerly
University of Kentucky School of Journalism and Media
Versailles wants Midway to pay 73.7 percent more for police services
next year.
Versailles Mayor Brian Traugott and Police Chief James
Fugate proposed a revision of the cities’ police contract to the Midway City
Council’s Public Works and Services Committee at a meeting Thursday. If
approved, the new contract would bring Midway’s $100,000 payment up by another
$73,674.
The number came as a surprise to the committee, who expected
the revised costs to be in the $150,000 range. Council Member Bruce Southworth,
chair of the committee, called the proposal “a hard sell,” saying that he liked
the idea of paying $150,000 “a lot better.”
Council Member John McDaniel listened as committee chair Bruce Southworth, center, talked with Versailles Mayor Brian Traugott. |
Traugott told the committee that Midway could not form an
independent police force for less than their presented cost, and that relying
on the state police “would be a big disappointment” due to the possibility of
increased response times.
Southworth agreed, but still felt that the proposed cost
would be “a lot for Midway.” He and City Clerk Phyllis Hudson said the city
should receive improved service from the police department in return for the
higher costs.
“I can’t promise you they’ll be 73 percent better,” Traugott
said.
Hudson said after the Versailles officials left, “I could
see it if it was a gradual increase per year.” The new contract would go into effect July 1, 2018. It could be for four years or longer.
Versailles’ police budget for the 2017-18 fiscal year is
$3.86 million, not including state incentives for salaries. Traugott multiplied
this by 4.5 percent to get the $173,674 figure presented to the committee.
Traugott didn’t say why he used that percentage, calling it
“semi-arbitrary,” but noted that it was more favorable to Midway than using the
city’s share of Woodford County’s population, 7 percent, which would be
“overkill;” or 9.5 percent, the share of service calls made to the Midway area
between Jan. 1 and Aug. 30.
Later in the
meeting, Southworth noted that County Judge-Executive John “Bear” Coyle wanted
to require Midway to pay a lot more in the three-way deal among the
governments, to help reduce the county’s costs.
“It’s a heck of a lot better than $400,000 … four and a half percent is not bad,” he said.
The other
committee member present, Council Member John McDaniel, said, “It’s going to be
hard to sell that amount of money, but proportionally . . .” He didn’t finish
the thought, but said he thought the percentage would be a bit higher. McDaniel
is a former Midway and Versailles police officer.
Beyond the
financial part of the contract, the committee considered a renegotiation of the
shifts officers would work while providing service to Midway, a possibility
Traugott and Fugate were open to.
The current
contract calls for the police department to provide “daily,
around-the-clock” service to Midway, which it currently fulfills by using two
eight-hour shifts and having officers on call for the remaining eight hours.
Council Member
Kaye Nita Gallagher, who also serves on the committee, didn’t arrive in time for the committee’s discussions with Traugott
and Fugate, but supported the revision of the shift terms if it would result in
more comprehensive service for the city.
A view of the lot from above its side fence on Cross Street |
The owner of the
lot, Emmajo Pulley Gray, applied for an encroachment permit to allow access to
and from Cross Street, but only after the work was completed and she
got a letter from the city attorney asking her to.
Gray has not
appeared before the council to explain the rationale for the work, but her
neighbor Charles Logan speculated at the previous meeting that
installation of blacktop on the lot could result in damage to his property from
water runoff.
Council Member
Steve Simoff, who was present at Thursday’s meeting but does not serve on the committee,
passed along heard additional concerns from Gray’s neighbors, and expressed a
need on the council’s part to identify what her plans for the lot were before
taking further action.
“Are [they] going
to have a business operating out of there, or is it just going to be a place
for storage?” Simoff asked.
The committee
agreed to recommend that the council deny Gray’s encroachment request.
Lights on North Gratz: Southworth and McDaniel briefly discussed the
committee’s plans to contact Kentucky Utilities about the cost of installing
new streetlights on North Gratz Street.
The lights would
be placed to help navigation to and from Walter Bradley Park, which saw a host of improvements last year, as well as the businesses in the area,
including the new Brown Barrel restaurant and Darlin Jean’s Apple Cobbler CafĂ©.
Southworth asked
Deputy Clark Sonya Conner to check with Kentucky Utilities about the cost of
lights.
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