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FREEHOLDERS TO APPROPRIATE $23 MILLION FOR COUNTY JAIL EXPANSION
 | | --Photo By Keith Hagarty The Board of Freeholders are discussing plans to appropriate $23 million for expansion plans to the Ocean County Justice Complex. |
| TOMS RIVER - Plans to expand the Ocean County Jail are moving ahead as the Board of Freeholders plans to appropriate $23 million toward the project.
"This funding ordinance will be used to cover the cost of purchasing and installing prefabricated inmate housing units," said Freeholder Director John P. Kelly, who serves as director of law and public safety. "The housing units are a big part of the planned expansion of the jail."
By pre-ordering the units, Kelly said the county will have them available when they need to be installed and will also save money for ordering them early. The board introduced the spending measure during its November 7 meeting and a public hearing will be held on the ordinance held at their November 20 meeting.
The expansion and renovation plans for the jail calls for 157,000 square feet of additions and alterations at the Ocean County Justice Complex located on Hooper Avenue.
"This expansion has been discussed and studied for more than two years," Kelly said. "It's really a matter of maintaining public safety that we are undertaking this project."
The county plans to add space for an additional 400 beds, which would increase the jail capacity to 680 beds.
"We will not have sentences shortened because we don't have the room to house inmates," Kelly said. "This is a practice that may happen elsewhere but not in Ocean County."
The proposed expansion would include the construction of new space at the rear of the justice complex and a two story addition on the south side of the existing building. The Ocean County Jail currently is located on the fourth and fifth floors of the complex.
According to a needs assessment study completed in 2005, since 1985, when the board opened the jail atop the complex, the county's population has increased by almost 200,000 people. Since that time period, new mandatory sentencing laws have gone into effect resulting in longer jail terms. In addition, municipalities have employed more police officers resulting in an increase in patrols and arrests.
The combination of both increasing admissions at the Ocean County Jail and increased average length of stay has created a higher average daily population at the jail according to the study done by Carter Goble Associates, Inc. The current average population at the facility routinely exceeds more than 500 inmates while the jail was built to hold 280.
"An expansion of the facility is needed
to meet the current and future needs of the
Ocean County Jail population," Kelly said. "Because of the growing numbers, we cannot
separate inmates, which creates security and safety problems in particular for our corrections officers."
"The expansion will address all those concerns and will result in a safer facility for our officers and the public at large," Kelly said.
The expansion is designed to meet the needs of the county's inmate housing requirements until 2025 and all inmate areas would continue to be within a maximum-security perimeter.
With the alterations, support functions that already exist, including intake areas, laundry facilities and the medical unit, will be improved.
Last year, the county awarded a contract to Fletcher Thompson Architecture Engineering, LLC of East Brunswick, to proceed with the design and permit approval phase of the project.
The design and permit approval phase is expected to take about 12 months to complete, while the actual construction will take about 30 months. The entire project, including the bidding and award of the work, is expected to take about 45 months to complete.
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