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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2010-03-25 Commissioner MinutesTHURSDAY, MARCH 25, 2010 The Franklin County Commissioners met Thursday, March 25, 2010, with the following members present: David S. Keller, Robert L. Thomas and Robert G. Ziobrowski. Chairman Keller presided and after calling the meeting to order, and the Pledge of Allegiance proceeded with the business of the day. On a motion by Robert L. Thomas, seconded by Robert G. Ziobrowski; unanimously approved to adopt the agenda. On a motion by Robert L. Thomas, seconded by Robert G. Ziobrowski; unanimously approved all bills presented and ordered paid. On a motion by Robert L. Thomas, seconded by Robert G. Ziobrowski; unanimously approved the minutes of March 16, 2010 and March 18, 2010 meetings. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski, seconded by David S. Keller; approved the Election Board minutes of March 18, 2010 meeting. Commissioner Thomas abstained from voting. John Hart, Chief Clerk/County Administrator informed the Board of the following items: 10:00 meeting today for public comment on the facility project being held at Administration Annex. The Board reviewed Children & Youth matters. On a motion by Robert L. Thomas, seconded by Robert G. Ziobrowski; unanimously approved the Updated Contract listing for Fiscal year 2009/2010. The Board reviewed Controller matters. On a motion by Robert L. Thomas, seconded by Robert G. Ziobrowski; unanimously approved the Contract between the County of Franklin and William F. Kaminski to provide contracted attorney services for the Controllers Office at a cost of $11,405.00 for the period of January 1, 2010 through December 31, 2010. The Board reviewed Grants Management matters. On a motion by Robert L. Thomas, seconded by Robert G. Ziobrowski; unanimously approved the Subgrant Award Notice (2009-AJ-04-20718) from Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency for the Pre-Trial Services Staff Retention Project for a grant amount of $198,871.00 for the period of October 1, 2010 through September 30, 2012. The Board reviewed additional Grants Management matters. On a motion by Robert L. Thomas, seconded by Robert G. Ziobrowski; unanimously approved the Grant Application to Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency to be used for Drug and Alcohol Treatment and Management for sentenced restrictive intermediate punishment offenders for a grant amount of $220,422.00 with an additional amount of $18,152.00 that will need to be secured by Adult Probation for the period of July 1, 2010 -June 30, 2011. The Board reviewed Mental Health matters. On a motion by Robert L. Thomas, seconded by Robert G. Ziobrowski; unanimously approved the Housing and Urban Development Annual Progress Report (APR) for the Supportive Housing Program Homeless Assistance Project 2 for the period of January 1, 2009 through December 31, 2009. Continued on page 2 The Board reviewed additional Mental Health matters. On a motion by Robert L. Thomas, seconded by Robert G. Ziobrowski; unanimously approved the Housing and Urban Development Annual Progress Report (APR) for the Shelter Plus Care Program for the period of July 18, 2008 through July 17, 2009. In accordance with PA Acts 67, 68 and 127 notifications, William A. Brindle Associates, Inc. notified the County of a Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection General NPDES Permit being applied by Franklin County Housing Authority for the construction of two new multi-family residential structures next to the existing Mount Vernon Housing Complex located in the Borough of Waynesboro. In accordance with PA Acts 67, 68 and 127 notifications, William A. Brindle Associates, Inc. notified the County of a Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection General NPDES Permit being applied by Keystone Health for the construction of a new Medical Center located in the Borough of Chambersburg. In accordance with PA Acts 67, 68 and 127 notifications, R. Lee Royer and Associates notified the County of a Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection General NPDES Permit being applied by Daniel and Cathy Twigg for a residential subdivision on property located in Montgomery Township. In accordance with PA Acts 67, 68 and 127 notifications, Mountain View Reclamation notified the County of a Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection General Title V Air Operating Permit Renewal being applied for the Waste Management Division Services of Pennsylvania, Inc. In accordance with PA Act 14 notification, West End Fire & Rescue Co., No. 3 notified the County of a Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection Water Obstruction and Encroachment Permit to install a dry hydrant on property located in Southampton Township. The Board reviewed Transportation matters. On a motion by Robert L. Thomas, seconded by Robert G. Ziobrowski; unanimously approved the recommendation of the Transportation Director to award the bid for the Franklin County Transportation Premium Services to all three vendors who placed a bid, Manito, Inc., Mont Alto Fire Company and South Mountain Volunteer Fire Department. Each vendor offers different services that can be used and Medical Assistance Transportation Program (MATP) fully reimburses the County for these trips. The Board reviewed Assessment matters. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski, seconded by David S. Keller; unanimously approved that the premises of Franklin County Tax Parcel #OJ14-118 of Rodney M. & Cora Lee Leab of having the assessment of $31,030.00 shall have the lawful assessment of $27,710.00 for the tax year 2010 and all future tax years. Commissioner Thomas abstained from voting. The Board reviewed Assessment matters. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski, seconded by David S. Keller; approved to deny the assessment appeal of Franklin County Tax Parcel #OK08B-041 of Margaret Park Kilpatrick. Commissioner Thomas abstained from voting. Continued on page 3 The Board reviewed Assessment matters. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski, seconded by David S. Keller; approved that the premises of Franklin County Tax Parcel #OQ07-393 of Oliver Homes Inc. of having the assessment of $31,970.00 shall have the lawful assessment of $29,600.00 for the tax year 2010 and all future tax years. Commissioner Thomas abstained from voting. The Board reviewed Assessment matters. On a motion by Robert G. Ziobrowski, seconded by David S. Keller; approved that the premises of Franklin County Tax Parcel #5C32-083A of Ronald B. & Mary B. Martin of having the assessment of $110,320.00 shall have the lawful assessment of $88,870.00 for the tax year 2010 and all future tax years. Commissioner Thomas abstained from voting. The Board recessed at 9:45 a.m. and will reconvene at 10:00 a.m. at the Administration Annex for the Facilities Public Comment meeting. The Board reconvened at 10:00 a.m. Chairman Keller announced that it was in the best interest of the county and its residents to have an open forum to obtain public comment on potential county building plans. He said no decision has been made on site selection for the judicial center, and that all comments and opinions expressed at the meeting would be forwarded to Carter Goble Lee (CGL), the county' facility consultant, who would be directed to respond back to the commissioners. Commissioner Keller noted that CGL had made recommendations in their 2009 report to the county, and that the facilities subcommittee of the Criminal Justice Advisory Board (CJAB) had made a different recommendation as to site for the judicial center. Commissioner Keller asked that the meeting commence with any other alternative proposals for the judicial center and siting of other county operations. He asked that presentations be limited to 15 minutes or less. Mr. Bernie Washabaugh II of Second State Enterprises introduced himself and gave a presentation to the board and the audience of approximately 50 people. Mr. Washabaugh expressed his opinion that the judicial center and county administration should be in downtown Chambersburg. He said he had studied CGL's report on county needs and it provided the basis for his proposal. He said he had considered security, quicker occupancy, consolidation of operations, parking, image, sustainability and cost savings in addressing the county needs for the next 20 years. He suggested an addition to the present Courthouse Annex for the judicial center. The addition would be to the east of the existing Courthouse Annex and would meet all the identified needs of the county now and in the next 20 years. He said the county savings would be 10 - 15 million dollars due to using existing county property and eliminating the need to purchase more property. He said security for the building would be provided by banning parking on Lincoln Way East adjacent to the judicial center and putting concrete planters on the sidewalk. Secure parking would be behind the judicial center in a fenced lot with keycard access. Mr. Washabaugh then presented the second component of his proposal. He proposes that a building be constructed on land he owns along Lincoln Way West between Spring Street and the Conococheague Creek. He said his site, combined with land the Borough of Chambersburg owns for Fort Chambers Park totals 4.5 acres. He said the essential elements of the site are the building, paving for parking, and green space, all of which can be met using the site he owns Continued on page 4 Mr. Washabaugh explained that the building would be on the site he owns. It would have parking on the lowest two levels. It would rise several stories to accommodate whatever space the county would need. His plan includes as much as 134,000 square feet in a new building, and could accommodate all county administration functions plus other operations, such as human services, that are presently located outside downtown at buildings owned or leased by the county. He showed a chart with pie graphs indicating how much space the county owns and leases. He said parking in addition to the building would be provided using the Rosedale parking area owned by the Borough, the "shoppers lot" owned by the Borough behind Olympia Candy Kitchen, another lot on Loudon Street owned by the Borough, spaces on Lincoln Way West owned by Central Presbyterian Church, and up to 80 spaces across the Conococheague Creek on land owned by the Kalathas family. He said there were a total of 460 spaces identified, and said the Borough of Chambersburg is working with him to allow the county exclusive use during business hours of much of the identified Borough parking. Mr. Washabaugh reiterated his claim of 10-15 million dollars in savings for the county. He said the county would gain efficiencies by using new office space that could accommodate modern technology. He said adding on to the existing Courthouse Annex would be cheaper than building on a new site, and construction of both a judicial center and an administrative building on his site could begin much more quickly than any of the plans previously presented because the Borough of Chambersburg has already given his Spring Street plan the appropriate approvals. Mr. Washabaugh requested time to work with the Commissioners and consultants to analyze the details and develop a more defined plan with timelines and cost estimates. Mr. Sid Palmer provided public comment and wanted to know how confident Mr. Washabaugh is that there would be that much in savings. Mr. Washabaugh responded that he's pretty confident. Real savings would occur because it would not be necessary to purchase properties or to raze buildings. The biggest advantage is quick occupancy. Mr. Washabaugh said right now is a good time to do construction projects due to low construction costs. Commissioner Robert Ziobrowski asked Mr. Washabaugh if he is proposing to sell the land to the county, build a building and sell it to the county, or build a building and lease it to the county. Mr. Washabaugh said he was open to any of these options but would prefer to build the building and lease it to the county. Commissioner Robert Thomas asked if the potential lease costs were included in the savings. Mr. Washabaugh responded no -that these costs were not part of the savings. He would build to suit and work with County to determine needs, elements as far as technology, and build and lease to the County. Mr. Washabaugh said build to suit would be easiest, quickest, and fastest way to move forward. One option if the County wanted to own the property could be to have the county enter along-term lease with a buyout for $1.00 at the end of the lease. Mr. Palmer asked if Mr. Washabaugh's 10 - 15 million dollar reduction in costs was due to constructing less square footage that the consultants' recommendation. Mr. Washabaugh responded no but there might be some minor variations from the consultants' recommendations. Continued on page 5 Mr. Paul Cullinane provided comment and asked Mr. Washabaugh if his proposal of a 50,000 square foot addition plus continuing to use the historic courthouse could house all judicial requirements, and was it consistent with needs stated in the CGL study. Mr. Washabaugh responded that his proposal meets his interpretation of judicial needs, and meets the needs of the CGL study if certain functions presently in the courthouse, like the Register and Recorder's office, moves out of the judicial center to the new building on Spring Street he is proposing. The Courthouse Annex addition would be for court departments only. Mr. Cullinane stated back in November the partnership entities and Downtown Business Counsel submitted independent resolutions asking the Board of Commissioners to construct the court facility in the downtown area. Mr. Cullinane thanked Commissioners for making this time available for public input and noted that these entities are encouraging and hoping the Commissioners, staff and judicial committees all consider developing a project to continue economic vitality by staying downtown. He said the best projects utilize private sector interests supported by the public sector. Mr. Cullinane said he hopes in the final analysis constructing downtown will result in downtown becoming stronger because of this project. There is capacity in other buildings around the square and other properties have vacant capacity to help with this project. He hopes that CGL would take into consideration all capacity within downtown before making final decision. Mr. Frank Stearn wanted to know the status of this land during the Agnes flood of 1972. Mr. Washabaugh responded that the facility first floor is 10 feet above flood stage and his architects have addressed this through their land development plan. Mr. Jay Lightfoot asked how this proposal is cheaper with a lease. If the County owned the property they could have it paid off in 20 years whereas with a lease the county would only have to show for it a handful of receipts. Mr. Washabaugh answered there are other options such as a build to suit and a purchase at the end. Commissioner Keller asked if there were any other presentations to be made to the board. Receiving no response, he opened the floor to comments. Ms. Shirley DiMarco, who owned old Dinette City property, said she has watched things grow and go in downtown Chambersburg, and she was one to go. Ms. DiMarco said she was an advocate for downtown for years and is delighted with Bernie's proposal. When in business, she would ask people how they got to her store, and they responded that they came from the courthouse. Ms. DiMarco said people come downtown while doing business at the courthouse. When people come to the courthouse they meander in stores. Mayor Pete Lagiovane provided comment that businesses are working to revitalize downtown. He said Mr. Washabaugh's proposal would improve the north end of town and southern end of town and would be a shot in the arm for the borough. If numbers for Mr. Washabaugh's proposal are not right (and the savings are not as great as he estimates) then that is OK. The project should be viewed as benefiting our community. The Mayor thinks this is a good idea and he asked the commissioners to work with Mr. Washabaugh. Mr. Joe Cooper commented that remodeling always seems less expensive and this would revitalize a building that is preexisting and will revitalize downtown. It would bring buildings up to code. Mr. Cooper sees an increase in numbers by what the Washabaugh project can create: it would save dollars for Commissioners and create more income by raising property values for what is preexisting right now. He said it would bring some new clients into downtown and he applauded the time put into this and the Commissioners for having this meeting. He said he would be honored to have a building close to this proposed. Continued on page 6 Mr. Robert Wollyung said he had already presented to Commissioner Keller his own thoughts. His suggestion was that spending more money now would save money in the long run. He is not in favor of adding to courthouse in the back but expanding up to Second Street and it should build with steel so can the county can add additional floors for future expansion. Mr. Wollyung disagrees with locating some offices to another building. He thinks row officers should stay together in the courthouse building. Some offices on Franklin Farm Lane should be moved downtown. He would buy up to the alley behind the Courthouse Annex and add more parking. Mr. Wollyung is in favor of adding a parking garage that would be electronic with employees having a pass card. He proposed the commissioners go into an agreement with the Borough, King Street Church and downtown merchants to form an authority, so that everyone shares in the costs of a parking garage. With 200 jurors coming to the courthouse, public and employees all are in competition for parking. The Borough could enforce the parking and get the revenue for this. This concept would not interrupt court operations during construction. Separate entrances could be provided for security. Mr. Andy Grochowski mentioned he is the newest member of the community, has newer businesses downtown, and does get business from the courthouse. He said if the courthouse leaves it would make a huge gap for many of the downtown businesses. When locating his business he looked at who were big players in the area and decided to locate close to the courthouse. Mr. Grochowski asked the Commissioners to consider Mr. Washabaugh's plan with constructing a courthouse in center core. Mr. Grochowski stated that cost is an important factor but the county needs to have community commitment. Mr. Will Pananes agreed with so much that is said. He purchased his business in 1971, and has reached into his pocket and given to business council and DCI. He said improving downtown improves the whole community. The County needs to look at downtown. The Borough and County have made major commitments to downtown. He said we've come to a point that businesses are constantly bombarded with competition and when the community sprawls out individuals will drive elsewhere for lunch and will not walk. Moving the courthouse will take away from the center and history where it all began. People have invested their lives in downtown. Mr. Pananes asked the Board to stay close to the core. Mr. Mike Silva, owner of 14 N. Main St., said he is willing to work with the County to stay in downtown core and keep County as anchor for downtown. Mr. John Thompson questioned if CGL did an economic study with moving courthouse to Grant Street. He said it would kill the core of downtown if the courthouse moved out of downtown area. Chloe Jacobs from CGL answered no. Mr. Palmer added that as a young man he was faced with decision to go back to Chambersburg to work or stay in Philadelphia. He grew up here and wanted to come back here. Mr. Palmer never regretted this decision and he came back and opened Palmers on the square. He sent a letter to board and received the invitation to come here today. He purchased a building along the stream 55 years ago. During Agnes the stream came over bridge and within 2 inches of first floor apartments. His building did not have any damage and this would support what Mr. Washabaugh said concerning the flood plain comment. On the question of security, Mr. Palmer came back from Israel 4 days ago and security is great there. There is no building that can't be made secure whether it's a new or old building. Through proper planning any building can be made secure. Mr. Palmer said consultants give good ideas of what can be done and will give opinions that result in solutions. This consultant has done that. He noted that 40 million Continued on page 7 dollars is a lot of money. If the courthouse does not remain in the core of Chambersburg there would be a depreciation of property values, a reduction in taxes if businesses close, and a decrease traffic flow which is an important component for successful businesses. Our downtown is reasonably healthy but is not the same as it was 25 years ago. Traffic flow determines economic value of downtown. Mr. Palmer said Mr. Washabaugh did a good job on presentation. Tenants at Mr. Washabaugh's proposed new building would utilize the park and rails to trails at noon time. Mr. Palmer stated the Commissioners will have to validate costs of what was proposed and he encouraged the commissioners to study the plan along with architect, but not to let the consultants make the decision. Mr. Palmer asked the board to give this plan consideration and determine if it fits. Mr. Skip Jennings commented that he just had a meeting with GM about building his new (automobile dealership) facility. He said his heart has always been with downtown Chambersburg, and pointed out his involvement with the Chamber of Commerce and Chambersburg Area Development Corporation. Mr. Jennings stated in his opinion downtown needs to be given a little air to allow some growth. He is not opposed to Mr. Washabaugh's site but if the county does everything in this proposal and jams everything downtown the result will smother downtown and retail viability will go down. He said parking is a real issue and noted that last week jurors had to park at the old Sears building lot and walk several blocks to attend court. He suggested that plans give town some growth and let corridors develop to have a healthy downtown. He said the judicial center needs room for growth. On his site (the Jennings GM dealership), the courthouse would have almost 6 acres for the building with room to grow. Mr. Washabaugh asked if he could work with CGL. Chairman Keller asked CGL and county staff to clarify details of Washabaugh proposal, review information provided and come back with a recommendation. Mr. Palmer reiterated his earlier points and suggested the county preserve the past and prepare to move into the future. Bob Orsa commented that he grew up in Chambersburg and owns a business. He likes the fact that using this (Mr. Washabaugh's) proposal would absorb vacant space. Mr. Orsa doesn't think expanding horizons is going to help the core. He said the Chambersburg Mall sucked the life out of the town along with the downsizing of Letterkenny. Mr. Orsa doesn't see how spreading things out will help and he is looking at this as a business owner. The decision has to be more than just about money. He suggested the county could consolidate downtown and sell the Administrative Annex building and the Sheetz building. What happens to the court house will have an effect on merchants that have invested and put their time into downtown. Commissioner Keller asked if anyone had any more comments. Receiving no reply, he thanked those in attendance for attending and participating, and he thanked county staff for organizing the meeting. Continued on page 8 The meeting was adjourned at 12:00 p.m. with a motion by Robert L. Thomas; seconded by Robert G. Ziobrowski. FRANKLIN COUNTY COMMISSIONERS