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A Degree Above

Renovation Begins on County Owned Shopping Center Building

December 16, 2010

by: 

Dwayne Page
Mike Foster
Town and Country Shopping Center Building
Town and Country Shopping Center Building

Construction on the renovation of the former Town and Country Shopping Center has begun and what will become an office complex and recreation center is expected to be completed by late summer of next year.

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County Mayor Mike Foster said the project was bid in two phases and Cambridge Constructors of McMinnville was the low bidder at $1.6 million on the first phase and $726,000 on the other for a total of $2.3 million. Under terms of the agreement, Foster said at least 40% of the labor must be from DeKalb County and 25% of the materials must be purchased locally. "The county commission unanimously voted to recommend to the purchasing committee that Cambridge be awarded the contract. We had four bidders including Cambridge, Lee Adcock Construction, J&S, and another company out of Cookeville. Cambridge was $407-thousand dollars cheaper than the others. We compared all the equipment and everything in the specs and they awarded the contract to them (Cambridge). The first thing we were concerned about was the roof. So this will include a new roof on the entire building, a new roof and insulation, an all new central heat and air system for the entire building, and a new facade on the front of the building."

"The project was bid in two phases because we didn't know what the estimate was going to be. We set it up so we could winterize and weatherize the entire building, get the heating and air done, get the facade done and get the southern portion of the building from the old food store all the way down to and including where the old Pizza Inn was located. All of that was in one part of the bid. The other part of the bid was for where the senior citizens and recreation area will be. It (bid) came in under the amount we were expecting. The first part (bid) was for $1,611,000 and that's for an all new roof, all new central air and heat, facade, painting the exterior building, and doing all the interior walls from food center down to Pizza Inn. The other part (bid) was $726,000. It will include all the remodeling for the entire building, including adding desks and work stations for the four offices that are being moved from the courthouse."

According to Foster, the county can afford this project without having to raise property taxes. In fact, he said the county's debt service payments will actually be less than they are now, due to a better bond rating and a re-structuring of the county's debt."We (county) had some notes. Some of them had been here a long time, some were short term and some for a longer term but the payments on them were $465,000 a year. By re-doing the structure and by getting a new bond rating of A plus from Standard & Poors, even adding this new building, the payments are now $406,000 a year. That's nearly $60,000 a year less. Plus we're renting two parts of the building that's going to bring in about $57,000 a year so our debt service is going from $465,000 to $349,000. That's a tremendous savings, enough to do the utilities and everything on the entire building."

Again Foster said the work has begun on the building and it should be ready for use by next summer. "By contract, they have to be done by eight months or they start paying a penalty. The part where UCHRA is moving into, they have to have it done within four months."

Foster said when completed, the building will offer public use for a variety of purposes. "We all know that we want to have something for our young people to do and there are a lot of things incorporated into this building. There's absolutely no new costs to any taxpayer. We're going to be moving four offices out of the courthouse. We'll have a drive-thru window for the county clerk. You'll be able to drive up and get your car tags and never have to leave your car. That will be a good thing for people who have trouble negotiating the steps at the courthouse. So the county clerk, trustee, property assessor, and register of deeds which are all interconnected will be moving there (shopping center), moving to the south end of the building. Plus we've built in two storage areas, several hundred feet each, where we can have archives."

"Adjoining that (courthouse offices) will be the UCHRA. They will be leasing approximately 4,700 square feet. They will be moving their facility in there. Motlow Junior College and Tennessee Tech will be having some extended classes there so they (students) don't have to drive to Motlow or Cookeville for extended classes. We'll have six classrooms for that, one of which will be set up as a training center for computer literacy. A lot of industries are needing that. Other people also need it. It's to help create jobs and increase the productivity of people with jobs and give them a better opportunity for employment and maybe allow them to get a better job than what they have right now. We'll also have another meeting room in that area (of the building)."

"Second Harvest Food Bank will have an area in the back (of the building) where they can store their food and distribute it in a much better way. In the (food center) store part, there's about 3,500 square feet for senior citizens. Adjoining that area is an exercise room of about 2,000 square feet and then there's a museum area for things that are pertinent to the county. Adjoining that will be a game room, and then an auditorium with a stage area which will also include an overhead projector which could be used by industries for training. It could also be used as a mini-theater, seating about 230 people. We'll have a scaled down gym with basketball goals where kids can go and play along with two other exercise areas."

"We already have some grants and we've applied for others where we can get things we really need without it being an additional cost to the county."

In October, 2009, the county commission voted to purchase the 62,000 square foot complex for about $750,000. The property covers 5.21 acres and includes a large paved parking lot.

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Sheriff's Department to Cease "Flagging" Operations at Hurricane Bridge as of January 1st

December 16, 2010

by: 

Dwayne Page
County Funded Flagging Operation to Cease as of January 1st
Solar powered road sign near Hurricane Bridge
Solar powered road sign near Hurricane Bridge

The DeKalb County Sheriff's Department will cease "flagging" operations at Hurricane Bridge beginning January 1st due to a new TDOT requirement.

Since April 15th, the sheriff's department has posted a "flagger" on each end of the bridge to monitor traffic across the bridge, which has state posted weight limits. The county commission authorized the "flaggers" last January and appropriated the funds to pay for it with the understanding that the county would apply for state grant funds to help recoup the costs.

At the time, County Mayor Mike Foster said posting "flaggers" at the bridge would help school buses, fire trucks, and industries with heavy loads get across the bridge without violating the state's posted weight limits of 10 tons for a straight truck and 18 tons for a semi. Flaggers were to be posted there Mondays through Fridays from 7:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m.

On November 29th, the county received a notice from TDOT commissioner Gerald Nicely about a new training requirement for TDOT, the result of the Federal Highway Administration's updated regulations for work zone safety.

According to Sheriff Patrick Ray, the new requirement states that all uniformed law enforcement officers who work on a TDOT project shall have training from a Peace Officer Standards and Training (POST) certified police training academy within the state of Tennessee. Furthermore, these officers must have an additional four hours of FHWA approved work zone training by December 31st, 2010. The "flaggers" being used by the sheriff's department at Hurricane bridge are part- time employees, who are not POST certified. "This is not something that the county commission, the county mayor, or myself has done", said Sheriff Ray. "This is a requirement from Nashville from the Tennessee Department of Transportation."

"TDOT has revised it's requirements for the use of law enforcement in the highway safety work zones. This will become effective on December 31st. This is a new requirement that is a result of the federal highway administration's work zone safety. What we have to do is, if we have officers down there, they have to be full time law enforcement officers that has the training from the Peace Officers Standards and Training (POST) in Nashville. Without that training they will not be able to do any of the flagging work at the bridge. If we use our regular deputies or certified deputies that are on shifts, those deputies would have to be taken off the road in order to go down there and do that (flagging) or the county would have to pay overtime fees to those deputies for doing that so I don't think that would be cost efficient for the county or us. So on January 1st, 2011 the weight restrictions on the bridge will go back to what they are and there will be nobody there to flag traffic. We will not be able to send officers down there to stop traffic on the bridge or let any kind of semi- truck, including loaded school buses, to go across the bridge. Any vehicle that's overweight will have to take an alternate route."

Sheriff Ray said since April the "flaggers" have been working at the bridge, but there have been occasions when they could not work due to poor weather conditions or times when the state's solar powered flashing road signs could not function. "Some of the requirements at the bridge that we have had to adhere to are if the weather is bad, such as during heavy rain or ice and snow, then we're prohibited by the state from flagging during those times. Also within the last thirty days we've had trouble with the solar powered signs. If the sun is not shining then the signs will not power up so we're having to get our local TDOT people to go to Cookeville to get a generator that's big enough to come back and charge those batteries. This week, there's not been anybody there (flaggers at the bridge) because of either the weather or the signs. We're still having problems with the signs. We'll get back to it (flagging) just as quick as TDOT can get to us. They've been busy with the road work trying to get it done."

Construction is expected to begin soon on Hurricane bridge.

TDOT opened bids on the project October 29th and the low bidder was OCCI, Incorporated of Fulton, Missouri with a bid of $26.9 million. The contract was officially awarded to OCCI.

TDOT spokesperson Jennifer Flynn said last month that "it's not yet known when construction will begin but OCCI has until October 31st, 2013 to complete the project. "It will take about a month to get all the paper work done. As soon as that happens, then the contractor will hold the pre-construction conference where representatives from the contractor's office and TDOT representatives from the construction field office, the regional construction office, and any utilities that might be involved on the project, will meet at a pre-construction conference and determine how the work is going to be done and how they will approach the job. As soon as that is done, they can get to work on the project. The completion date for this project is on or before October 31st, 2013. "

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