The Olympian

Two grandmothers flex political muscle for ballot's Proposition 1

By Keri Brenner | The Olympian • Published September 19, 2007

A pair of Tumwater and Lacey politicians are going on a different sort of campaign.

Proposition 1

The proposition would increase the sales and use tax within Thurston County by three-tenths of 1 percent for a term of 20 years for the purpose of funding new and expanding proven, research-based prevention and early intervention strategies and criminal justice purposes throughout Thurston County, in accordance with the provisions of RCW82.14.450 and Resolution No. 13879.
Get involved

•Election mailings:
Starting Oct. 12, Thurston County will begin mailing voters pamphlets to 106,000 homes. An additional 20,000 pamphlets will be distributed to area public buildings and agencies. Ballots for the Nov. 6 general election will be mailed out starting Oct. 19, according to Gwen Cornelius, voter outreach coordinator.

Politicians to speak for Prop. 1: The "grandmothers brigade" of Judi Hoefling, Tumwater councilwoman, and Nancy Peterson, Lacey deputy mayor, will speak at 7 p.m. today before the area Junior League, at Worthington Center, Saint Martin's University, Lacey.
New Tumwater jail

The new jail, the Accountability and Restitution Center, is a scaled-down version of a $102.7 million criminal justice center that was rejected by voters in an $88 million ballot measure in 2004. The jail has been billed as supporting alternative programs such as work release, day jail and electronic home monitoring, but none of those programs will be housed at the Tumwater facility in the first phase of the project, county officials said.

Officials said the 320 new jail beds are crucial to the county because the existing county jail at the courthouse in Olympia is overcrowded and outdated. That jail was built in the 1970s for fewer than 100 inmates, but has been expanded several times to its current 408-bed capacity.

The county plans to run both jails simultaneously when the new jail opens in 2010. At least for the first phase of the new jail, the alternative programs would continue to be housed at the Olympia facility. County Sheriff Dan Kimball said the county will need to hire between 40 and 70 corrections deputies and support staff to run the new jail.

The Olympian

In their role as grandmothers, they are hitting the Thurston County speaking circuit in support of Proposition 1, the 3/10 of 1 percent sales tax increase to pay for criminal justice and youth crime prevention programs.

"All we've been doing is spending more money on jails, so we want to do something different," said "Granbo" Judi Hoefling, a Tumwater City Councilwoman. "We want to take a bold step and intervene on a generation."

Hoefling, who has five grandchildren, and "Nanna" Nancy Peterson, Lacey deputy mayor and grandmother of six, will speak tonight at a meeting of the area Junior League at Saint Martin's University. It is one of a series of talks where they are emphasizing their family role in order to play up the purpose of the sales tax increase.

If approved by voters on Nov. 6, Thurston County Prop. 1 would raise the county sales tax from 8.4 cents to 8.7 cents per $1 spent. The tax increase would generate about $10 million annually in revenue.

Of the $10 million, roughly two-thirds would go toward programs for children and families to ease violent or abusive home situations or to otherwise help steer kids away from crime. The remaining one-third of the revenue would go to the county and its cities for criminal justice programs.

Tumwater jail

The new jail at the Mottman Industrial Park in Tumwater has been billed as supporting alternative programs such as work release, day jail and electronic home monitoring. However, those programs are not expected to be added at the new jail until the latter phases of the project.

During the first phase, the alternative programs will continue to be housed at the existing county jail at the courthouse in Olympia. Money for the first 320-bed section is coming from a "detention" sales tax approved by voters in the mid-1990s.

Bill Pilkey, a financial planner and frequent critic of Thurston County's efforts to build a new jail, said he was skeptical that the intervention programs would work. He said he would rather see drug, alcohol and mental health rehabilitation programs for adult offenders to allow them better success at not returning to jail if released into the community.

Pilkey said he would support a smaller jail and a new rehab center instead. "I don't want to pour people's hard-earned money into something that's not going to work," Pilkey said. "Throwing more money at the problem is not going to cure it."

Hoefling disagreed. She said officials who administer the money will be obligated to choose programs for early intervention that are "proven and research-based."

"Let's do what works," she said. Pilkey contends the county will have to use most of its $2 million or so criminal justice revenue from the sales tax increase to pay for staff to run the $35 million, 320-bed jail.

"This has not been thought out," Pilkey said of the jail. "There's no money for staff."

Judy Wilson, campaign treasurer, for the pro-Prop. 1 Family Investment Committee, said her understanding was that the money from the sales tax increase would go toward jail alternative and treatment programs rather than day-to-day operations.

"The purpose of the new jail is about getting folks rehabilitated and going back to the community," Wilson said. "The money is to keep people from coming back through the revolving door."

Keri Brenner covers Thurston County and Tumwater for The Olympian. She can be reached at 360-754-5435 or kbrenner@theolympian.com.

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