Pubdate: Wed, 13 Oct 1999 Source: Santa Barbara News-Press (CA) Copyright: 1999 Santa Barbara News-Press Contact: http://www.newspress.com/ Author: Mark Van De Kamp, News-Press Staff Writer SALES TAX FOR JAIL TO BE ON BALLOT Supervisors Agree To Put Measure Before Voters In March But Scale Back Size Of Facility From 800 Beds To 400 A sales tax increase will be put in front of voters next March to build a 400-bed jail on Santa Maria farmland and upgrade juvenile detention facilities. County supervisors decided Tuesday to place the measure on the ballot after intense lobbying by the sheriff and the head of the Probation Department. The tax measure approved by the board, however, would raise less construction money and build a smaller jail than the officials wanted. "We have to do this," said Tom Urbanske of Santa Maria, the 5th District Supervisor. "It's so important. There really is no option." The half-cent sales tax would last five years, costing about $48 annually for the average consumer, Sheriff Jim Thomas said. That would raise $100 million for construction. After five years, the tax would fall to a permanent quarter-cent tax, raising $13 million annually for operations and upkeep of the new facilities. If voters embrace the tax, the jail and renovated juvenile facilities would open within five to seven years. The new jail along rural Black Road would end daily busing of inmates between the Goleta jail and North County courtrooms. It also would curb the number of inmates released early because of a court order to reduce jail crowding. Since June, more than 1,000 inmates have been released early. Youth crime prevention programs would be strengthened through the tax money generated, said Probation Chief Sue Gionfriddo. The 50-year-old Juvenile Hall complex in Santa Barbara would be rebuilt. Plus, a new 120-bed Juvenile Hall would be built near Santa Maria next to the new jail. So it was with great relief that Gionfriddo and Thomas reacted to Tuesday's 4-0 decision by the supervisors to put the measure on the March 2000 ballot. But they're not relaxing. Just getting started. "To accomplish that with such broad-based support is remarkable, but I don't want to minimize the challenge ahead of us," she said. "We've now passed the first step of a first ladder. We've got a long way to go. There's a tremendous need for public education throughout the county to fully advise the voters of all the facts." Winning the required two-thirds voter approval will be tough. A county-hired consultant took a poll last spring of 600 likely voters and found support was only 62 percent -- about five points short of the necessary 66.7 percent. Past county Grand Juries have issued reports urging the county to consider building a North County jail to ease crowding at the main jail. Foes of the measure, however, say the government is merely raiding taxpayer wallets again instead of making better use of its existing revenue. The county has a multimillion-dollar backlog in unrepaired roads, bridges, sidewalks and parks, said Andy Caldwell, executive director of the Coalition Of Labor, Agriculture and Business. Year after year, the board fails the public, with lack of leadership on spending priorities, yet it approves raises for county employees, Caldwell said. Bruce Rittenhouse, activist and Santa Barbara City Council candidate, said he opposes the measure because money should be devoted to education programs instead of locking up more people. "I'm in total opposition," said Ernest Armenta of the Santa Maria Valley, a frequent government critic. "I'm going to encourage my voters to shoot it down." In voting to go ahead with a ballot measure, supervisors followed the lead of board chair Naomi Schwartz of Santa Barbara on Tuesday. She favored building a 400-bed jail, however, not the 800-bed jail the sheriff wants. Schwartz also proposed cutting the half-cent sales tax from eight years to five. Approving a smaller jail allowed supervisors to prune $33 million from the construction cost estimate -- an effort to make the measure more appealing to voters. "To me that is a package that is fiscally prudent," Schwartz explained. Supervisor Susan Rose agreed. She wants to avoid building the additional 400 beds, if possible, perhaps by investing more in prevention programs. Sheriff Thomas said the 400-bed jail is acceptable. "Perhaps that will be an easier sell to the public," he said. "That meets our needs in the next 10 years. But at some point we will need to look at more bed space." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D