Saline County Commissioners this morning took no action to rescind the mask mandate, thus keeping the mandate in place for at least two more weeks.
Jason Tiller, health department director, provided an update on the COVID-19 situation in Saline County as part of the bi-weekly review of the mask mandate resolution, according to information provided by Saline County. Tiller told the commissioners that the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases increased by 123 since the last review two weeks prior. Additionally, there were two additional deaths during that time period, he said.
Tiller told the commissioners that community spread of COVID-19 is now prevalent and he stressed the need for people to remain vigilant as the pandemic is not yet over. Wearing masks, practicing social distancing, avoiding large gatherings, and staying home when sick are proven methods that individuals need to continue to practice to keep children in school and businesses operational, he said.
At the conclusion of Tiller's presentation, the county commissioners took no action to rescind the mask mandate.
Additionally, Tiller told the commissioners that the health department's annual flu shot clinic for persons ages 19 and older is scheduled for Oct. 14 at the 4-H Building in Kenwood Park. It will be a drive-thru clinic only, he said.
Commissioners also voted to approve signing a contract with Motorola for a new emergency radio communications system in Saline County. According to information from the county, "staff has worked over the past few weeks to allocate costs between the city and county with the county taking the bulk of the costs associated with the backbone infrastructure and needed radios for the county public safety agencies and the city taking the costs associated directly with the 911 dispatch center and their public safety agency radio costs."
The total cost for the infrastructure and radios for the county is $8,010,654.62, the county noted. There also are yearly costs for maintenance of the system over 15 years and other subscription services that make the total cost of the contract $10,962,757.10 for Saline County.
According to the county, "This project will replace the antiquated emergency radio communications system with a modern system that is capable of growth, upgraded technology, and interoperability to serve Salina and Saline County for many years. Because this system will utilize existing infrastructure and coverage from the State of Kansas KSICS radio system, an expedited build out will occur and Salina/Saline County Public Safety agencies will be operational with a new system in 8 months, with the full build out to be completed by February 2022."
Other commission business conducted today, according to information provided by the county, includes the following.
Phillip Smith-Hanes, County Administrator, presented the commission with agreements with subrecipients for the Coronavirus Relief Funds. These agreements are with the agencies and organizations that will receive funds through the direct aid plan. Of particular note and discussion was the agreement with the Chamber Foundation, as their agreement was modified slightly when it came to the agreement that the county hold the Foundation harmless for up to 50% of any judgement or penalty assessed against the Foundation in the event the program is found to have been in violation of federal rules. The Chamber Foundation is slated to receive the largest single distribution of the funds, $2,713,313.71 or 24.7% of the total amount. Their focus will be on providing funds to for-profit businesses in the county who experienced business interruption due to COVID-19 and meet eligibility criteria. The Chamber Foundation has also committed to contact those businesses who applied to the county for funds back in July. Commissioners approved the memoranda and exhibits, 3-1.
Commissioners heard four requests from Annie Grevas, community corrections director. The first request was the approval of the FY20 Year End Outcomes Report which covers the goals that the agency worked towards throughout the fiscal year. Their efforts included partnering with providers in the community for childcare and wellness checks for clients, increased successful client completions, and tracking data for dispositional departures that are supervised by community corrections. The other three items were department budget related where commissioners were asked to approve an adjustment to the 4th Quarter FY20 budget that simply moves funds from different line items into others but does not affect the bottom line. The other two budget items were asking Commissioners to approve the FY21 Adult and Juvenile carryover reimbursement budgets. Commissioners voted to approve all four requests.
Commissioners approved for several items from the Road and Bridge Department to be declared no value and sold on Purple Wave. Any proceeds from the sale of these items will be deposited into the road and bridge special equipment fund.
Justin Mader, county engineer, presented the commission with a request that came from landowners to improve access to agriculture property on McReynolds Road. This particular section of the road has three different locations where Dry Creek crosses the road. It is the recommendation of the county engineer to explore further building 2,300 feet of a new earth road that would bend in the channel to allow for access to the agricultural land. It is estimated to cost between $75,000 and $125,000. Commissioners heard from the landowners and provided consensus to Mader to move forward with the necessary reviews and studies to determine costs.
Grevas provided a department update for March through September 2020. Grevas reported on the several grants that were submitted, the effects of COVID-19 on their operations, and the UpTrust platform that the department will be implementing very soon. This platform will provide push notifications to clients to remind them of court dates and appointments. It will also allow Central Kansas Foundation the ability to notify clients and their supervision officer of appointments or non-compliance. This platform is secure and compliant with HIPAA. Coronavirus Relief Funds were secured by community corrections to implement this platform.
Smith-Hanes provided his weekly update, reporting on the next steps for the formation of the Public Building Commission for the finance funding for the emergency radio communications project. A resolution will be provided to the commission next week and Smith-Hanes asked commissioners to begin thinking about who they would like to appoint to this commission. Smith-Hanes also reported that in the approval of accounts payable that commissioners signed, was the first distributions for the direct aid plan to agencies. A dashboard has been put on the Coronavirus Relief Fund portion of the website for citizens to track to see where the county is at on distributions of the coronavirus relief dollars. Access the dashboard here: https://www.saline.org/Coronavirus/CRF-Funding.
Jamie Doss, county clerk, reminded commissioners and the public that today is National Voter Registration Day. She encouraged citizens to check their voter registration to ensure that it is correct and also encouraged those who are not registered to vote to do so. Citizens can check their registration status at www.voteks.org or contact the clerk’s office. The last day to register to vote in the November election is Oct. 13.