Shoshone commissioners back out of railroad property purchase
JOSH McDONALD | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 2 years, 1 month AGO
WALLACE — The Shoshone Board of County Commissioners this week decided against buying a 49-acre parcel of land from the Union Pacific Railroad.
The property, located to the west of Spunstrand Inc., was discussed as the proposed site of a new jail and public safety building for the past four years, but additional information from the Environmental Protection Agency prompted the commissioners to reject the property.
According to Dan Martinsen, with the county’s planning department, the verbal opinion provided by the EPA indicated a jail would likely violate the terms of the current environmental covenant as it pertains to residential use on the property.
As part of the Bunker Hill Superfund cleanup, several miles of property adjacent to the former railroad were remediated to some degree as the railroad was converted into the Trail of the Coeur d’Alenes bike trail. The property in question wasn’t remediated for residential use.
There are steps the county could’ve taken to petition the EPA if county officials decided they wanted to utilize the property, however, that would require quite a bit of work on the county’s end — significantly increasing the amount of money they would need to spend to accomplish the goal of building of a jail.
The original decision to pursue the property had been made by the previous board of commissioners and had spanned several years before the current board was elected.
According to the EPA, they were never contacted by the county during the initial purchase process to get clarification on the specifics of that environmental covenant.
There was also a discussion about the funds for the purchase of the property.
The previous board had engineered the sale of county property in Smelterville to Maverik Inc. for $2.1 million, and the funds from that sale would be used to purchase the new property. However, $1.7 million of that was used by the county to pass the 2023/24 budget, so the county may not have the funds available to complete the sale as planned.
Shoshone County Sheriff Holly Lindsey was given the opportunity to weigh in on the situation since the public safety building and jail are under her jurisdiction.
“We have to stop looking at the jail like it’s going to be a money maker,” Lindsey said.
As crime rates have spiked, the jail has been at capacity or even over full for much of the past few months, which led to the facility failing its annual certification inspection. But she also believes that a new, bigger facility may not be the answer for the county — especially because she is struggling to properly staff the current building.
As it stands, the current jail is in need of millions of dollars worth of upgrades — but they would need to pass a bond in order to make that happen.
In 2019, the county attempted to get voter approval for a bond to build a new $22 million state-of-the-art jail facility. It was rejected by voters.
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