Eric England, facilities director for Lee County buildings and grounds, told the finance committee on Aug. 12 that the county is managing a portfolio of aging buildings with a small in-house maintenance crew and increasing reliance on outside vendors.
England said his department covers multiple buildings including the courthouse, old and new courts, 911, animal control, the Law Enforcement Center, the food pantry and the old jail. The maintenance department has eight staff members (three custodians and four maintenance technicians plus the director), and he said turnover earlier in the year left the department nearly new and stretched thin while tackling several large projects.
The director said he is building a preventive-maintenance program—rolling out iPads for techs and scheduling routine work—and trying to separate true maintenance agreements from other outside repairs that had previously been miscoded. He forecast a possible shortfall of roughly $21,000 in the maintenance-agreements line in 2025 based on run-rate projections and said vendors are signaling price increases; England estimated some contracts could rise substantially (he suggested as much as 36% in one exchange, reflecting labor and parts pressures).
Committee members asked whether more work could be brought in-house; England said he would prefer that but would need roughly 15 additional staff to do so. The committee agreed to revisit capital needs in a later budget meeting when the capital request schedule is discussed.
No formal action was taken; the committee asked for a capital planning session and follow-up details on maintenance agreements and a projection of deferred maintenance needs.