LaSalle County's sheriff briefed the Public Safety committee on staffing shortages, training schedules, and an ongoing difficult inmate with complex mental-health needs who has required multiple hospital transfers. The sheriff said four recent hires will reduce overtime pressure once fully released from field training, but current staffing and a prolonged high-needs inmate have driven overtime and hospital-billing costs.
The sheriff said he contacted several mental-health providers for weekly in-jail support. North Central declined to provide services without a contract; the sheriff reported that Aruca agreed to send a provider to meet with the inmate weekly while the county coordinates longer-term options. The sheriff described the inmate as the most difficult he's encountered in more than 20 years and said the county continues to work with the State's Attorney's Office on detention issues.
Because the county is in an accreditation year and auditors will visit later in the year, the sheriff asked the committee to authorize seeking a one-year extension on the jail medical services contract to avoid adding a major procurement during accreditation. A vendor provided verbal willingness to extend for one year; the sheriff asked staff to request a written confirmation and seek committee guidance. Committee members asked the sheriff to pursue the one-year extension so the procurement calendar is not further complicated during accreditation.
Committee discussion also covered the costs and liability of replacing a contractor with county-employed medical staff. Several members noted that direct employment would raise insurance, pension and administrative costs and that contracting remains the practical alternative for the near term.