Committee OKs $1M for Child Advocacy Center, extends building option and signs off on multiple amendments and grants
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The committee approved a $1 million county contribution to renovate a newly purchased Child Advocacy Center facility, exercised a 30‑day extension with a $100,000 deposit on another building option, and passed a package of budget amendments and grant acceptances covering sheriff vehicles, traffic safety grants, school and highway amendments, ambulance equipment, opioid board items and bond‑refunding savings.
At the March 5 meeting, the Rutherford County Budget, Finance and Investment Committee approved a set of capital and budget items including a county contribution to the Child Advocacy Center, an extension deposit on a prospective county purchase, and multiple budget amendments and grant actions.
Child Advocacy Center: Bill Whitesell told the committee the organization closed on an 8,000‑square‑foot building in the older medical center area and will seek renovation bids; architect and construction estimates put renovation costs just over $1.1–$1.2 million. Staff said the county’s $1,000,000 contribution would be restricted to specific renovation uses defined in section 1.2 of the contract. Commissioners raised questions about a contractual clawback (repayment) mechanism; county attorney staff explained the county can record a memorandum of notice against the property and, if needed, seek recovery in court. The committee approved the contract by roll call.
Property purchase extension: The committee voted to exercise the first of three 30‑day extension options for the Bank of America building purchase and to approve an additional $100,000 deposit toward the purchase price. Staff said the purchasing committee is seeking construction‑manager‑at‑risk pricing and resolving title and parking arrangements before closing.
Budget amendments and grants: The committee approved several no‑new‑money transfers and grant actions, including a $10,000 transfer to prisoner clothing and a $133,811 reallocation to buy two Dodge Durangos for mental‑health transports (a no‑match mental‑health transport grant), amended police traffic safety grants (Tennessee Highway Safety Office) totaling $200,000 and $25,000 for overtime and equipment, a SAMHSA rollover cleanup for recovery courts, a $880,000 state grant recognition and expenditure increase for Rutherford County Schools (no fund‑balance use), and a $15,000 internal transfer to cover higher natural gas costs for the Highway Department. The committee also approved acceptance of a previously awarded essential equipment grant for ambulance services and opioid board budget items (including a K‑9 for the sheriff's office and a $15,000 award to Graceful Gym and Murfreesboro City Schools).
Debt management update: Finance staff reported gross savings of $25,478,732 from bond refundings since 2010 and said an upcoming refinancing could add roughly $1.1–$1.5 million in additional savings; staff also noted triple‑A reaffirmations from Moody’s, S&P and Fitch.
What it means: The committee moved forward with capital support for local victim services, preserved the county’s contractual options to complete a building purchase, and advanced several operational budget changes using grant or internal transfers rather than new general‑fund appropriations.
Next steps: Contract and grant approvals will proceed as required (mayoral signature for awarded grants and forwarding of items to full commission when applicable); purchasing and staff will return with firm renovation bids and any title/resolution updates.
