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IT warns aging vehicles, depleted radios and supply cuts could slow county services

Clayton County Board of Commissioners (public budget meetings) · April 29, 2026

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Summary

Interim CIO Matthew Hutchison told commissioners IT has several 20‑year‑old vehicles, depleted radio inventory and reductions to computer supply accounts that could increase replacement costs; IT noted purchases of nearly 200 laptops for emergency vehicles and a pilot lease program to expand device availability.

Interim Chief Information Officer Matthew Hutchison told the budget committee that multiple modest reductions in IT accounts have operational consequences across departments.

Hutchison said several IT vehicles are about 20 years old and some have been redlined; the department relies on a handful of loaner vehicles and lacks appropriately sized transport vehicles for technical equipment. He also flagged a $10,000 reduction in the radio repair account and noted that single radio replacements can cost about $7,000–$8,500 depending on model; replacement demand has been driven by requests from fire and parks for additional units.

On departmental supplies, Hutchison said an approximate $6,000 reduction in the computer supply account can lead to higher replacement costs when protective cases and low‑cost accessories are not available; he gave an example where a $20 case can prevent a $400–$600 replacement. He said IT has purchased nearly 200 laptops designated for emergency vehicles and is testing a leasing program to increase device availability while exploring warranties and centralized purchasing to lower per‑unit costs.

Hutchison also said IT will perform walk‑throughs of Superior and magistrate courtrooms to assess copier/printer models and evaluate whether leasing or warranty strategies could reduce lifecycle costs for county court technology.

Commissioners and finance staff discussed placing certain devices on centralized recycling or fleet programs to lower unit costs and improve allocation.