Meeting in special session Monday night, August 26, the Gillespie City Council voted 5-2 to purchase a brick building at 124 N. Macoupin St. to house the growing Gillespie Police Department.
On a motion by Ald. Dona Rauzi, seconded by Ald. Bill Hayes, the council agreed to buy the building, which formerly housed the Gillespie Chiropractic Clinic, for $69,000. Mayor John Hicks said the city expects to spend up to $200,000 to remodel the structure to house the Gillespie Police Department, currently located at 109 W. Pine St. The fate of the 109 W. Pine address was not discussed, nor was a timeline for moving the police department into new quarters.
Ald. Rauzi, Hayes, Wendy Rolando, Bob Fritz and Janet Odell-Mueller voted in favor of the purchase. Ald. Dave Link and Frank Barrett cast dissenting votes. Ald. Landon Pettit, who advocated for the purchase during the council’s regular monthly meeting two weeks ago, was absent.
At 2,270 square feet, the new building will nearly double the square footage available for the Police Department. The building is located on a 15,000-square-foot lot, compared with 9,000 square feet at the current location, meaning there will be ample room for parking and/or to build onto the existing structure.
City Treasurer said the building owner listed the property for $80,000. The city offered $60,000 and settle at $69,000 after further negotiations.
Fisher said modifications to the building will include replacing stairs to the basement with ADA-compliant stairs, which will make the basement accessible for storage and securely holding evidence.
“We’ll probably change the entryway to make it a double-lock entry,” Fisher said. “We’ll have to make some changes but basically the inside won’t change very much.” Current exam rooms can become individual offices with little or no remodeling. The lobby area will probably be divided with a new wall to create a waiting area for visitors.
For the past two years, the council has investigated the possibility of remodeling the space vacated in the Civic Center when the Fire Department moved to new facilities in East Gillespie. Cost estimates for that project, however, came in at $600,000 to $700,000. Buying and remodeling 112 N. Macoupin St. will cost approximately half of what was estimated for the Civic Center alternative.
“We’ve been talking about doing something here for a couple of years,” Ald. Link said. “How many thousands of dollars have we spent on engineering for here?”
Fisher replied that engineering fees for the Civic Center project total about $5,000, but some of the planning for the Civic Center location should translate to the 112 N. Macoupin site.
“We’re thinking we can use some of the plans we had done for here for the new building,” Fisher said. “We hope we can use some of those plans to spec out the other building without making much modification.”
Hicks said a larger facility for the Police Department is needed because the size of the Department has expanded in order to service police protection contracts with surrounding communities including Benld, Eagarville, Mt. Clare, Sawyerville, East Gillespie and Wilsonville.
“We’ve got more people working for us,” Hicks said. “We have more people coming in,” Hicks said the city also wanted to have the Police Department located on the city’s Main Street.
“I still think the dentist office would be a better place to put it,” Ald. Barrett commented, referring to the former location of Smiles Plus Dentistry, 709 Staunton Rd. “The square footage is more and the basement is finished.”
“What you’re talking about is $130,000,” said Ald. Rolando, “plus there’s more parking space with this place.”
Monday night’s special meeting of the council was held immediately prior to a committee meeting during which the committee members directed Fisher to apply for a federal grant to defray the cost of buying two police patrol cars sometime after Oct. 1, and recommended setting 6-8 p.m., Oct. 30 and 31, as trick or treating hours. Committee actions do not become official until approved by the full council.
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