The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Gwinnett sheriff wants to hire 105 more employees

- By Tyler Estep tyler.estep@ajc.com

The Gwinnett sheriff’s office hopes to hire more than 100 new employees next year — and on Monday asked county officials to find the money to make it work.

Representa­tives from the sheriff ’s office — which runs the local jail, serves warrants and provides security at government buildings — were among those from several county department­s who will make their annual budget pitches this week. Overall, the agency’s proposed 2019 budget of more than $102 million would represent a roughly 6 percent increase over this year’s budget.

A significan­t chunk of the would-be increase is accounted for by requests to create 105 new positions. Those jobs would include about 72 full-time deputies who would work at the jail, the county justice center or in the field.

The rest of the proposed positions would include jobs like “administra­tive support associates ,” cook san dan IT associate to help with new body cameras.

“We’re stressed,” Chief Deputy Billy Walsh said of the current staffing situation.

The jail’s year-to-date population of 2,346 is already higher than 2017’s mark, Walsh said, which was several hundred higher than 2016. He attributed the increase to the fact that county and city police department­s are “staffing back up” and thereby have more manpower to investigat­e cases and to make arrests.

About half of the new deputy positions proposed would provide security at the new expansion at the Gwinnett Justice and Administra­tion Center, on which constructi­on is already underway.

The staffing increases proposed Monday would cost about $6 million, Walsh said.

He and fellow Chief Deputy Lou Solis were quick to point out that, over the last several years, the sheriff ’s office has been cleared to create only about a dozen new positions.

The sheriff ’s office is authorized for 768 positions.

The agency also requested just over $2 million to fund operations related to the federal 287(g) program, a controvers­ial program that gives local law enforcemen­t agencies some of the powers of immigratio­n officials. The figure requested Monday was about $300,000 more than what was requested for 287(g) for the current year’s budget.

Gwinnett has become one of the most prolific communitie­s in the nationin terms of arresting and placing holds for Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t on people they believe could be in the country illegally.

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