Yours truly, as a pre-coffee-on-a-Saturday-morning fill-in on the weekly Not Quite Quorum podcast, where (partner and city councilor extraordinaire) Laura Bergus and I talked about the direct line from chattel slavery to disparities in policing and incarceration, the Johnson County Jail, and our hopes for a better future:
There’s a sense in city planning. It’s important because you don’t unbuild roads. Once you build a road, it’s there.
And so you gotta really have to get it right, even if it takes 20, 30 years between when you plan that road and the road gets built.
A jail, and particularly this one, this iteration, is something we’re talking about lasting a long time.
We’ve heard supervisors say 100 years. [Supervisor] Jon [Green] has said 50 years. [Sheriff] Brad [Kunkel] has said that this should last us 30 years before it needs something. Whatever that is, we’re still talking about building a thing in our community, a unique thing in our community.
Real hard to convert that building to something else. And we need to have a conversation around it. And we haven’t for more than a decade.
Listen wherever you get your podcasts.