The Clark County Sheriff’s Department will soon take over policing duties in Utica.
Town Marshal H. Melvin Rumpel, 68, is retiring, and rather than hire another marshal, Town Board President Hank Dorman said it makes more sense to contract with the county sheriff’s department for police protection.
“It’s a small community, and to hire another marshal, we have to pay them to go to the (police) academy,” Dorman said. “We have quite a bit of turnover and we’re on a small budget.”
Dorman said it is more cost effective for the town to contract with the sheriff’s department than to pay a marshal’s salary and send them to training.
“It will alleviate budget problems and keep policing the community,” he said.
The town will pay a sheriff’s deputy $15,000 a year — $5,000 less than a town marshal, on top of the deputy’s county salary. The town also will provide the car and gas for the deputy, as it does for the town marshal.
The officer would work 40 hours a week — the town and the sheriff’s department won’t pay overtime — and likely will schedule reserve officers to work when the deputy isn’t on duty, said Sheriff Danny Rodden.
He said it will be similar to the situations that deputies are in at New Washington and Henryville schools. The officers are stationed at the schools, but also provide protection and assistance in the surrounding areas as needed.
The town also recently purchased a Ford Focus to replace an older police vehicle. The Focus cost about $13,000 — including the cost to equip it with police gear — and it was paid for with funding from the drug and alcohol court. The town also plans to use a Ford Crown Victoria it already owned.
The town board signed an interlocal agreement with the county to contract with the Sheriff’s Department on Tuesday. Rodden said he expects a deputy will be stationed in Utica by the first of November.
Clark County
Utica contracts with county for police protection
-
- Meth lab numbers increase sharply in 2011
- Sellersburg issues boil-water advisory
- Suspect arrested for pharmacy robbery
- Crowded slate set for May primary
- Student council cancels yard sale
- Winter weather advisory issued for Southern Indiana
-
Search under way for missing Underwood man
Kenneth Roger Clampitt, 41, of the 1300 block of Lindenmayer Road, has been missing from his residence since Thursday at approximately 4:30 p.m.
Continued ... -
River Ridge moves forward with development plans
No sale has been finalized on either piece of land, as River Ridge owns the 16-acre parcel, and the adjacent 54-acre tract is owned by Crossdock Development, a Louisville-based company that specializes in developing properties on the order of millions of square feet.
Continued ... - News and Tribune briefs for Feb. 10, 2012
- Town has no cure for ailing medical center






