Oklahoma County eyes phased-in construction and bond sale for jail
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Oklahoma County Detention Center
Oklahoma County officials are exploring a phased-in approach for a jail replacement project while they seek to supplement voter-approved bond funding that falls far short of current costs.
The county’s Citizens Bond Oversight Advisory Board last week instructed the project’s contractors to produce a detailed plan for phased-in construction using existing funding sources.
County
In 2023, the county sold
Oklahoma County Engineer Stacey Trumbo said $35 million of the proceeds have been encumbered or spent, with the remaining $10 million expected to be tapped by June.
“Selling the remaining bonds is being discussed by the (county) commissioners and could be determined in the next 60 days,” he said in an email, adding that
A public-private partnership request for proposals the county launched last year to help finance the jail was closed with no selection made, according to Trumbo. He added that a new RFP will be issued “when activity begins again.”
Raymond James, Morgan Stanley, and Jefferies
The county aims to replace its 13-story detention center in downtown Oklahoma City — which opened in 1991 and has been under state and federal scrutiny for health, safety, and other concerns — with a jail that would have room for medical and mental health treatment.
Construction is underway on a mental health facility the county is funding with American Rescue Plan Act money.
The jail project faced delays when Oklahoma City last year denied
The dispute was