Chief
Steve Finical of the Summit County Sheriff's Office had already selected
the winning bid for a new conveyor system at the County Jail when he got
a call from Tammy Kinder, senior account manager of Jeter Systems
Corporation in Akron.
"I read in the Akron Beacon that you're about to spend almost $81,000 on
a replacement conveyor system to store prisoners' personal property,"
she told the chief. "If I can show you a better solution with more
storage capacity at about half the price, will you give us a crack at
it?"
Although some public servants would have declined to start the arduous
bidding process all over again, Chief Finical welcomed the chance to
save taxpayers' money. "Even though this project had been in the works
since 2002, I figured it wouldn't hurt to give Tammy a shot," he said.
"We try our best to be prudent with county and taxpayers money."
Finical immediately put Deputy John Barrackman and County Jail
Maintenance Supervisor Tom Hathaway on the job with Jeter Systems, a
leading manufacturer of mobile storage systems, filing cabinets and
color-coded filing supplies. The two county officials worked closely
with Kinder and her team to custom-design a movable shelving system that
fit their exact specifications at a price tag that was $40,000 less than
the system they were considering.
“We
were originally looking at a conveyor system similar to what you’d find
at a dry cleaner’s,” explained Hathaway. “Dry cleaning-type systems are
designed to handle single items of clothing. In our case, we have
inmates who bring their entire belongings with them if they happen to be
homeless. The systems we were looking at just weren’t designed to
accommodate that kind of volume and maximize our space--an important
consideration since we regularly house more than 600 prisoners at a
time.”
The engineers at Jeter showed Barrackman and Hathaway several prototypes
of its EZ Roller movable storage system before they arrived at a design
that was acceptable to both the County Jail and the Company. "With
constant input from the staff at the County Jail, we were able to design
a system using off-the-shelf parts that gave them far more storage
capacity for considerably less money."
The system designed by Jeter features a stationery row of storage
racks, plus seven movable rows that are used to create access aisles
when and where they are needed, thus making the most of available floor
space.
Deputy John Barrackman left and Chief Steve Finical right inspect
installation of prisoner's garment bag.
Each row functions as a stand-alone two-tier "closet" to hold bags
containing prisoners' personal property.
"Our old conveyor system was installed in 1989 when the jail was built,"
Finical said. "It wasn't industrial strength, and we were constantly
repairing it. The Jeter System is mechanical instead of electrical, so
there aren't a lot of things that can go wrong with it. It's so heavy
duty that it looks like we'll never need to repair it.”