Supervisors: More options surface in DHS relocation discussion

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More options regarding where Department of Human Services (DHS) will move surfaced during a Union County Board of Supervisors meeting Monday.

Previously, county supervisors were only investigating one option, which was to move DHS from their current location inside the Union County Courthouse to the former Iowa State Extension building.

Darren Thompson, executive officer for DHS in this area, said last week the DHS move is necessary as DHS currently has the opportunity to hire two more employees in Union County, but cannot because they do not have enough space at their current location.

Additionally, Thompson said DHS staff does not currently have an adequate conference/meeting room for employees and families to meet.

More options?

The initial option to move DHS to the former Iowa State Extension building is expected to cost Union County about $2,000 in rent, utilities and insurance per month.

On top of that, remodeling costs projected at $50,000 would cost the county anywhere from $17,000 to $21,000 after they are reimbursed by surrounding counties and by the state.

Monday, supervisor Dennis Brown presented a new option he and Union County's Building and Grounds Director Paul Boden had discussed last week.

Their option is to keep DHS at the Union County Courthouse — a building the county already owns — by moving the assessor's office upstairs to the supervisor's board room. DHS would then acquire the office space left in the assessor's office.

And, the board of supervisor's would then move from their current location to the yellow brick building north of the Union County Law Enforcement Center where a portion of DHS staff currently resides.

Brown and Boden's option seemed to gain the most support from other board members Monday.

"It's a lot better option than writing a check out to someone else every month," said supervisor Lois Monday. "I'm all for remodeling something we already own. That would be to our advantage."

Brown said, moving forward, he would communicate with the assessor's office and veteran's affairs about the possible move, "get hard numbers" regarding how much the reorganization and remodeling would be for the move and speak with DHS on whether the option would give them enough space and satisfy state regulations.

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