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Suncoast Searchlight: Sarasota commissioners consider cheaper solution to county jail overcrowding

Written by on Thursday, September 4, 2025

The less expensive plan puts off the problem for about a decade.

By Derek Gilliam/Suncoast Searchlight

Original Air Date: September 3, 2025

Host: The Sarasota County Jail is full, but if current incarceration trends continue, the way its expansion is proposed, it may be full soon again. Derek Gilliam with Suncoast Searchlight has this report.

Blue and yellow graphic of a searchlight shining from above on the west coast of the state of Florida with the text "Suncoast Searchlight."

Derek Gilliam: The most ambitious plan promised a generational solution—a new criminal justice complex designed to vastly expand capacity and carry the county well into mid-century. Its latest cost estimate: as much as $630 million, to be paid for only if voters agreed to shoulder the debt.

At a meeting on August 27, they voted to explore a more modest option: demolish just the jail’s west wing and build an eight-story addition in its place. The $401 million project would create 725 beds, lifting operational capacity to 1,237 by 2033.

But by 2042, the jail would be full again.

The pivot captures the bind facing county leaders. According to the Sarasota Herald-Tribune, steady rise in arrests since 2021, coupled with a doubling of pretrial stays, has pushed the jail population past what the facility was built to handle. 

Aerial shot of the Sarasota County Jail complex.

The Sarasota County Jail is overcrowded, prompting county commissioners to consider a costly addition. Photo by Michael Barfield of The Florida Trident, via Suncoast Searchlight

Yet any solution depends on persuading voters to approve hundreds of millions of dollars in new construction—and recent history suggests public appetite for such projects is thin. In May, North Port voters rejected a $115 million referendum for a new police department headquarters, a defeat that now looms over commissioners weighing whether Sarasota residents would support an even larger ask.

Chairman Joe Neunder said he doesn’t know how voters will respond given what happened in North Port but called the jail issue “one of the bigger things we’ve dealt with this year.”

Neunder said: “What I can tell you is that we absolutely need to do something, and we need to have a plan here.”

Until recently, the front-running plans were two versions of a new criminal justice complex. Both would require demolishing the county’s aging Criminal Justice Center on Ringling Boulevard and building a five- or six-story jail on East Avenue. The CJC would be rebuilt at another property near the current jail campus.

The five-story option, estimated at $549 million, would create 823 beds by 2033. The six-story version, projected at $630 million, would stretch capacity even further—enough to keep pace with the county’s growth beyond 2050.

County staff and representatives from the sheriff’s office said they no longer support a six-story version, arguing new population projections show a sixth floor would not be needed.

Sheriff Kurt Hoffman, meanwhile, pressed commissioners to act quickly and urged them to embrace the jail-only plan, calling it a viable option. The jail, he said, is already operating at 115% to 120% of its rated capacity.

Hoffman said, “All those other governmental inspections that come into the jail and monitor us are on us for the population situation.”

Major Brian Meinberg, commander of the courts and corrections division, told commissioners the addition would also be more efficient to run. It would require fewer correctional officers than the larger complex proposals and avoid the expense of transferring inmates elsewhere during construction.

Illustration labeling the different buildings of the Sarasota County Jail complex: the west wing, north wing, east wing, existing CJC, and historic courthouse.

This illustration shows the current layout of the Sarasota County jail and nearby buildings. The Sarasota County Commission is exploring three options to expand capacity at the jail to solve the facility’s long-standing overcrowding problem. Image from August 27, 2025, county presentation via Suncoast Searchlight

Although the west wing’s official capacity is just 77, Meinberg said it now holds 110 to 115 inmates. The jail-only plan would provide a temporary building to house them while construction is underway. He warned overcrowding could force the county to ship inmates to other facilities as soon as the end of this year—a cost Hoffman said could grow into the tens of millions of dollars.

The $401 million estimate also includes $27.5 million in maintenance for the current Criminal Justice Center, which houses the Public Defender and State Attorney’s offices, along with other court and sheriff’s functions. All three options call for a $10.9 million expansion of the Ringling Boulevard parking garage. The complex proposals would add another $145 million to replace the CJC altogether.

That makes the jail-only plan about $148 million cheaper than the five-story complex and $229 million less than the six-story version.

Former sheriff and current Commissioner Tom Knight said the problem has been around since before he ran for sheriff in 2008.

Knight said, “We’ve been talking about it for 20 years. It isn’t going away, and this is a commission that’s got to pull the trigger and do something.”

But the longer the county waits, the higher the number climbs. Knight recalled exploring an $80 million option as sheriff. In 2022, another plan carried a $100 million estimate. By 2023, a 300-bed addition was projected at $150 million. That option, if built now, would open with the jail already over capacity, Hoffman said.

Aerial shot of the Sarasota County Jail complex.

Sarasota County commissioners have studied several plans to ease overcrowding at the jail, including options that would demolish the aging Criminal Justice Center on Ringling Boulevard and building a five- or six-story jail on East Avenue. Photo by Michael Barfield of The Florida Trident via Suncoast Searchlight

Knight said the CJC is “antiquated” and acknowledged the need for replacement. But he questioned whether voters would stomach any option at these prices.

Knight said, “We’re looking for a cheaper option, but we’re not sure the voters will even vote any option.”

Board members advanced all three options but directed staff to return with refined estimates in December. Commissioner Teresa Mast pressed for speed.

Mast said, “I really want you to sharpen your pencil and expedite this and get it back to us, because quite frankly we’re behind the gun.”

Capital projects manager Brad Gaubatz described the current figures as “back of the napkin” numbers. Independent consultants will vet more detailed designs before commissioners see them again, and he cautioned that the totals could go up or down.

The schedule is already slipping. A January 2024 memo envisioned county workshops beginning this fall, with ballot language drafted in 2026. Those steps remain undone, leaving the county behind on the timeline to place a referendum on the ballot.

Reporting for Suncoast Searchlight, Derek Gilliam. To read the full story, go to suncoastsearchlight.org/sarasota-county-jail-option-commissioners.

 

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