February Commission Meeting 2026

 

Prior to the meeting, Democratic Congressional Candidate Kristi Burke led sidewalk chalking to protest ICE. On the consent agenda were two items regarding the acceptance of funds for 287g immigration enforcement through the Sullivan County Sheriff's Office. The Commission chamber was standing room only.

Public Comment was opened after the regular business of notary and minute approval, presentations, and appointments. While people continued to sign up for public comment, Chair Gardner read Rule 4 concerning public comment, which specifies a time limit of 30 minutes and the procedure by which that may be extended. In my year+ of sitting in on meetings, this is the first time that rule has been read: It was the first time more than 10 people have signed up for public comment.

The speakers, the vast majority of whom addressed Items 2 and 3 on ICE funding on the agenda, were passionate and well-informed, citing sources ranging from statistics of ICE arrests in Minnesota to philosopher Immanuel Kant. Several speakers addressed their deep respect for law enforcement while standing against current ICE tactics. "We are all products of immigrants," one speaker reminded everyone. Questions raised included whether there was money for additional training or only equipment, the potential for civil lawsuits, and the loss of trust in law enforcement that could lead to more crime. There had also been feedback from phone calls with individual commissioners that Nashville "will punish us if we don't," which was identified as bullying.  While the room was a bit rowdy, the meeting remained respectful until one speaker claimed they had "a bigger dick than all of y'all."

The Sheriff, Jeff Cassidy, was the last to speak and the only speaker who obviously violated the stated rules. If he has had any training in de-escalation tactics, he violated all of it when he turned from addressing the chair to addressing the audience. It felt to me like he was baiting the attendees to provoke a response because he knew that by doing so he could ensure that the commission would vote to end public comment and the media would frame the meeting around rowdiness instead of facts.

While not all commissioners voted to end public comment, the votes on the board changed a lot before being finalized to end public comment. A 15-minute recess was called, the room was ordered to be cleared but wasn't enforced, and multiple deputies arrived wearing armored plates. The meeting resumed with only one person being escorted out after he attempted to disrupt the meeting again.

After the recess, the consent agenda was put on the board. For those who don't understand the procedure of meetings, the consent agenda includes all items that do not face opposition or need further discussion, and must be passed unanimously. The chair offered a chance to remove any item on the consent agenda (which included items 2 & 3, which were the ICE funding), but no one did. Items 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,11,14,15,&16 were passed unanimously.

Other business

Item 12 concerning the purchase of a property in which to house the Sullivan County Women's Recovery Home was moved to 1st reading, which means it will be revisited next month. The advanced payment policy for property taxes, funding for the Families Free drug treatment program, and a bond for new sheriff vehicles were passed.

Jail Presentation

The meeting was supposed to begin with a presentation about the new jail construction, which is behind schedule and over budget. However, they had no presentation and only answered questions from the commissioners. I was disappointed in how little information was presented. The current end date is April 20, 2026, and the department expects it to take about a month to fully occupy the jail after completion. Several commissioners felt that any over-budget expenditures caused by design flaws should be paid for by the designers, but the contractors were clear that any improvements to the jail are to be paid for by the county.

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