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Tarrant County leans toward renovating sheriff鈥檚 training center instead of building a new one

Sheriff's uniforms hang in Tarrant County Sheriff's Training Academy. The building does not have enough room to store equipment.
Rachel Behrndt
/
Fort Worth Report
Sheriff's uniforms hang in Tarrant County Sheriff's Training Academy. The building does not have enough room to store equipment.

After months of back-and-forth, Tarrant County Commissioners gave their unofficial support to renovating the Tarrant County Sheriff鈥檚 Office training center, instead of the original plan to build a new academy at a higher cost.

The renovation alone would cost about $19.6 million, plus about $2 million for furniture and equipment, according to estimates from Komatsu Architecture, the firm the county hired for the project.

Commissioners also have the option to approve an $18 million shooting range at Tarrant County College Northwest and a $3.9 million tactical training space as part of this plan, including other additions. If they say yes to all the additions, the total project cost would be $50.4 million.

County Judge Tim O鈥橦are and County Commissioner Manny Ramirez threw their support behind the renovation plan during a Commissioners Court meeting Tuesday, and so did Sheriff Bill Waybourn. The county can start the renovation before making final decisions on extra facilities, Waybourn said.

鈥淲hile we don鈥檛 want to put the range and the tactical village on the very back burner, it can wait and we can move forward with space that we desperately need right now,鈥 Waybourn said.

Komatsu Architecture presented three plans on Tuesday:

  1. Renovating the existing training center for a base cost of $19,596,665.
  2. Building an addition to an existing building at the Tarrant County College Northwest Campus for a base cost of $35,113,650.
  3. Building a standalone building on Tarrant County College鈥檚 Northwest Campus for a base cost of $51,671,288.

Nothing is official until county commissioners vote on this issue, but they gave an unofficial go-ahead to Komatsu Architecture to plan for the renovation. The actual vote on the choice could happen in December, County Administrator Chandler Merritt said.

The county originally considered spending up to $50 million on a new training center.

Sheriff Bill Waybourn told the Fort Worth Report his department had outgrown its existing space, and he wanted to make sure his deputies got the best training possible. , because Tarrant County College and the Fort Worth Police Department .

The county later shifted its plan and .

Ramon Garcia with the Tarrant County Law Enforcement Association told commissioners he鈥檚 excited for the training center updates. His organization represents Sheriff鈥檚 Office employees.

鈥淲e鈥檙e going to have that opportunity to raise that next generation of highly trained and skilled officers for Tarrant County,鈥 Garcia said.

Editor鈥檚 Note: Komatsu Architecture is run by the family of Sylvia Komatsu, 四虎影院鈥檚 chief content officer.

Got a tip? Email Miranda Suarez at msuarez@kera.org. You can follow Miranda on X @MirandaRSuarez.

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Miranda Suarez is an award-winning reporter who started at 四虎影院 in 2020. Before joining 鈥淣TX Now,鈥 she covered Tarrant County government, with a focus on deaths in the local jail. Her work drives discussion at local government meetings and has led to real-world change 鈥 like the closure of a West Texas private prison that violated the state鈥檚 safety standards. A Massachusetts native, Miranda got her start in journalism at WTBU, Boston University鈥檚 student radio station. She later worked at WBUR as a business desk fellow, and while reporting for Boston 25 News, she received a New England Emmy nomination for her investigation into mental鈥慼ealth counseling services at Massachusetts colleges and universities.