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Washington courthouse portico entrance will close, DA, commissioners agree

By Barbara S. Miller for The 2 min read
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Scaling steps to enter massive wooden doors under the Washington County CourthouseĢƵ South Main Street portico will soon become a thing of the past.

When District Attorney Gene VittoneĢƵ staff exits its current offices because of changes made to accommodate a seventh judge, an agreement he and the county commissioners worked out calls for the DA and staff to have security “the same or greater than that already existing” at the courthouse.

This would include a sheriffĢƵ deputy, metal detector and an X-ray screening device for bags and purses in his new location.

Rather than hire additional manpower, Sheriff Samuel Romano was told he’ll have to make due with enough staff to handle security at a single courthouse entrance plus the newly purchased Caldwell Building, 26 S. Main St., where the district attorneyĢƵ 30-member staff is headed.

“ItĢƵ my understanding they’re going to shut the front door,” Romano said of the courthouse.

A third deputy will handle security duties at the West Cherry Avenue entrance to the courthouse during its busiest periods, he said, and another deputy will be assigned to the Caldwell Building, which the county purchased earlier this month for $400,000.

Vittone, First Assistant District Attorney Dennis Paluso and Assistant District Attorney John Friedmann requested a court injunction to halt the move, which was scheduled for this weekend.

A negotiation session mediated Monday afternoon by President Judge Katherine B. Emery resulted in an agreement between the district attorney and commissioners formalizing aspects of the move and security measures, including a bulletproof main entrance.

Commission Chairman Larry Maggi said, “We were trying to be as efficient with our resources and still protect our staff.”

A security assessment of the courthouse recommended that access be reduced to a single entrance with an “armed presence,” Vittone said.

The commission chairman said he and his board have “pushed back on that for several years.”

No date has been set for the courthouse entrance closure. “ItĢƵ a work in progress,” Maggi said.

The county must first assure that the Caldwell Building complies with all applicable codes and certifications.

According to the agreement the litigants reached, the district attorneyĢƵ offices in Courthouse Square will move first, followed by Crime Victims Services and last, Vittone and his main office staff.

“I don’t anticipate moving this weekend,” Vittone said.

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