Ramsey County Sheriff Jack Serier announced Wednesday that he will run for the position next year in the wake of concerns from some of his employees that understaffing at the county jail has endangered inmates and correctional officers.
Serier, who was appointed sheriff in January by the Ramsey County Board of Commissioners, could face several challengers with long records of public service. Attorney and lobbyist Nancy Haas, former Minneapolis police officer Mike Martin and former Ramsey County sheriff Bob Fletcher all confirmed their interest in running for the post.
Serier defended his handling of the jail issue Wednesday, saying that it took time to hire new corrections officers, and that the facility will be fully staffed by early December.
But a union representative, Haas and Fletcher were critical of how long it took Serier to address the issue. The union is currently in negotiations with the sheriff's administration regarding staffing, and neither would divulge the staffing numbers this past summer, or, what full staffing would look like.
Ramsey County Undersheriff Steve Frazer said exact numbers are "security data" and cannot be shared.
"I don't know if the sheriff dropped the ball, or, whether there are challenges with putting qualified correctional officers on the floor," said Brian Aldes, secretary-treasurer and principal officer of Teamsters Local 320, a union representing law enforcement employees. "In a nutshell, it's the sheriff's job to staff this jail."
Aldes said correctional officers were made to work overtime shifts to compensate for staffing shortages.
E-mails sent to jail administration and Ramsey County commissioners in August show anxiety and fear among some correctional officers. They wrote about jail pods being locked down, upset inmates flooding cells, inmates assaulting staff and officers working 14-hour shifts.