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From our November 2, 2000,
edition.
City
moves closer to management contract
By
Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
The
City of Clarendon took another step toward contracting with the Panhandle
Regional Planning Commission for city administration services last week.
A
committee composed of Mayor Tex Selvidge and Alderman Smiley Johnson will
work with the (PRPC) to come up with a plan and schedule of completion for
city improvements.
The
formation of the committee follows a called session of the board last
Monday, October 23, in which the aldermen held talks with PRPC
representatives Gary Pitner, Jarrett Atkinson, and Colby Waters.
Atkinson
said the commission has been offering city management services for about 1˝
years. Bovina was the first city to contract with the PRPC, and they have
found the service so useful they are now seeking a full time city manager,
he said.
“We
were initially hired in Bovina to develop personnel policies,” he said.
“Now we’ve basically worked ourselves out of a job.”
Under
the proposed agreement, the city would contract with the commission to
have a PRPC employee serve as a part-time City Administrator for an
estimated $32,539 per year. The Board of Aldermen would still set policy
for the city and oversee the city administrator. The city administrator
would oversee daily operations of the city including the areas of
personnel and business and financial matters.
The
administrator would be in Clarendon two days a week and would do a lot of
work over the phone.
“Business
still goes on when the [administrator] is not there,” Atkinson said.
The
aldermen would also outline specific goals to be achieved by the
administrator.
Colby
Waters is the man most likely to serve that position. The Pampa native is
currently serving Bovina and is familiar with Clarendon having gone to
Greenbelt Lake many times growing up.
Waters
said the city administrator position can take some of the work load off
city employees and can benefit citizens also.
“This
position gives the city one person to come to instead of going to all the
[aldermen] individually,” Waters said.
Aldermen
see several benefits to contracting with the PRPC. They say it gives the
city the chance to see if an administrator is useful to Clarendon without
getting involved in a hiring process or making a longterm commitment to
someone. The contract is paid on a monthly basis, and the city can cancel
the agreement at anytime.
“We
just want to have the best for the people of Clarendon,” said Alderman
Billy Jack Land.
Mayor
Selvidge echoed Land’s comments and praised City Secretary Janice Barbee
and City Superintendent Jim Roberts saying, “I don’t know what we
would do without them.”
Aldermen
Mac Stavenhagen agreed and said both Barbee and Roberts should be included
in setting goals for the city administrator.
The
money for an administrator is already in the current city budget.
In
other city news, the board held its regular meeting on October 24. The
1999-2000 city audit was discussed, and the board voted to have Gordon
Maddox conduct the audit. The aldermen also discussed the old TxDOT
building and set up a time to look at the facility.
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