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From our November 23, 2000,
edition.
City
puts brakes on management contract
By
Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
The
Clarendon Board of Aldermen put a proposed city management contract on
hold last week.
The
city had been considering hiring the Panhandle Regional Planning
Commission (PRPC) to provide administrative services to Clarendon. But
after a closed session with city employees last Tuesday, the board voted
not to make a commitment to PRPC at this time.
Instead
the board will wait to see what happens with an application for a planning
grant from the state.
Alderman
Billy Jack Land said he was disappointed by the decision not to contract
with the PRPC to provide a city administrator.
“I
feel like until we get a person in charge, we’re not going to get what
we want,” Land said. “It’s just like having a superintendent at the
school or a president at the college. The right person can pay for
themselves.”
Mayor
Tex Selvidge and Alderman Smiley Johnson had drafted goals for PRPC to
accomplish and presented them to the board last week. But Alderman Mac
Stavenhagen said he wanted to hear from City Secretary Janice Barbee and
City Superintendent Jim Roberts.
“We
got input from Jim and Janice, and they were unfavorable to [the PRPC
contract],” Land said.
Land
said the grant from the Texas Community Development program could
accomplish some of the same goals the city had in mind for a city
administrator.
“We’ll
just wait and see,” he said.
The
grant, which the city applied for in August, would provide $40,000 for
city planning and codification of city ordinances.
According
to Barbee, planning under the grant would coordinate future waterworks and
street projects and would help create a map of city water and sewer lines.
The
grant would also pay for codification of ordinances – a process whereby
ordinances are combed through to see if they are meeting the current needs
of the city and make sure than none of the laws are contradictory.
“The
ordinances are already indexed,” Barbee said, “but we need some
upgrading.”
The
City of Clarendon was incorporated in 1901 with the first city election
taking place on September 24 of that year.
The first ordinance was passed on January 7, 1902, and it accepted
and adopted the map of the township.
Nearly
a century later, some ordinances are no longer valid, some have been
amended, and some may be in conflict. Barbee said a codifying process
would help clean all that up.
A
decision on the grant is expected in January. If approved, the city would
put up a match of $6,000.
In
other city business, the aldermen agreed to notify the Texas Department of
Transportation of the city’s interest in bidding on the old highway
barn. Ionex Telecommunications, Inc., requested that the board review
their service product. The board requested more information on this
service.
The
airport improvements were discussed, and a report of activities at the
library was given.
Tommy
Hill spoke to the board requesting the city pave Hawley Street from Fifth
Street to Browning Blvd. Paving is currently on hold until warmer weather
arrives next spring, and the city is following a plan for the paving. No
action was taken on this request.
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