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Dateline: January 17,
2002
County
considers fire, lightning protection
Roger
Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
Donley
County Commissioners voted to give Judge Jack Hall the authority to add
certain items back into the Courthouse Restoration Project when the court
met in regular session Monday. The items would only be added back if the
county has no choice but to do so.
Among
the items that were deleted to reduce the cost of the budget were the
lightening protection system, a standpipe for fire protection, and a
fire-rated door in the first floor corridor. But the county’s grant
administrator, John Kiehl with the Panhandle Regional Planning Commission
(PRPC), told the court it may become necessary to add those items back
into the job.
The
county is still waiting for a final determination as to whether City Fire
Marshal Duane Garman will allow the removal of the standpipe and
fire-rated door, Kiehl said. Officials had hoped to eliminate the $8,000
standpipe and the $1,050 door and instead rely on a nearby fire hydrant in
case of a blaze.
“You
know you could say, ‘Well, there hasn’t been a fire in the courthouse
for 111 years,’ but then just today there was a fire in the Santa Fe
Building,” Kiehl said, referring to Potter County’s recently restored
office building in Amarillo.
Kiehl
also said he thought the Texas Historical Commission (THC) may become
adamant that the 1890 building have some form of lightning arrestor
system. The system is estimated to cost $12,540, but officials hope to
negotiate with the contractor to find a less expensive system to
accomplish the same goal.
Kiehl
said it was necessary to give the county judge the authority to act
quickly in case the fire marshal or the THC decides to require the items.
“We’re
getting to a point where the demolition work will be finished and things
will be going into the courthouse instead of coming out,” Kiehl said.
“These [items] have to be done in a certain order to keep the project
moving.”
Phoenix
1 Restoration’s Dwight Smith says the project is on schedule.
Scaffolding is expected to be erected soon around the exterior, and parts
of the roof will be coming off soon to make way for the third story tower
and dormers.
In
other county business, commissioners decided to give $2,500 to the Donley
County Jr. Livestock Association Building Fund and $500 to Lori Leffew for
her secretarial work during last week’s livestock show. The money will
come from salaries which were budgeted but not spent in the Extension
Office.
Chris
Sharp with the PRPC addressed the court regarding a proposed resolution to
enact and enforce a floodplain management program as set fort by National
Flood Insurance Program Regulations. Sharp said the resolution is
necessary as part of a grant the county is seeking following flood damage
around the county last spring.
If
approved, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) would create
floodplain maps of Donley County. It would then be the county’s
responsibility to furnish those maps upon request when a developer wishes
to build in the county. The court took no action on this item to give
commissioners time to read the actual regulations.
A
contract with OJD Engineering to repair and rehabilitate the bridges over
Troublesome Creek and Mulberry Creek was approved.
The
court authorized the Courthouse Annex hallway and Conference Room to be
used for the Democratic Primary on March 12, 2002.
Commissioners
approved sending the county clerk and her deputy to a training seminar in
Amarillo and sending the judge’s secretary to training in Austin.
County
officials were declared ineligible to serve on the County Grievance
Committee, and a list of names to serve on that committee was drawn from
the Grand Jury list. A letter will be sent to those people asking them to
serve.
And
the court approved the annual audit report as presented by Gordon Maddox.
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