|
Dateline: January 31,
2002
New
grant helping city plan for future
Carrie Helms, Clarendon Enterprise
The
Clarendon Board of Aldermen voted last week to accept a $46,060 planning
grant that would allow the city to map streets, sewers, drainage, water,
economic development, zoning, and more to make future plans.
Grant
manager Kay Howard of Lubbock-based HOWCO presented the plan at the
regular meeting of the Board of Aldermen January 22.
The city applied for the grant two years ago, was approved last
year, and received funding this year from the state Office of Rural
Community Affairs.
“The
maps would be like a blueprint,” Mayor Tex Selvidge said, “that would
help us find what we need to do, a time frame for projects, and cost
estimates.”
The
current maps have not been updated in more than 15 years.
“The
flood zone maps were updated in 1986, and the zoning maps are dated
1965,” secretary Linda Smith said. “The new maps will be more
detailed, and it will help us to know exactly where everything is in
Clarendon.”
Plans
call for the new maps to be stored on digital media for easy access and
reproduction. Detailed housing maps will show the exact position and
condition of dwellings around the city.
The
city is expected to pay $6,060 of the total cost of the four to six-month
long project.
“When
it is completed, we will have an overall plan of where we are now,”
Selvidge said, “and where we would like to be in five to ten years.”
Among
the items on the city’s drawing board is a proposed paving project that
would cover 60 blocks of the city’s most traveled streets, Selvidge
said. Those same streets also carry a lot of water during rainstorms.
While
it is still in the planning stages, the mayor said the city intends to
contract with a professional paving company to do the street project.
Aldermen are looking at a variety of ways to fund the paving, including
asking the city voters to approve bonds.
“I
think we could probably make the payments with what we already budget each
year,” the mayor said.
The
planning grant should help fill in the details and cost projections of the
street plan and may boost the city’s chances of receiving a grant to
replace a large section of 1920s-era sewer line, which is in danger of
collapsing.
In
other city business last week, Gordon Maddox presented the audits for the
Clarendon Economic Development Corporation and the city. Both audits were
approved.
Building
permits were discussed. The board voted to waive the permit fee for the
Donley County Courthouse restoration project and to refund the fee paid by
Community Fellowship Church. A permit was still required
for both projects, however.
The
city fire marshal position was discussed, but no action was taken. And the
board discussed revising the city’s Personnel and Procedures Manual.
|