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Dateline: December
19,
2002
City
aldermen take action on nuisances
By Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
Clarendon
city officials took further action to clean up property around town last
week.
During
a public hearing on December 12, city aldermen questioned Isaac Huvall
about his property at 502 S. Bond Street, on which several complaints had
been made.
Huvall
told the board he didn’t really understand what the problem was. He said
he keeps about ten percent of his property wild for quail and dove that
live in the area. He also keeps aluminum cans for recycling and admitted
that high winds sometimes blow the cans about the neighborhood.
“I’ve
got them cleaned up now, and they [the cans] are up against the house,”
Huvall said.
“People
want the cans gone,” Alderman Janice Knorpp responded.
Huvall
told the board that he takes the cans to be recycled “about once a
year,” but city officials said that wasn’t enough. Alderman Mark White
agreed and said the city has a duty to perform.
“We
have the ordinances to keep the city in order, and they have to be
enforced,” White said. “The cans need to be moved.”
Later
in the board’s regular meeting, the aldermen found Huvall in violation
of the Nuisance Ordinance and voted unanimously to order Huvall to clear
his property of cans and inoperable machinery within 30 days.
Aldermen
also discussed an abandoned house at 316 E. Sixth Street. City Secretary
Linda Smith said the owners of the property had indicated they did not
care what happened to the property. The board voted to begin the legal
steps necessary to demolish the structure.
In
other city business, Lynn Coats with GreenLight Gas presented information
to the board concerning a proposed rate increase. The board will consider
this matter further at a called meeting on December 30.
Loy
Davis requested permission to place three doublewide homes on property he
owns on Seventh Street between Leroy and Johns. The aldermen voted to
allow two doublewides on the property and said the alley should be left
open.
The
board approved a proposal for a holiday greetings ad in The Clarendon
Enterprise.
A
budget resolution to amend the 2002-03 municipal budget by $12,000 was
discussed and approved.
City
Superintendent Jim Roberts reported that the new trash truck and new
backhoe should be delivered in the next two months. He gave the board
information on a Texas Department of Transportation grant which might pay
to fence off the airport, and Roberts also reported that the Donley County
Sheriff’s Office had requested stop signs be erected on Jefferson Street
at the Third Street intersection. The board approved the request.
Smith
reported that traffic fines levied by the sheriff’s office had dropped
off from 23 in September to nine in October and five in November.
David
Pitts reported that the Clarendon Volunteer Fire Department has applied
for grant in the amount of $54,000 from the Texas Forest Service. The
money would be used to for a new brush truck, which would also serve as a
new rescue vehicle.
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