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Dateline: June 19,
2003
Paving
price tag stuns aldermen
By Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
The
Clarendon Board of Aldermen received a dose of “sticker shock” last
week when estimates were presented for a project to pave streets in all
parts of town.
The
plan, which would pave and curb 95 percent of the streets in Clarendon in
just 18 to 24 months, carried a total price tag of $4.9 million.
“It
liked to give me a heart attack,” said Mayor Tex Selvidge. “We’ve
got to do a lot of work and take some time to figure out the best way to
do it, but we can’t afford the first plan.”
Vince
Viaille, a financial advisor from First Southwest Company in Lubbock,
presented bond options to the board. With an interest rate of 4.75
percent, bond payments on $5 million in bonds would be about $400,000
annually for 20 years.
The
city currently only generates about $200,000 per year in ad valorem taxes
with a tax rate of $0.45555 per $100 valuation, which has remained
unchanged since 1999.
The
municipal tax would have to triple to generate the income necessary to pay
$5 million in bonds, and the aldermen seemed united in not taking that
route. They took no action on the plan and instructed engineer Che Shadle
to return for the June 23 meeting with a plan in the $2 million range.
“We
haven’t heard a word from the citizens on this – pro or con,”
Selvidge said. “I don’t feel like property owners should foot the
whole bill. We should look at a combination of increased fees and
increased taxes.
“I
wish we had done this in the late 1970s and early 1980s,” Selvidge said,
referring to the first time he served as mayor. “It would be paid off
today if we had.”
The
mayor expressed frustration with the current state of the streets and the
need to make improvements.
“I
feel like we need to do something if we’re going to grow,” he said.
“If we want to bring people to the community, one thing they are going
to look at is the streets.”
In
other city business, the board formally denied Gary Hunt’s request for a
building permit for his property at 8th and Leroy Streets after meeting in
closed session with City Attorney James Shelton for nearly an hour.
Aldermen Janice Knorpp and Mark White voted to deny the permit; Aldermen
Tommy Hill and Michael Tibbets abstained; and Mayor Selvidge broke the
tie. Alderman Bobbie Kidd was absent.
Hunt
had sought to erect commercial storage buildings on his property, but the
area is zoned for residential use only.
Jean
Stavenhagen with the Saints’ Roost Museum presented the museum board’s
recommendation to accept a bid from Phoenix I Restoration, Ltd., to
renovate the old Ft. Worth & Denver Railroad Depot. The city is the
sponsoring entity for the Texas Department of Transportation grant which
will pay for the depot work. The board accepted the bid of $196,200 with
the stipulation that the museum has the right to negotiate with the
bidder.
The
board voted to keep Colby Waters on retainer for consulting services
through September 30, 2003, when the city’s contract with the Panhandle
Regional Planning Commission will expire.
The
board also discussed purchasing the Thunder Junction theme park and voted
against the idea.
“It’s
got a lot of possibilities, but I don’t think we can afford it right
now,” the mayor said.
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