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Dateline: August 5, 2004
City
seeking new bids for 2004 paving project
By
Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
The
City of Clarendon last week rejected the only bid for its proposed 2004
paving project after the price came in at almost twice the expected
amount.
The
Board of Aldermen directed city engineers to advertise the project again
to try to generate more interest and get more reasonable quotes.
City
Administrator Sean Pate said the city expected to pay about $180,000 to
pave 11 blocks on portions of Fourth and Seventh streets. That estimate
was based on work the city had done last year in the southeast part of
town under a disaster grant.
Contractor
J. Lee Milligan submitted the only bid of $355,840.60, which city
officials saw as an indication that contractors are too busy right now and
are not hungry for work.
“As
we get closer to winter months, companies will need more work, and we’d
expect bids to drop,” Pate said.
The
new bids will be required to be broken down so that the city can review
what each part of the project will cost, Pate said. City crews could then
be utilized for some aspects of the project, such as rough grade cuts, in
order to control costs.
The
city is also watching the calendar as summer months draw to a close and
there are fewer warm weather days to do the paving.
“Our
engineers say we’re still in the clear,” Pate said, noting that he
doesn’t want to split the project into fall and spring phases. “It’s
to our benefit to do it all at once.
City
Hall begins advertising for new paving bids this week. Those will be
opened on August 19 for possible action by the Board of Aldermen on August
24.
In
the meantime, the administrator said city workers will continue replacing
and lowering utility lines on West Seventh Street in preparation for
paving.
Pate
said that water lines on that street have already been lowered where they
were too shallow and that the sewer line there was needing replacing
anyway.
“We’ll
just be money ahead by replacing those lines ahead of paving the
street,” he said.
In
other city business last Tuesday, Jewell Judd returned to City Hall to
again ask aldermen to consider closing the alley beside her property in
Block 182B. She said she wanted the alley closed to prevent her neighbor
from “driving that Frito truck across my driveway,” but aldermen
pointed out that doing so would also prevent her from getting into her own
carport. City officials told Judd she would also have to have her property
properly surveyed before any further action could be taken.
Jean
Stavenhagen addressed the board representing the Saints Roost Museum and
updated the aldermen on the depot renovation. The work has been completed
under a federal grant administered by the Texas Department of
Transportation, but a large unexpected administrative cost has been
incurred.
The
board approved assisting the museum with $500 per month for August and
September from the Motel Bed Tax Fund and agreed to consider further
assistance in the new budget year.
The
city ad valorem tax rate was discussed, and aldermen voted to keep the
rate at its present $0.48555 per $100 valuation.
A
budget amendment of $29,000 was approved for the 2003-2004 fiscal year to
cover the cost of additional work requested by the city during last
year’s paving project.
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