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Dateline: February 3,
2005
Aldermen
seek common ground on paving
Clarendon
city leaders tried to find common ground as they again took up the topic
of street improvements during their regular meeting last Tuesday.
Mayor
Tex Selvidge urged the Board of Aldermen to unify on a paving plan so that
another year does not pass with nothing accomplished.
“We
need to focus and give them [the citizens] something,” Selvidge said.
“We have to decide what we’re going to do and do it. If we don’t,
then suddenly it’s the end of the summer, and nothing’s done.”
Alderman
Michael Tibbets said he thought the city should set the goal of paving
every other street and borrow just the money that it can pay back in a
short time.
“Why
don’t we go a million and a quarter, borrow against our CDs, and start
our grid?” Tibbets said. “If we pay it off in five or six years, you
won’t have any opposition.”
City
engineer Che Shadle said he thought the board should go even further than
that.
“As
a citizen, I’m saying borrow more than that,” he said. “I’m
speaking not as an engineer but as someone who wants to see his street
paved.”
Tibbets
reiterated his point that a smaller project would meet with more approval
from the citizens.
“Something
that’s paid off in the same time as a trash truck won’t generate any
opposition. You won’t have any petitions,” Tibbets said.
Aldermen
Bobbie Kidd and Mark White said the city should continue its idea from
last year of focusing on controlling water flow in the city and connecting
paved streets.
Without
taking formal action, aldermen directed Shadle to come back to the next
meeting with a plan to pave as many streets as possible for $1.25 million,
concentrating on areas of water flow and chronic maintenance problems. The
project would be paid for through revenues from fee increases that were
imposed in 2003 after voters rejected a proposed $2.5 million paving
project.
Tibbets
also asked representatives of The Clarendon Enterprise if the paper would
be supportive of the plan or just try to create controversy.
“The
newspaper doesn’t create controversy; we just report it,” publisher
Roger Estlack responded. “We have always been in favor of paving from
day one.”
In
other city business, aldermen discussed the idea of constructing a metal
building for a new City Hall, but the board decided the city could not
afford to tackle that project and pave streets at the same time.
“Let’s
just get estimates to fix this [City Hall] and do the streets,” Alderman
Janice Knorpp said.
The
board also gave final approval to Ordinance 354, which amends the
Livestock Ordinance, and Ordinance 356, which amends the fee schedule at
the recycling center.
Aldermen
approved the mayor’s request to give the Saints’ Roost Museum $4,500
out of the Motel Bed Tax for costs associated with the museum’s depot
project.
City
Administrator Sean Pate reported progress being made to clean up an old
dumping area north of the recycling center. He also said that work on the
ball fields is progressing and that plans are being made to tear down a
house on Allen Street.
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