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Dateline: March 22,
2007
Hydrants
draw attention of city aldermen
The City of Clarendon is busy
working on fire hydrants around town after fire department officials
alerted the Board of Aldermen to problems with the plugs.
Fire Chief Delbert Robertson
addressed the board last Tuesday and reminded the aldermen that not
properly maintaining the hydrants could cause insurance rates to go up in
the city.
“They have to do something so we
can get to them,” Robertson told the Enterprise this week, “and they
should be flow tested every year.”
Robertson said it appears the city
took his department’s recommendations to heart, noting that City Hall is
bringing in an expert next Tuesday to make suggestions on what needs to be
done.
Robertson said some new hydrants
have replaced older ones, but the older plugs were left in place with no
water going to them. Those non-functioning hydrants need to be removed
altogether.
City Secretary Linda Smith said
many of the fire hydrants are just plain old.
“Some of them are so old we
can’t get parts,” Smith said. “Some were put in back in the
1920s.”
Dirt has built up around some
hydrants over the years to the point that they are now buried, and other
hydrants just do not work at all.
City workers have been digging out
hydrants this week, and Smith said the city will look at replacing a
certain number of plugs every year.
“It will cost between $3,500 to
$3,800 to replace a single fire hydrant,” she said.
In other city business, Robertson
reported that the doors on the fire hall need to be insulated. He will
bring a proposal to a future meeting.
Chamber of Commerce Executive
Director Judy Burlin spoke about the DonleyTx.com web site, which was
launched as a community network a few years ago. She presented a proposal
from CyberMedics to redesign and maintain the site. The cost for this
would be divided among several entities. The board requested Will Jordan
to be at the next meeting to explain the proposal further.
The board discussed sick leave
that had been accrued by employees prior to policy change in 2002.
Mayor Pro-tem Michael Tibbets said
he felt that time had been earned and should not have been taken away. The
board approved a motion to reinstate the time for use in emergency cases.
Dates of the citywide clean up
were discussed and set for April 14 through April 30, 2007. This will be
publicized further closer to the dates, and the board also decided to keep
the recycling center open from 1 to 6 p.m. on Sundays.
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