Archive for the ‘Bastrop City Council’ Category

City denies price hike request

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–The city’s trash and garbage hauler, Allied Waste Disposal, got a cool reception Tuesday when a company official asked the city council for a 2.3 percent rate increase because of changing economic conditions.

Company manager Steve Shannon said a rate hike is justified because Allied has been hammered recently by rising landfill costs and and a collapse in markets for some recycled goods. He freely admitted that terms of the company’s present service contract with the city do not require a rate adjustment for the coming year.

The council retreated behind closed doors briefly to consult with the city’s lawyer on the matter but emerged and declined–without comment in public–to take any action on the Allied request.

Best project bid brings joy to Bastrop officials

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–When city officials opened bids this week for construction of improvements on Chestnut Street between Water Street and the Union Pacific Railroad line, the apparent best bid was for just more than half the engineer’s official cost estimate. That left Bastrop leaders hopeful that similar cost savings may appear when they open bids next month for construction of a new city hall and a convention center.

During Tuesday’s city council meeting, City Manager Mike Talbot announced that the apparent winning bid for the Chestnut Street work was $786,000. The engineer’s cost estimate for the work was $1.4 million.

The project includes utility relocations and reconstruction, new sidewalks, street lighting and landscaping, all part of an effort to encourage pedestrian traffic and retail development eastward from Main Street toward the new city hall and convention center. The cost will be covered by the city’s half-cent sales tax devoted to economic development efforts.

In a slumping economic climate, contractors and builders appear eager to secure work, even at bargain rates, Talbot suggested. The street project drew offers from seven bidders. Prices ranged from $786,000 to almost $1.5 million, he said.

Comment: What will Bastrop be like in 2025?

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–The city council held a workshop session June 29 focused on what issues the council wants city staff to focus on both in the near term and longer range. One topic that kept resurfacing during the meeting was the need to develop a vision of what the historic city on the Colorado should look and feel like in years to come. It should be a vision shared by elected officials and citizens, some suggested.

True, such a shared understanding could be a politically safe anchor and guide for decision-making far into the future. The impulse to create or codify such a forward looking set of goals is essentially sound and fully laudable. Better late than never, I suppose; but the search for such consensus and vision may be 25 years or more behind reality.

One pressing issue at present is how to link and blend the commercial area in Bastrop along Texas 71 with the historic downtown business district and its adjoining tradition-rich residential neighborhoods , as council members noted last week. Such a linkage might give Texas 71 drivers and passengers some sense of the historic and unique community they’re passing through. Good idea.

Trouble is, Texas 71 through Bastrop is largely indistinguishable from similar freeway segments in Austin (US 183 between I-35 and MoPac), Temple (along I-35) Waco or San Marcos, Round Rock, Georgetown, etc. How all those areas look to visitors of all sorts has been driven almost entirely by the trends and fashions of highway commercial development across the nation from Newark to San Diego over the past 30 years, not local visions, culture or traditions. No more in Bastrop than in Round Rock.

The evidence of local cultural patterns and influences? Missing. It could take another 30 years to make the Bastrop freeway area look or feel different, more connected to the past or a future most folks would look forward to.

Could previous city councils have made a difference in this pattern? Certainly. Will this council begin to make a difference and set a new course? We’ll see.

But can that happen without the kind of communal vision some council members suggested they’d like to pursue? Maybe that’s a role the council itself should assert. As I said, better late than never. Good luck.

Here’s why. Even if the council seriously pursues a consensus/vision building effort over the next year or two or three, it already faces a serious series of decisions which will affect the shape, size and ambiance of the Bastrop community for many, many years into the future, decisions which cannot be delayed for too long.

On July 13, for instance, the council will hear (at City Hall beginning at 6 p.m.) a presentation by developers of the proposed XS Ranch project on almost 10,000 acres north of the city between the Colorado River and Texas 95. Centered on the former 6,700-acre Steiner Ranch, the XS project envisions some 7,000 new residential units going up over the next 20-30 years plus perhaps 300,000 square feet of commercial buildings (roughly the size of Burleson Crossing). Effectively that means a new city larger than Bastrop and only partially under the city’s control and supervision. The council, however, has substantial leeway to guide and affect what this development looks like and how it functions within a larger social and economic context.

Even delaying action on current proposals will constitute real decisions with real consequences, for better or worse.

Also waiting in the wings is the 550-acre Colroado Bend project on the city’s south side between Texas 304 and Tahitian Village. This council will also make crucial decisions about the shape and feel of that project if it matures–or if the council allows it to mature.

Already out of the barn are other major projects including The Colony (maybe 1,200 acres) between Texas 71 and FM 1209 and FM 969, not to mention The 700-acre Bastrop Village project at Texas 71 and FM 20 on the city’s western border. The current city council, however earnest and forward-looking, can do little to affect these projects. Those still on the drawing board are even larger, however, and have the potential to foster even more dramatic transformations.

I applaud the city council for even trying to imagine how it can play a role in guiding the future of the rural county seat town they live in and love. It will affect that future, no matter what it achieves or fails to accomplish.

I look forward to seeing how quickly the council can focus its vision and energies to help create a vital and attractive prospect for Bastrop for the decades to come.

Bastrop council posts two goal-setting sessions June 29-30

Friday, June 26th, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–Monday and Tuesday, June 29 and 30, the Bastrop City Council will hold back to back meetings to begin mapping out priorities and strategies for at least the next year. City Manager Mike Talbot has pressed the council to schedule the sessions because three of the six council members were elected for the first time in May and the remaining three were first elected in May 2008.

Each meeting next week begins at 6 p.m. at City Hall, 904 Main St. Each is a posted meeting and open to the public. Under state law, some topics which could arise may be discussed behind closed doors. The posted agenda does not permit the council to take action on any topic or issue discussed in executive session.

Talbot has told the council he hopes to hear them discuss their issues, concerns and priorities at the Monday session, including preliminary ideas for planning a new budget for the fiscal year which begins Oct. 1.

Talbot said he hopes to devote some of the Tuesday session to a review of the functions and duties of the city’s various offices, departments, boards and commissions to give the council a clearer conception of how the city carries out its business.

New water well undergoing production tests

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–With the city in the second year of a brutal drought with soaring summer temperatures and rising water demand, officials this week hope some relief may be within sight, not from the skies but from a shallow underground water bearing formation in Bob Bryant Park.

A promising test well in the alluvial aquifer was was completed June 21, Bastrop City Manager Mike Talbot told the city council June 23. A previous test well in the same formation underlying the city park a few weeks earlier proved a disappointment, yielding an average of some 113 gallons a minute.

City officials and enginerring consultants had hoped for a yield of some 300 gallons a minute or more. A second test well was ordered in the same vicinity and shows promise of better production, Talbot told the council.

Formal testing of the so-called Well 2 in Bob Bryant Park began June 22 and could take two weeks to complete, according to a report from consultant K*Fries & Associates. If all tests prove favorable the well could be a useful addition to Bastrop’s water production system by October, according to the same report. The cost of rushing the new well into operation remains to be negotiated, officials said.

Since last summer, when daily water demand in Bastrop reached 85 percent of production capacity for extended periods and water use limits were ordered, the city has carried out a number of test drilling operations, none entirely satisfactory so far. The new test drilling program has focused on sites on the west bank of the Colorado River because demand growth has been mostly in that part of the city in recent years.

At present all the city’s water wells are on the east bank of the river in shallow alluvial formations beneath Fisherman’s Park–essentially gravel deposits left by ancient river stream beds.

At the June 23 meeting, city council members appeared in agreement that putting new water production capacity on line is the most pressing need of the community at present.

City hall, civic center designs win council okay

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–Architect Mervin Fatter got a green light today from the Bastrop City Council to complete construction drawings and bid documents so work can begin on a convention center and a new city hall by year’s end. The final designs were unveiled at a public meeting last week and endorsed Tuesday by the council.

Work so far on a 15,000-square-foot city hall on Chestnut Street won praise from the council, but the proposal to build a convention center across the street remained controversial. Council Members Julie Hart and Kay Garcia McAnally held out for a delay in launching that project, saying they wanted more time to study projections by City Manager Mike Talbot about convention center operating costs and other financial details.

Hart and McAnally voted no on a motion to move the construction plan forward. Council Member Joe Beal said Talbot’s latest cost estimates for building and operating the 26,000-square-foot convention center are little different from a similar set of calculations put before the council in April. Beal called the assumptions on which the estimates are built “ultra conservative.”

Council Members Bill Peterson and Ken Kesselus joined Beal in pushing the building program forward.

Talbot estimated construction cost for the new city hall at $3.4 million. He put the final cost of the proposed convention center at $5.9 million. Both figures include furniture, fixtures, wiring for advanced communications technology and professional costs, said Talbot.

Given the current economic climate, bids for both construction projects could be 10 to 15 percent less than present cost estimates, said Mayor Terry Orr. “It’s a good time to bid (construction work),” he said.

Contractors will be invited to bid on each project separately or together, said officials.

Divided city council sets terms for lease allowing city hall to become new history museum and Bastrop visitor center

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–After a sometimes tedious special meeting which lasted almost four hours Monday evening, a divided Bastrop City Council endorsed the principal terms of a lease proposal which could turn the present city hall into a museum and visitor center on Main Street within five years.

Later this year the council expects to begin construction of a new city hall in the 1300 block of Chestnut Street.

The Bastrop County Historical Society hopes to lease the present city hall at nominal cost for up to 40 years and convert it into a history center and downtown visitor attraction. If the society can raise some $250,000 for renovation costs, the council agreed to contribute at least $500,000 from hotel room rental taxes to the project, as well as pay utility and some building maintenance and insurance expenses.

The final vote for the plan carried by a 3-2 majority with Council Members Julie Hart and Dock Jackson in the minority. Council Members Terry Sanders, Willie DeLaRosa and Joe Beal supported the proposition.

Hart said she liked the idea for a downtown museum and visitor center, but the proposal “asks too much from the city” in financial support.

Sanders said the project, as proposed, will help maintain the value of the city’s historic business district and overall “won’t cost the taxpayers (anything).”

The council debate on lease terms was preceded by an hour-long public comment period during which speakers were about evenly divided between backers and opponents of the proposal. At the end of the night some council members worried about the possible effect of ongoing community divisions over the issue.

“It’s been a difficult process,” said Jackson. “I’m saddened (by the remaining divisions).”

“If the conduct of these negotiations has caused division (in the community), I’m truly sorry,” said Mayor Terry Orr. “But it’s been an open discussion, and I hope we’ve had due process.”

Beal addressed the same issue, even as he pressed for a final decision Monday. “Open discussion is healthy,” he said.