Tuesday, January 6, 2009
Around Town
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Email from my Mom about Monday Night's Meeting
Karl
From: ecarrol@aol.com [mailto:ecarrol@aol.com]
Sent: Wednesday, September 17, 2008 12:07 PM
To: auctioneer@door.net
Subject: observations
Love ya
Mom
Friday, July 18, 2008
Town Hall Meeting Comments
We had a great Town Hall meeting last Friday at the Senior Citizen's Center. I appreciate Carol and crew at the center for giving us a place to meet and for providing the great cookies.
A lot of what was shared at the meeting was about cleaning up the town and the utility bill changes (water increase and $2.25 ambulance availability charge.)
Since it was determined that the roll-off dumpster area at the city barn is an illegal dump station, we can no longer accept trash there. At present, we are exploring the possibility of putting in a dump for certain types of non-household garbage. This dump could take furniture, limbs, building materials, etc.
The cost to build a dump (not including the land) is about $100,000. This includes engineering fees, excavation, permits, etc. There is another option - a citizen's collection point which would cost around $50,000 less the land. We could place furniture, limbs, etc. Either option would require us to charge something for the service and would require us to add on someone to run the site.
For the time being, you can take your alley trash (couches, building scraps, etc.) to the Littlefield or Lubbock County (Abernathy) land fill. The cost is approximately $24.00 per thousand pounds dumped.
Here are some of the questions that were not asked but instead placed on cards at the end of the meeting.
Q. How can we stop overlooking the drug traffic in the town?
A. As the former Marshal, I can tell you that when law enforcement gets good information, busts are usually made. The problem is a lack of information - without credible information, it is impossible to get the probable cause that is necessary to make an arrest. It is easy to say that there is a problem but it is much more difficult to get informants in to make purchases under police supervision.
If you have information that will help us clean this problem up, it will be greatly appreciated. Information that will help more than anything is traffic patterns. Date and time with license plate number, how long did the vehicle stay at the suspect house, etc. will be greatly appreciated. The information should span a few days or a week to build up evidence of drug trafficking activity. Call the Marshal or the sheriff or email the information to me at mayor@cityofanton.org.
Please understand that the people who are doing this have perfected their craft over time and they have a lot of safe guards in place to keep from being caught. If you have questions or concerns, please drop me a line or give me a call.
Q. What about Animal Control in Town?
A. Animal control takes money for the person to catch the animals and it takes money to dispose of the strays or wild animals (skunks, coyotes, etc.) It is difficult to provide services when the revenue is not there to support it.
Q What about Noise Control?
A. I am sharing the following information with you because to control the noise beyond what is already the law, an ordinance is required. To do this, you need to call City Council members and let them know how important the noise is to them. The Texas Penal Code states the following about Disorderly Conduct:
§ 42.01 a noise is presumed to be unreasonable if the noise exceeds a decibel level of 85 after the person making the noise receives notice from a magistrate or peace officer that the noise is a public nuisance.
85 decibels is about the level of a rock or country concert and must be measured with a decibel meter for it to be enforceable.
From personal experience, I can tell you that the level of noise that we have in town is far below the 85 decibels required to be in violation of Texas law.
Q Are we going to have more town hall meetings?
A. I sure hope so. I will be glad to meet with groups both large and small. Carol at the Senior Center set this one up and promoted it. I have told several who were not able to make it to this one to get a group together, get the date on my planner and promote the event! I am not currently available on Tuesday evenings.
Q If the City has a 60' right of way and streets are 40' then 10' on each side of each street belongs to the city. Why are home owners required to maintain city property.
A. The city does not own the streets and alleys, they just control and maintain them. The property owner still 'owns' the right of way, but for all intents and purposes, the ownership is merely on paper.
According to the Law Dictionary (online) a right-of-way is an easement, a privilege to pass over the land of another, whereby the holder of the easement acquires only a reasonable and usual enjoyment of the property, and the owner of the land retains the benefits and privileges of ownership consistent with the easement. (benefits and privileges of ownership are limited by the wording of the easement.)
Sorry, the city is not going to mow your grass!
If I missed answering your question, please drop me an email and remind me of the topic. Thanks to all who came out and supported the meeting - I look forward to having more of them in the future!
Karl
Sunday, July 13, 2008
Broken Water Main
After stopping by Nana B's to have a quick meal, I headed over to the work-site to find Larry and Mike in about a five foot deep hole almost up to their knees in muddy water. They worked non-stop until the water came back on at around 11:00 pm with full pressure being achieved around midnight when they got the booster pump primed the same night.
I did receive a few phone calls about the lack of water, but I figure that to most in town, the water outage went unnoticed. A big thanks to Larry, Mike as well as their support team (Truman, Roger, Todd and others) for getting our water back on in short-order. Next time that you see them, tell them thank ou for a job well done!
I will be posting several questions that I received at te town hall meeting on Friday once things slow down a bit in th Campbell household!
Karl
Thursday, June 12, 2008
Utility Bills and Taxes
A question that continues to be asked is, “how much, if any are we going to raise taxes and utility bills?” In all honesty, that is a difficult question to answer.
Revitalization costs/needs:
- Fix our streets (currently $15,000 per 20’ Strip one mile long)
- Remove trash from alleys
- Replace missing and illegible signs ($20-$50 each)
- Paint curb corners, fire plugs, etc.
- Repair or replace fire equipment
- Our Volunteer Fire Department recently received a grant for a new fire truck – the city is obligated to match a portion of the cost. ($10,000 to $25,000)
- Purchase equipment
- Backhoe has 6,500 hours and we must plan for a new one in the next 12-18 months. (used replacement investment $25,000 to $50,000)
- Small Road Grader – to keep ditches cleaned out and dirt streets maintained (used replacement investment $25,000 to $50,000)
i. We have numerous dirt streets that have ditches full of dirt causing drainage problems which lead to higher mosquito populations.
ii. Though we have a tractor and box blade, we depend on the county for most of our grading needs such as major road work and ditch maintenance.
- Asphalt maintenance equipment ($7,000 to $10,000)
i. Rather than wait two to four years to re-top our main streets, owning crack repair equipment will allow us to fix cracks as they appear.
ii. This will keep streets from degrading so quickly, saving money or allowing us to re-top a greater number of paved streets.
- Rebuild sewer plant lift station (up to $250,000)
- We currently are at the top of the list for a grant but we have been near the top for several years. (Match requirement 10 to 20%)
- We must have a place for residents to take non-household-waste (large items that will not fit in the dumpster)
- Costs
i. Labor
ii. Equipment (truck/trailer)
iii. Roll-Off Dumpster(average cost $450.00 each) or
iv. Fuel/labor to haul items to Abernathy or Littlefield land fill
- Each time that we have allowed residents to dump in the roll-off dumpsters, we end up having to clean up bigger messes than we had to begin with!
- Water system/well maintenance
- We recently bailed two wells at a cost of around $8,000 each on average.
- We have another well that has a high ground that will eventually mean the replacement of the pump motor. This could cost up to $20,000 in addition to the cost of bailing the well while the pipe and pump are pulled.
According to Triple C Waste (the company that empties our dumpsters,) many small cities that they service charge from $7 to $10 per month in addition to their normal utility bills to pay for services such as the above.
|
| State Average | Anton Rate | Difference |
| Average fee for 5,000 gallons of water in small cities | $28.68 | $13.00 | -45% |
| Average wastewater fees in small cities | $19.36 | $ 9.50 | -49% |
| Total Average water and wastewater rates | $48.04 | $22.50 | -47% |
| These rates do NOT take trash, taxes, vector control, etc. into account | |||
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
Thanks for the hard work!
We plan to bring the City's chipper shredder through our alleys in the first or second week of July to turn your limbs into mulch. Please place your limbs in the alley next to your alley fence or alley property line. Limbs can be up to 5" in diameter. If you have a limb that is more than 5" in diameter, please cut off all of the small branches and put the oversized limb in my side yard next to the piece of culvert north of my carport! These larger branches make good fire wood and I can use the exercise. :)
Email questions and comments to me at: mayor@cityofanton.org
Karl
PS If you have reported a problem or issue such potholes, etc., please drop me a line and let me know when you reported it. I will follow up on it for you.
The food boxes are purchased for $6.00 each and are purchased with monetary donations from individual members of the community, local Churches, and Anton's Ministerial Alliance This is a great program for those living on limited means email me for more information. There is an income test in all except extreme cases. If you know someone who might qualify or if you have questions about this program, please call Gayla Smith at 997-3232.
I will let you know when I post the information and photos to www.cityofanton.org .
I know that this sounds rather like a commercial but I must tell you that to see so many volunteers come out on such a challenging day weather-wise AND keep smiling is an awesome site! Watch our Community Activity Calendar for details of upcoming events!
I will post pictures of the event on a new page when time permits.
Karl
