The Bryan city council had five divided votes during Tuesday’s meeting.
The first of four 4-3 splits was naming Art Hughes Mayor Pro-Tem.
Later in the meeting was a 4-3 vote to increase the amount of money given to the Convention and Visitor’s Bureau. The CVB asked for $238,440. The majority vote calls for the CVB to receive $336,000.
Another 4-3 vote rejected the creation of a separate fund to hold oil and gas revenue collected by the city.
The other 4-3 vote rezones 36 acres across Traditions Drive from the entrance to The Traditions golf course. The plan is to turn most of what’s now a wooded area into a combination of homes, multi-family housing, limited office and retail space, and a possible senior living community.
The council voted 5-2 to give an interest free loan to the developer of the Greenbrier subdivision in east Bryan, off FM 1179. The quarter million dollar loan is for a sewer line extension servicing 110 home sites in Greenbrier and 44 in Stonebrier. In the past the council has approved agreements with developers for a major sewer line in the area as well as extended sewer lines to accommodate new manufacturing plants. In Greenbrier, the developer plans on building 72 homes that are 22 hundred square feet. That’s a target market set by a council majority earlier this year where homebuilders don’t have to pay city fees. Smaller patio homes would be built on the remaining 38 lots.
Among unanimous votes was finishing the purchase and installation of smartmeters for the water customers, which will cost up to $1 million dollars. The conversion began in 2008 with BTU electric meters.
The council also proceeded with purchasing an $800,000 fire engine and a pair of refurbished ambulances for $350,000. Fire chief Randy McGregor says where the new pumper will be stationed when it arrives just over a year from now will be determined after an evaluation of the entire fleet. The new ambulances will be located at stations one and three. McGregor says the city will save a combined $100,000 dollars by removing the patient compartments from the old chassis, replacing the floors, walls, ceilings, and storage cabinets, then placing them on the new chassis.
The council majority also agreed to move ahead with studying the pros and cons of requiring all commercial building owners to have smoke detector systems that report to an alarm service and to have sprinkler systems.