Brazos County commissioners approve contracts with seven organizations that provides services to county residents.
While there was a unanimous vote at Tuesday’s meeting (October 14), concerns were expressed by commissioner Fred Brown.
The first year commissioner said “I hate spending taxpayer dollars on things that, if you individually believe in these different things, then give to them. But it shouldn’t be the county’s responsibility to always open up our piggybank and give to different organizations.”
Wanda Watson disagreed, saying these organizations “serve the whole county” and “what they offer to the county also helps us with the growth of the county.”
Bentley Nettles pointed out these contracts were not just direct donations, but agreements where these organizations will be reviewed for their performance.
The largest amount of money in the group is Brazos County 9-1-1 receiving $1.4 million dollars. That is followed by the Brazos Transit District at $400,800 dollars.
Commissioners also approved $25,000 dollars for the Salvation Army, $12,000 for the Arts Center of the Brazos Valley, $8,300 to the Brazos County Historical Commission, and $5,000 to the Brazos Valley Thin Blue Line organization.
Click below to hear comments from the October 14, 2025 Brazos County commission meeting.
