Bryan Council to Consider Adding Charter Election Questions & Housing Incentives

Tuesday’s Bryan city council agenda includes two items from councilman Rafael Pena.

Pena and Al Saenz want the governing body to add three proposed changes to the city charter on this November’s ballot. It would replace a petition drive that started about a month ago. Gathering the most attention, is the idea of banning relatives of councilmembers from serving on city boards. That has drawn public opposition from Mayor Jason Bienski and councilman Chuck Konderla. If a council majority votes against the request from Pena and Saenz, organizers of the petition drive have until July 1 to submit 2,000 thousand signatures, of which 1,400 have to be certified for the November election.

Click HERE to read the charter election request from the council agenda.

Pena and councilman Greg Owens have picked up the year-old request from a developer who wants the city to spend $250,000 dollars towards an $8 million dollar residential complex proposed for the Park Hudson neighborhood. The developer wants the city to help pay for infrastructure of the new project after the city picked up $1 million in property tax revenue last year and another $2.5 half million the city kept when a tax increment refinancing zone was dissolved two years ago.

Click HERE to read the Park Hudson request from the council agenda.

The other proposal before the council comes from city staff to waive fees for builders of single family homes between 2,200 and 3,000 square feet. It does not forward the fee waiver to homebuyers. According to city staff, if ten more homes are built, the loss of fee revenue would be $50,250. But the payback in property taxes from those homes is estimated to take two and a half years. The city would also reimburse the $700 dollar entry fee to the Parade of Homes.

Click HERE to read the homebuilders incentive request from the council agenda.

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