Bryan city councilmen Al Saenz and Rafael Pena have two requests at Tuesday’s meeting regarding the hotel occupancy tax in the downtown area.
One is requiring the Downtown Bryan Association to go through the same screening process as other applicants seeking “HOT” funds, including a review by a committee associated with the convention and visitors bureau. Currently, the downtown association negotiates with the council and city hall administrators.
Click HERE to read background information on the DBA request from Councilmen Saenz and Pena.
In the second request, Pena and Saenz want the council…without a CVB recommendation…to give $25,000 dollars in hotel tax money towards a Vietnam Veterans memorial in front of the Clara Mounce library. This would be in addition to the city already building the monument’s concrete foundation. The Brazos Valley chapter of the Vietnam Veterans Association, which plans to hold at least two ceremonies each year, believes it will be a destination attraction.
Reporter’s note-Pena told WTAW News he originally asked to use general fund money to pay for the Vietnam Veterans memorial contribution. At the request of councilman Chuck Konderla, Pena said he amended his motion to include the hotel occupancy tax as a funding source but not the only source.
Click HERE to read background information on the Vietnam Veterans Association request.
Tuesday’s agenda also takes up three more street projects. The 370 thousand dollar change order puts the price tag for this summer’s road work to over two million. The additions includes repaving Old Hearne Road from Texas to Wilhelm…something that wasn’t scheduled until 2020…along with adding left turn lanes on Leonard Road at Harvey Mitchell, and repaving the access road to the BTU’s Dansby Power Plant between Bryan and Benchley…which will also benefit traffic going in and out of the new Axis Pipe and Tube plant.
Click HERE to read background information on the street work change order.
The council considers first-round approval of new rules for food trucks in Bryan. There will be a few differences compared to College Station. In both cities, mobile operators have to be at least 100 feet from a restaurant. In Bryan, the restaurant owner could give permission for a truck to be closer. In Bryan, trucks could operate eight hours day, compared to five in College Station.
Click HERE to read the background on the proposed regulations for mobile food trucks.
The council takes up a new water rate structure that would affect residential customers who use more than 30,000 gallons a month. That’s about 4,000 thousand of 20,000 residential users. For those customers, it will be the first increase in seven years, and it would not start until October first…after the heat of the summer and peak consumption. A staff study estimates 14 homeowners will pay an additional $50 dollars a month and one who who’ll pay $150 dollars more a month.
Click HERE to read the background on changing Bryan residential water rates.