College Station City Council Receives Outside Funding Requests From 10 Outside Agencies

Screen shot from a city of College Station document.
Screen shot from a city of College Station document.

A part of the process the College Station city council uses in developing their yearly budget is hearing funding requests from outside agencies.

Representatives of ten organizations made their pitches and responded to questions during the council’s July 10th meeting.

Click HERE to read and download presentation materials from the city of College Station.

The conversations also provided some background into agency operations.

Brazos County chief appraiser Dana Horton said increased funding is the result of an increase of valuation protests from what used to be 7,500 to 10,000 a year to more than 22,000.

Arts Center of the Brazos Valley CEO Leslie Bowlin said they have not had an increase in funding “in quite some time”, while the city’s population and the number of visitors have increased. The Wednesday after making the budget request, the council voted to not increase funding for the 2026 fiscal year.

Aggieland Humane Society is preparing for its 15th year of providing animal control services for College Station. Executive director Katrina Ross says a proposed $45,000 dollar budget increase for operations is due to, among other things, adding a veterinarian and more support staff and a 22 percent increase in maintaining buildings.

The director of Keep Brazos Beautiful, Brooke Arellano, said the lion’s share of volunteer assistance last year was the collection of 2.25 tons of trash, which is included in reports to state and national organizations that qualifies them to apply for “very large grants”.

A vice president at the Brazos Transit District was asked if they were open to changes in providing services in College Station. Jo Marlow pointed to their new committee composed of representatives from College Station, Bryan, Brazos County, Texas A&M, and the Texas Department of Transportation.

The director of the Brazos County health district, Santos Navarette, says he is waiting for decisions on possible federal funding cuts as the result of the new federal budget. That follows elimination of a $354,000 federal grant in April. The Wednesday after the budget request, the city council voted to approve a $100,000 dollar increase, subject to the same increase being approved by the Bryan city council and the Brazos County commission because of health district bylaws

The board chairman of the local economic development agency, Spencer Clements of the Greater Brazos Partnership, brought up the name of College Station’s largest private employer, FUJIFILM Technologies, has dropped DIOSYNTH.

Click below to hear some of the comments from some the agency representatives speaking at the July 10, 2025 College Station city council meeting.

Listen to “Comments from College Station city council outside agency funding requests” on Spreaker.

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