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Board meetings and strategic plans from Gregory Alan Butcher's organization
The meeting began with the Pledge of Allegiance and a statement regarding compliance with the Nebraska Open Meetings Act, including procedures for citizen address. Key administrative actions included the approval of an agreement with JO Consulting Inc. for a Water System Master Plan, with a cost of $123,500, covering the full scope of the water system study. The City Administrator's report was presented. Following this, upcoming community events were discussed, including a Young Professionals coffee and combos event, free business advice sessions hosted by the Chamber, ribbon cuttings for Timber Works and Dragonfly, the annual awards banquet, and Seward hosting a regional Civics Bee for middle schoolers.
This document segment appears to be part of the July 17, 2018 Seward City Council Meeting (Part 2 of 2). Due to the nature of the provided content (a WEBVTT file excerpt containing only timestamps and minimal transcription fragments), specific discussion topics, agenda items, or formal actions taken during the meeting cannot be accurately summarized.
The meeting began with the Pledge of Allegiance and a declaration regarding compliance with the Nebraska Open Meetings Act, including disclosure of meeting recording processes. Key discussions included the election of a council president. The consent agenda covered authorization to advertise for public bids for the Worthman Boulevard water main phase three project, which involves extending a 16-inch main to complete a loop in the rail campus, costing an estimated $367,753. Council also addressed authorization to advertise for bids for the industrial substation expansion project at 284 Road, aiming for a January 2026 completion to support the dairy project ramp-up. Standard administrative items involved authorizing the mayor to sign a maintenance agreement and a certificate of compliance with the Nebraska Department of Transportation for 2026 regarding state highway system maintenance and snow removal obligations. Finally, authorization was sought to add two individuals as signers to the wellness center checking account to streamline prompt payment to sports officials, mitigating a multi-week processing delay. The administrator's report covered ongoing project monitoring, delays related to water tower painting and US Cellular's conversion to T-Mobile, weekly meetings regarding the dairy project, and updates on closing out LB840 and TIF reports. The cancellation of the lighted holiday parade due to weather was also noted.
The meeting began with the Pledge of Allegiance and established adherence to the Nebraska Open Meetings Act, including disclosure of recording processes. The council addressed the consent agenda, which was approved. The first public hearing concerned an ordinance to revise the Unified Land Development Ordinance (ULDO) articles regarding site development regulations, specifically addressing minimum lot sizes in R3, R4, and urban corridor districts to prevent current multifamily residences from becoming non-conforming lots if rebuilt. The second public hearing involved a Tax Increment Financing (TIF) application by Perry Housing LLC for a redevelopment project at 428 North Third Street, proposing a fourplex construction on a formerly burned/demolished site. Discussions on the TIF application included eligible costs, anticipated valuation, and the impact on population density, noting the project aligns with infill development goals in the comprehensive plan. Council members expressed concern regarding the dilapidated property adjacent to the proposed development, although it is under different ownership, leading to a discussion on whether TIF funds should address neighboring blight.
The meeting commenced with the Pledge of Allegiance and a reading regarding compliance with the Nebraska Open Meetings Act. Key discussions centered on COVID-19 related matters. The council approved the draft minutes from the May 19, 2020, meeting and the consent agenda items. A motion was passed to confirm the Mayor's appointment of Craig Ironsbar to the Tree Board. A resolution concerning risk of exposure to COVID-19 through the use of municipal property for recreational activities was approved, establishing requirements for license agreements, insurance, and participant agreements for sports organizations. Updates were provided on the phased reopening plans for City facilities, including the Municipal Building renovations and procedures for the Civic Center. Further discussion involved the Seward Memorial Library's operational status with staggered sign-up hours and the Senior Center's plan to follow directives from Aging Partners regarding COVID-19 metrics before resuming programming, including the cancellation of this year's potato bake. Finally, the council discussed the plan for opening the city pool, noting capacity restrictions based on state directives (25% of 600 capacity, or 150 patrons not counting staff) and plans to manage patron flow via time-based sessions followed by facility cleaning, with a recommendation to open on or after June 15, 2020.
Extracted from official board minutes, strategic plans, and video transcripts.
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Tim Dworak
Building/Zoning & Code Enforcement Director
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