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Board meetings and strategic plans from Scott Barber's organization
The meeting commenced with an invocation and a moment of silence to remember John Ellsworth, a veteran who served in various law enforcement capacities and as a local justice of the peace. The council approved the minutes from the December 15, 2025 meeting and the claims report for the period of December 11th through December 29th, 2025. The agenda was amended to move reports ahead of an executive session. Significant time was dedicated to special presentations recognizing the retirement of Michael Shortino, an equipment mechanic, after 19 years of service, highlighting his technical expertise, especially with fire apparatus. Awards were also presented for the 2025 Electric Light Parade, including recognition for APS Power, the City of Cassagran Public Works Department, Hexel, and others across various categories such as 'Most Original,' 'Most Festive,' and the Mayor's Award. During public comments, a resident expressed concern regarding proposed MetroLink/T-Mobile infrastructure flags near their property.
The meeting commenced with an invocation and the pledge of allegiance. Key agenda items included the approval of minutes from previous meetings (City Council Regular Meeting of January 5th, 2026; Arts and Culture Commission of December 2nd, 2025; and Planning and Zoning Commission of December 4th, 2025), and the approval of claims for the period of December 30th, 2025, through January 14th, 2026. The council proceeded with the swearing-in ceremony for new police officers. Public comments addressed concerns regarding homelessness and the need for expanded shelter services, and opposition to mass warrantless surveillance technology due to privacy and civil liberty implications. A representative from Lucid Motors offered thanks to the community and council for their strong support against outside influence concerning potential expansion. The high school superintendent provided an update on upcoming community events, including a pep rally for a local food bank representative sponsored by Lucid Motors, and a clinic for middle school students sponsored by the Arizona Cardinals.
The meeting commenced with the call to order and the pledge of allegiance. A procedural motion was passed to move agenda item G4 to the top of the new business section. The minutes from the December 4th, 2025 meeting were approved. The commission proceeded with annual elections, nominating and electing a new chair and vice chair. The public comment portion was held, followed by the primary new business item: a public hearing for a major amendment requested by the Ironwood Village HOA. This amendment seeks to replace turf with decomposed granite and landscaping materials in four central drainage basins, which requires amending the Planned Area Development zoning guide to deviate from the existing requirement specifying turf in these areas. Staff detailed the history of turf maintenance challenges, including weed infestation, failed hydroseeding attempts, and extensive irrigation system replacement in 2023. The applicant provided a ten-year timeline of turf maintenance expenditures and issues, noting that the four target basins have not responded to remediation efforts and are currently mostly dirt. Staff noted that, unlike previous requests that were denied due to concerns over loss of recreational amenity, this specific amendment is supportable as it only affects four basins located alongside an existing central spine walkway, thereby not significantly impacting pedestrian access or recreational space criteria. Staff recommended approval subject to a condition requiring the HOA to survey the existing landscaping against the approved final landscape plan and replace any missing trees and shrubs.
The special meeting commenced with a roll call confirming all council members were present, followed by a motion to move into an executive session held upstairs. Upon returning to the regular session, the council approved the minutes from the July 19, 2021, regular meeting and the minutes from the June 3rd Casa Grande Personnel Retirement Board meeting. Claims dated July 14th through July 27th, 2021, were approved. Following agenda approval, the council held a special presentation involving the swearing-in of a new officer, Jesus Rodriguez. The consent agenda was approved with the removal of item G10 due to a conflict of interest concerning Councilmember Powell, who abstained from voting on that item. Item G10 involved the authorization to purchase a 2022 Ford F-250 pickup truck for the Police Department to replace a 20-year-old vehicle. Ordinance Number 3287, authorizing a contract with Sunrise Engineering for the final design and construction documents for the Quartz and Relief Sewer Project up to $200,000, was discussed extensively regarding its scope and impact on city capacity, and subsequently approved. Finally, the council considered and approved Resolution Number 5329, which ratified the 2021 City of Casa Grande Personnel Policy amendments, including housekeeping items and changes regarding residency requirements, following a discussion on employee notification procedures.
The study session provided a legislative update for the 2026 legislative session, noting that approximately 40 days had passed with nearly 2,000 bills introduced. Key discussion topics involved several proposed bills potentially impacting local control and city revenue. Housing development items included HB 2452 concerning data centers and nuclear reactors, HB 2795 potentially shifting regulation of data centers to the federal level, and HB 2793 to create efficiencies in the annexation process. In housing/development, SB 1241 concerning private permitting for single-trade residential projects and mirror bills HB 2588/SB 1431 aiming to prohibit cities from setting design standards for developments were discussed as concerning measures that strip local control. Public safety topics included resolutions prohibiting photo enforcement systems (HCR 20004/SCR 100004) and SB 1111 establishing guardrails for Flock technology usage. Election discussions covered HB 2022, which moved the primary election date, and SB 1054, which would allow local ordinances with emergency measures to be challenged by referendum. Financial discussions included HB 216 regarding the transfer of undistributed county transportation tax revenues and HB 2400 proposing a motor vehicle tax holiday that raises concerns about long-term state shared revenue decreases. A significant concern was HCR 2052, which would impose a four-year moratorium on cities adjusting or increasing taxes, fees, or rates. Administration topics included SB 1167 allowing municipalities to use websites instead of newspapers for public notices, and HB 218 restricting the city's ability to require licenses for mobile food vendors.
Extracted from official board minutes, strategic plans, and video transcripts.
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