roads

 

 

Wed
29
Aug

Llano $4.8 million street project underway

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Phil Reynolds/The Highlander
Upgrades on Llano streets throughout the community are expected to continue through the end of the year.

 

 

Phil Reynolds
The Highlander •
Pavers continue work on a $4.8 million dollar street project that began this spring in Llano, with the hope of being finished before the end of the year.

All of Llano’s streets will have some work being done on them, said City Manager Scott Edmonson.

Wed
07
Feb

K.C. Engineering offered GShoals roads contract

 

 

By Glynis Crawford Smith

The Highlander

The Granite Shoals City Council on Tuesday night (Jan. 9) gave city staff the nod to negotiate a contract with K.C. Engineering, Inc. for development of the specifications for the city's road bond project.

“Three companies responded to the city's request for qualifications,” said Assistant City Manager Peggy Allen Smith. “The staff recommended K.C. Engineering in Marble Falls.

“After we negotiate a contract that is approved by the council, we expect it to take a couple of months to draw up specification of contractor bids. That keeps us on the schedule we have been estimating, with paving work going on between August and October.”

Water notices

Smith, who serves also as utility director, said residents could expect another notice with their water bills for a fourth quarter sample of trihalomethanes (TTHM) that exceeded the Texas Commission for Environmental Quality (TCEQ) limit.

Fri
04
Aug

Granite Shoals negotiates 'learning curve' on November road bond affirmation vote

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Glynis Crawford Smith/The Highlander

Eric Tanner, right, chairman of the Granite Shoals Arterial Road Bond Committee discusses with Roger Scarborough the extent of work to take place on the city three main north-south roadways if voters in November re-affirm last year's approval of $3 million in bonds. A town hall meeting Saturday, July 29, was an educational, Q&A on moving ahead with the project.

By Glynis Crawford Smith

The Highlander

In November Granite Shoals will be the first city in the 172-year history of the State of Texas to call an election to re-affirm a bond issue.

That is what citizens heard at the Town Hall Meeting for Road Improvement Bond Update held Saturday, July 29, in Granite Shoals.

“The city attorney (Brand Young) had to go all the way to the secretary of state to see if was allowed,” said Eric Tanner, chairman of the new Arterial Road Bond Committee. “But the city council decided to seek voter re-confirmation before issuing the $3 million in bonds approved last November.”

Tanner's committee was created just because of questions that were bound to arise when a city council hesitated before spending money essentially in hand.

The meeting on road improvements may have drawn only half the crowd that turned out for a recent urban deer update, but they were citizens with plenty of questions.

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