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HomeMy WebLinkAbout07/14/2000 - Joint Minutes City CouncilMayor Lynn Mcllhaney Mayor Pro Tempore Larry Mariott City Manager Thomas E. Brymer City Council James Massey Ron Silvia Winnie Garner Dennis Maloney Anne Hazen MINUTES COLLEGE STATION CITY COUNCIL Special Meeting (Joint Retreat) Friday, July 14, 2000 and Saturday, July 15, 2000 G. Roilie White Visitor Center 7707 Raymond Stotzer Boulevard College Station, Texas COUNCIL MEMBERS PRESENT: Mayor McIlhaney, Mayor Pro Tem Mariott, Silvia, Massey, Garner, Maloney COUNCIL MEMBER ABSENT: Councilmember Hazen STAFF PRESENT: City Manager Brymer, Assistant to the City Manager Brandenburg, Assistant City Manager Brown, City Attorney Cargill, Jr., City Secretary Hooks This special meeting was a joint retreat with City of Bryan councilmembers and representatives from the Texas A&M University. Mayor McIlhaney called the meeting to order at 9:15 a.m. on Friday, July 14, 2000. Facilitators from the Aspen Group, Linda Dawson and Randy Quinn set the course for the two- day exercises. Each council member introduced him or herself, and provided the group with their hopes, expectations, concerns and other comments on retreat. Council members developed a list of collaborative efforts that occurred at various levels of government and corporate sector. The group recessed for a lunch break. At 1:00 p.m., council members regrouped and each city participated in the following exercise. "What's working well in College Station", and "What's working well in Bryan". "Barriers for College Station", and "Barriers for Bryan". Council Special Meeting 7/14-15/2000 Page 2 Some of the items listed were: "What's working well in College Station" (CS Council input) Teamwork Trust between staff, council, and community Commitment to community and to each other Focused, vision oriented, empowered staff' Citizens feel confident in their government (feel safe) Quality of life Commitment to education, strong school district Team style of management The following identifies the City of Bryan's perspective of "how well College Station is doing". Home to TAMU Large retail hotel/motel tax base Low crime Zoning Lack of stress on infrastructure Economic Development "What's working well in Bryan" (Bryan Council input) Ability to generate electricity Governance methodology Financially stable Downtown Expanding and Diversity Healthcare Facilities Low Crime Rate Historical Renovations Retirement Opportunities Stable Population Low unemployment Good Schools Caring and Giving Central Location Good Land Use Planning Emphasis on Intergovernmental Relations The following identifies the City of College Station Council's perspective of "how well Bryan is doing". Most of Bryan property is taxable County Seat Rural Electrical Service Strong Economic Service Banking center Civic Pride Council works well together Mary Miller from Texas A&M provided the group a list of strengths and barriers for A&M. Council Special Meeting 7/14-15/2000 Page 3 Strengths Faculty Very popular Academic excellence Desire to be a strong player in community Outstanding Physical attributes (land) Vision for greatness Outstanding staff, students Good support from community Asset to Blinn College Barriers Need more resources Bureaucratic demands from Austin Need for more graduate students Class sizes too large Physical limitations Lack of diversity Traffic congestion/safety Secondary thinking about B/CS Community unto itself Lack of communication College Station Barriers (CS input) Inconsistent communication between entities Dollars Resources Regulation and Legislative Restraints Competing Agendas Competing agendas Multi-jurisdictional Conflicting priorities Growth pressures Services that may need to be provided (Bryan's input) Large growth and Linear Growth Utility power Lack of diversity Bryan Barriers (Bryan's input) Aging Infrastructure Appearance of older areas External agencies (TXDOT) Absentee landlords Railroad Perception of Safety Recalcitrant land owners Finite resources Code Enforcement Infill Development S. College Avenue Perception of poor town (minority) College Station's input Single member district promote voter apathy Past relationships between Bryan/CS Land Use prior to zoning Legislative and regulation restraints High demand in service, low ability to pay for service Extensive discussion was held on action and commitment to facilitate collaboration between each city. The following list identifies commonalities the two cities' found in collaborative efforts. Council Special Meeting 7/14-15/2000 · Vision of something better · Dissatisfaction with current situation · Political courage · Strong communication strategies · Leaders' ability to forge common goals · Intrinsic motivation; can be economics, safety/security, or other · Common needs or opportunity · Thinking outside the box; willingness to change · Willingness to stay the course · Shared learning, better relations · Time running out · Assume broader perspective Page 4 Council members discussed the pending lawsuits that exist on electrical distribution and transmission lines. This issue would be discussed in greater detail by the two Mayors', city managers' and Mayor Pro Tems' from each city in a separate meeting. Council concluded their discussions at 4:55 p.m. on Friday, July 14, 2000 and reconvened on Saturday, July 15, 2000 at 9:20 a.m. Council discussed important areas that must happen for collaboration to begin. Resolve "baggage" of past issues Communicate · Socialize · Increase interpersonal interaction · Hold joint meetings of boards and committees Undertake joint efforts · Transportation · Utilities · Consider creating a new entity to address transportation and utilities · Develop a uniform planning code Collaborate and create a new culture, for councils and staff · Set expectations and hold staff accountable · Culture must become systemic and systematic to be sustainable Facilitators Linda Dawson and Randy Quinn assisted councils in developing a community vision. Mission Statement As a result of our collaborative efforts, citizens will enjoy a high quality of life for a reasonable cost. Council Special Meeting 7/14-15/2000 Page 5 End Results 1. Citizens will participate in a broad range of cultural and recreational experiences 2. Citizens will use cost-effective and comprehensive services Transportation Water Health Utilities 3. Citizens will live in a safe environment 4. Citizens will live in a well-planned community Concluding comments were optimistic. The commitment to collaborate for the common good of the citizenry was commended by everyone in attendance. Councils will continue this collaborative effort by holding future joint retreats to consider implementation. The Joint Legislative Committee will serve as the catalyst to keep both cities on track. The councils will meet with their respective staffs' to receipt input on priorities, financial impact, resource allocation and time frames for all areas discussed on Friday. Hearing no objection, the meeting adjourned at 11:10 a.m. on Saturday, July 15, 2000. PASSED AND APPROVED this l0th day of August, 2000. City Secretary Connie Hooks APPROVED: ynn Mcllhaney~' O:group/council/minute s2000/min7 - 14 - 15. doc