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HomeMy WebLinkAboutPublicity Vol. 26 (Jan. 1982 - Sept. 1982) Political storms will begin soon From page IA weekend and couldn't be reached for comment. At least two other Col- lege Station residents are considering running for the school board. "I've been asked by several people to run," said former A &M Con - solidated High School teacher Vernon Files. "I'm considering it," he said. "`I'd have their sup- port but I don't know how much more." Chuck Giammona said Friday that he is also considering running. "I'm busy with my other work" at Texas A &M where he is an assistant research biologist in the civil engineering department. "It would take a com- mitment. The commit- ment is there. I'd have to reorganize some ad- ministrative respon- sibilities." Several other area residents have been men- tioned as possible Col- lege Station school board candidates but they couldn't be reached for comment Friday. In Bryan, the three - year terms of school board President Travis Bryan Jr. and Vice Presi- dent James Stegall come to an end. "I haven't really had time to think about it," Stegall said Frtiiiay. "I will probably decide ear- ly in January. I'm think- ing that I will run." Bryan couldn't be reached for comment. There have been no The Eagle, Sunday, Jan. 3, 1982 rumblings about other possible candidates in Bryan yet. ,.x C is ,, .. E ' 5 , . .. lot ' M"t h tl 4 R c' $ % '1 i i 1111M : '''''' i. Eagle photo by Bill Meeks John Black checks traffic via computer • Emergency tra is system has city, iremen pleased By DAVID CRISP behind a storeroom at City Hall. For firefighters, the com- Staff Writer Within seconds, red lights puterized signal system adds a To College Station drivers along halted traffic heading north at margin of safety to 11 different Texas Avenue last Thursday, it Jersey Street and Texas Avenue runs through College Station was just another long delay at a and heading south at Texas and streets, and cuts critical minutes traffic light, wasting a few East Main Drive. Traffic emptied off fire response time. midafternoon seconds of New out of the block. The way was Year's f ve. clear for fire trucks to pull into the For the city, getting the special But the 40- second delay, during normally busy street. fire department system to work is which a new traffic signal system In the imaginary fire run to the another sign that its $950,000 was tested, might someday help Texas A &M campus, the left turn computer - controlled traffic signal save somebody's life. light onto University Drive opened system is near completion. At about 3 p.m., city traffic up moments later and green lights The system, a State Department engineer John Black punched a faced firemen all the way down of Highways and Public signal into a computer terminal in University, left onto Wellborn and his office, which is stuck' away onto Old Main Drive. Turn to SYSTEM, 4A The Eagle, Tuesday, January 5, 1982 Traffic control s stem • • is state -run experiment From page IA before last week. But a study of a Transportation experi- But the system has im- similar system in Atlan- ment paid for mostly proved dramatically in ta, one of 135 in the with federal funds, has the last month, in part United States, found been in operation since because of its worst -ever that computerized February. When it has foulup. It happened signals cut traffic ac- worked properly for 30 when the computer jam- cidents. And Black is days, it will be turned med every traffic light on beginning to notice im- over to the city, which the system for about 15 provements in the traffic will then have to main- minutes while Black was flow, which is what out to lunch. tain it. counts, he says. State traffic engineers While traffic on Texas At any rate, it's better have given the system Avenue zoomed along for the system to have credit for 15 days of on a 15- minute green bugs now, at federal ex- error -free operation. In light, drivers on Univer- pense, than after the city fact, it has not worked sity fumed in a line of takes it over, Black says. perfectly for even one stalled cars that grew fin- Debugging the computer day, if one considers til Black returned and has given the city staff parts like the fire system, shut off the computer, almost a year of tutoring which never worked putting the signals back in handlin, problems. on individual timings. "You now what it's Trapped in the foulup like ?" F e said. "It's like on University Drive that a Ru' ik's cube. You day were several top make '. change over here 0 highway department of- and you foul up a color ficials, who were in town on the other side by 180 for an A &M short degrees. That's just what course. Since then, work it's like." by the system manufac- turer, Eagle Signal Cor- poration, has proceeded rapidly. A special program The system now in- makes the lights along eludes 14 intersections Wellborn Road blink when a train moves along Texas Avenue, down the track. Another University Drive, redirects traffic during Wellborn Road and Jersey Street, but can be Aggie football games — expanded. Covering one an idea that may work wall of Black's office are too well. a bank : of computer When the program last equipment and a large was used during the an map of downtown Col- nual Thanksgiving Day e Eagle , lege Station, complete battle with the g Longhorns, traffic was esday, January 5, 1982 with flashing yellow able to speed away from lights, green arrows and Kyle Field so fast that it white lighted triangles. backed up Texas Avenue Sensors in the streets from FM 2818 — where count the traffic con Texas narrows to one tinuously and the com lane — to University puter adjusts the signals Drive, a distance of to match the iraffic flow several miles. and keep cars moving "I've never seen it do unimpeded. Black con that before," Black said. trols more than 300 com- The system has had its puter commands that share of problems. As communicate with the late as Sunday night, the system, which is con i computer malfunctioned nected to traffic lights forcing maor system ad- over lines the highway department first began justments o ►.Monday. laving in 1979. CS lanners to hold p four Four public hearings, three parking from agricultural and townhouse to area plans, four site plan permits, three commercial and single family residen- final plats and one preliminary plat are tial. on the agenda for a College Station Final plats will be considered on the Planning and Zoning Commission D.A. Smith subdivision, Treehouse meeting Thursday. Place and Southwood Section 26. A The commission, which meets at 7 preliminary plat is on tap for section p.m. in city council chambers at city two of University Park. hall on Texas Avenue, will hold public The commission will look at site plan hearings on rezoning of two lots in permits for a section of the Huntington Southwood Valley from commercial to apartments, for Northgate Colony, for apartment district, rezoning of 22 acres four- plexes at University Park and for near FM 2818 and Holleman Drive phase two of the Treehouse Apart - from single - family to low density ments. apartment, rezoning of two acres at Parking area plans for a veterinary Stallings Drive and Harvey Road from clinic in Southwood Valley, for expan- high- density apartment to planned sion of the Bridal Boutique and for a commercial and rezoning of three motel in Lakeview Acres also will be tracts in the Woodcreek subdivision considered. The Eagle, Thursday, January 7, 1982 • Petitions could stop rezoning A group of College Station residents, primarily from the Cour- tyard Apartments, 600 University Oaks Blvd., presented enough signatures Thursday to the city's zoning com- mission to force a three - fourths vote of the city council to rezone a strip of land in their neighborhood. More than 40 percent of 1 the people living within 200 feet of the northwest corner of the intersection of Stallings and Drive and Harvey • Road signed the petition to protect their neighborhood from the congestion of commer- cial zoning. The zoning commis- sion, after they received the petition signed by about 300 residents, recommended that the council deny Austin developer David Drapela's request to rezone the 2.05 acres of land from apartment - high density to planned commercial. Because of the peti- tion, it would take five of the seven council members, instead of the usual simple maiority. • The Eagle, Friday, January 8, 1982 0 suit challenges CS park land rule ...:,.. •• ,. By JANN SNELL cities, the suit also states. Staff Writer The Fifth Amendment states that private proper- A;developer is challenging in court the constitu- ty cannot be taken for public use without just com- tionality of College Station's requirements for pensation. Turtle Rock claims this right is violated public park land within residential subdivisions. in its suit. The Turtle Rock Corp., which is developing a "The ordinance makes clear that the city is look- subdivision known as West Ridge immediately west ing out for the welfare of the people," said College i of Southwood Valley, filed its suit against the city Station Tax Assessor - Collector Glenn Schroeder. Friday in the 272nd District Court. Schroeder administers the park land ordinance. Turtle Rock claims that the city's demands for "I think if you ask a psychologist or anyone, park dedications violate the state constitution and they'll tell you that space is important for people," the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Schroeder said. "People who are crowded into high Constitution. density dwellings start having all kinds of pro- Ttlrtle Rock's plans for West Ridge received the blems." College Station City Council's stamp of approval City planners nationwide would recommend even this past year in every area but the requirements for more park space than required in College Station, a neighborhood park as specified by the "Park Schroeder said. L1n4 Dedication Ordinance." "It is generally accepted that there should'be an `College Station requires developers to donate one acre of park land for every 100 dwelling units," he acre bf land for every 133 dwelling units for said, compared to College Station's requirement for - neighborhood parks in a development. an acre for every 133 dwelling units. ..3f the developer doesn't want to dedicate land for pks, he can request the city to consider a cash s stitute. ff the city agrees to accept money instead of land, the city must, under the ordinance, use the money within-two years to develop a neighborhood park in th$droximity of the developer's subdivision. ,4l'he city agreed to place $34,200, which was con - trrbur(ed by Turtle Rock in lieu of land, in an escrow atc unt pending the outcome of the suit. Ile ordinance is "unreasonable, capricious and arbitrary," the suit, filed by Bryan attorney Bill Payne alleges. . ; (Turtle Rock) of its property without due process of law, " —a guarantee in the Four - tetnfh Amendment, and "it is discriminatory in nture." - ., • , :'he - ordinances "is not a proper or reasonable ex- else of the police power" allowed incorporated • The Eagle, Saturday, January 9, 19>tit) 2 r Commendable action As some letters to the editor have criticized actions of the College Station city government, I think a rejoinder is in order. I found city personnel to be completely cooperative when they promptly refunded my utility deposit last month. With inflation continually cutting into the real value of the utility deposit, it was commendable of the City Council to remind College Station homeowners that after two years of prompt payment of ori}e's utility bill, the utility deposit shall be refunded upon request. I do appreciate it. � Kathleen Kenefick — College Station CS P &Z approves plan for site of new school College Station planning and zoning commis- sioners approved one site plant for the new Southwood Valley elementary school Thursday but said school district officials will have to bring them a landscape plan before the school gets the go -ahead from city officials. The city commission approved a revised site plan for the proposed 800 -pupil school at Brothers Boulevard and Deacon Drive, but unanimously directed that the school district come back with a detailed landscaping plan. In another rezoning request, opposition from homeowners, including City Councilman Alvin Prause, preceded a commission vote to table rezoning of a University Drive site for a townhouse development. Spokesmen for developer Ronald M. Helton and Associates Inc. of San Antonio said the firm plans to build luxury condominiums on the eight - acre tract, located south of University Drive at the proposed Lincoln•Street extension. Zoning of the tract, which once was proposed for a Sheraton Hotel, was tabled for a staff study on proper development for that whole area south of University. The commission also tabled part of a request for apartment zoning south of the proposed Holleman Drive extension near the intersection of Harvey Road and Dartmouth Drive. Commissioners did approve developer Jim Jett's request for a 10 -acre administrative - professional zone along Harvey Road, but tabled by a 4 -3 vote apartment zoning for another eight acres until the city decides, where the Holleman 1 right -of -way will go. The Eagle, Monday, January 11, 1982 • fi Counc to d new precincts New voting precincts for the City of College Sta Councilman Tony Jones on changes in the Informa- tion will be discussed'by the city council today at 4 tion and Hospitality Center of the Brazos Valley, p.m. in council 'chambers in City Hall on Texas which on Friday will become the College Station Avenue. branch of the Bryan - College Station Chamber of The council will consider adjusting polling places Commerce Convention and Visitors Bureau. to match new precinct lines recently redrawn by the Brazos County Commissioners Court. No action is The change was approved Tuesday by the board scheduled for -this afternoon's work session. of directors of the chamber of commerce. The council today also will hear a report from The Eagle, Wednesday, January 13, 1982 • o TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: The College Station City Council will hold a public hearing on the question of rezoning the following 108 propertyy: TO WHOM 11' MAY 108 Legal Notices th e 2.05 acre northwest ract of located the CONCERN: intersection of Stallings Group "D" - 138 KV Drive and Harvey Road (SH The College Station City Horizontal Line Post In 30), from District R -6. Apart - Counclt will hold a public sulators and Armor Grip ment / High Density to C -3, hearing on the question of Supports Planned Commercial. The rezoning the following until 1:00 PM„ Jarwary 20, application is In the name of property: 1982, at which time the bids David Drapela. Three (3) tracts of and in will be Opened in the office The said hearing will be the Woodcreek Subdivision of the Purchasing Agent at held in the Council Room of located east of Texas the City Hall. Specifications the College Station City Avenue approximately 2,000 may be obtained at the Hall, 1101 South Texas feet south of the intersec- office of the Purchasing Avenue at the 7:00 P.M. tion of Texas Avenue and Agent. All bids received meeting of the City Council the east Bypass to be after t!lat time will be on January 28, 1982. rezoned as follows: returned unopened. The For additional information, TRACT A: A 3.01 acre tract City of College Station please contact me. located north of and adja- reserves tt�e right to waive James M. Callaway cent to Rock Prairie Road or reject any and all bids or and approximately 2,500 feet any and all irregularities in Ass'l. Director of Planning east of the intersection of said bid and to accept the Texas Avenue and Rock offer considered most ad- TOMH Prairie Road from vantageous to the City. - Agricultural Open District, ' These items may be pur- CONCERN: A -O to General Commercial chased with Revenue Shar- District, C -1'. ing funds. CS- 81- TR -ED -6. TRACT B: A 48.42 acre tract 1 -6 -82. 1- 13,82. The College Station City located approximately 3,000 Council will hold a public feet north of Rock Prairie hearing on the question of Road and south of and rezoning the following adjacent to the southwest property: A 21.98 acre tract in the line of the Foxfire Subdlvi- lion from Townhouse Dis- Crawford then north League trict, R -3 and Agricultural located the x i m h ely 360 Open District-A-0 to Single F.M. we 8 west approximately Family Residential District, feet west 2818 the intersection Holleman of F.M. 2818 and Holleman R -1. Drive, from District R -1, TRACT C: A 21.60 acre tract located south of and adja - Single Family Apartment/Low District R-y. • cent to TRACT B from Density. Agricultural Open District, The o Bar "6" o r the A -O to Single Family Re- The a name o Bar tion is ernes. sidential District, R -1. The said hearing will be The said hearing will be held in the Council Room of held in the Council Room of the College Station Hall, the College Station City en 10 South on th Texxas Avenue Hall, 1101 South Texas meeting a at t the the City Council P.M. Avene at the 7:00 P.M. For additional 1 . on January meeting of the City Council on anu on in on January 28, 1982. ntact t me. information, For additional Information, please contact me. James M. Callaway please contact me. James M. Callaway Ass't. Director of Planning Ass't. Director of Planning The City of College Station is accepting bids) for: Group "A" - 138 KV Steel Transmission Deadend Pole (65' Height) Group "B" - Underground Distribution Conductors (750 MCM Copper Power Cable, 300 MCM Soft -Drawn Bare Copper) Group "C" - Distribution Disconnect Switches (Three - Phase, 600 Ampere. Air -Break Switches) i 1 The Eagle, Wednesday, January 13, 1982 19 • CS council to discuss airport needs eeds Partial funding for a $12,000 study of Brazos The City of Bryan, Brazos County and the County airport needs will be considered today by Bryan - College Station Chamber of Commerce the College Station City Council. also would be asked to pay $1,000 shares. Swirling snow cancelled the regular council The council also will consider an ordinance le- work session Wednesday, but council members vying assessments for will try to get through their regular meeting agen- g part of cost of provements to MacArthur and Poplar r streets, at a da at 7 p.m. today in city hall on Texas Avenue. public hearing in December, several landowners The council will consider paying $1,000 as its there objected to their shares of the $81,000 pro - share of a study by the Texas Transportation In- ject. stitute of passenger and freight demands for air- port traffic here. The study has been proposed by The council will hold public hearings on rezon- the Metropolitan Planning Organization, a coun- ing sections of the Ramparts addition and tywide transportation committee that would pay Southwood Valley from general commercial to $8,000 apartment district. January 14 1 82 The Eagle, Thursday , Ja u y 9 € �0o L. .. c (ID � o pizi az E a 0 o c u a v u 0,..c c O � u u to 0 n �cc∎,, et 3 � a L ° - v O _C ro Q 0 v O 0 '"• I, RS p • C • 2 2 c v � � �• .-�� . ..., v o O > W C. a 3s u > 0. to v v o - u • In h u C C v) 'C 0 ' s,:. = 1r R h a - O 1- • c v 00 7 C • c == .°=•v cyE 0 RS .O C v o C C 7 ,2 O - v C '-�>'._oc�o 0 0 > o�' p p a = a° o e O v u cl •C v c 3•• �. O v a ' G, CO n u C v '- C1 [- • 1"I O et a' 0 v v V V= c o, 03 6. c C O ° " a) O O ,.. 2 O o v 1. C , v ti co C. O CL... E w cd >, O E v. °.� • u1 «, o = o fl v ti vV .n ;; 0.> la. CU O cv • ro in • u v is = v 3 N ce 6 c- o v v Car ">czcoc 1: , --a 0 O _ v ti.. 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S T 0 y 0 p„ CU c c v I .� 3.�v >,EU M C�4 u o a ou c - u ° V • U w a� c° > c c c c v c ° 0 • T w > e ▪ w e to u ° 0 0 6 -' : 8b F, 4_, 2 a T' 1 Q 5 %), 0 p- -' 'et N Y 0 .. 0 00 u , c cz >. = O O c v • v Q •p " v' ?) v O cr1 U o ' c v , c -o _ V • U 0 v .4 ° v E- .3 • = 0 o 0 c� o Council K proposal Cr O s ower p College Station' city could be cheaper for the $Cyan Utilities Direc- made a proposal to pro - council members Mon- university than continu- tor Gailord ,White said vide electricity to the day rushed to put their ing its present contract the City of Bryan has not university." stamp of approval on a with the Brazos Electric city proposal to sell elec.- Cooperative, which has , "� tricity to Texas A &M gone before the Public University by 1983. Utilities Commission for The proposal will be a new rate tariff, Bardell submitted today to said. A &M's board of regents, Staying with the which, is holding commit- cooperative also would tee meetings this week. require A &M to make its Council members own capital i m- unanimously authorized provements, he added. City Manager North Rate increases that the Bardell to make the pro- city receives from its sup - posal, which would pro- plier, Gulf States vide the city • with Utilities, would be pass - revenues that will exceed ed on to the university, the cost of supplying the Bardell said. power by 15 percent. The proposal calls . for a $30,000 per month minimum-charge and in- cludes a provision that would enable the city to buy back surplus elec- tricity at a 10 percent dis- ` count. But the city also will have to make substantial capital improvements to supply the ,,power, in- cluding adding transformers and at least Consultants to one 138,000 -volt powerline. The equip- With planners ment, however, could Consultants who are Tuesday, January 19, 1982 also be used to service preparing a Plan ,2000 other parts of the grow- The Eagle for the City of College ing city. Station will meet at 7 Capital costs, which could total more than $2 p.m today with the Col million, would` be paid lege Station Planning and Zoning Commis- out by A &M over a 20- year period at a monthly sion. cost ranging from Representatives of $27,000 to $69,000, Snyder and Associates depending on .m- and Wyse and Associates the i will be at the meeting to provements made. discuss goals and needs Bardell said that by for the city over the next will need ed pan the additional 20 years. The meeting five to 10 megawatts of will be held at College Station City Hall. supplemental power to The consulting firms use at peak periods of are expected to complete the day, plus up to 15 a draft plan sometime in megawatts for standby April. At that time, r emergency power. public hearings on the .Buying from the city document will be held both by the planning and zoning co.nmission and the city council. \• v ° • - . a 0 0 • c, $... • 13 r w -2 ." I' ° p c' g va C b (. > O U L c�Y • ^q N .O a ( a -� .o .,...L. cv 3 c-. 3 > ca. 6 Q O g c *,; `' 'o a al r, O - r° '0a — a L. rte/ Q : � p : 0 0 b o a) ��`°�° v 4.4 t o 1 �1 u al 7 O g o j ) n O O , as . ' 0.o3 = 3a , vcvo ° -6�, ^� O a E a W O 0 X `° ° a ° O (-9 • „, v D. cv D p n ,� o " g `' 00 " � P.-11 v 3 o v ao rH al ct w Z � E cr >,"1:3 >,"1:3 U N T O E L� " ai - 0 0 z :a "- a O ao ti .4.4 Q W cv cd O o i C› ° E u a • ca t o o 4J � a - =_ >,> —„ o I ca ,.. 0 -a o • OU o v Q 0 c) 0 3 619 w O ..o vi 3 N 1...) c 3 b w a) tj > u O «S a O «S a 0 CCS y .0 a 4- cd a) "O G E c a --a0 N to (71 ° a v E U b >;,- a, Ey ,. () a v CTS a s • o CO w a W a ° H a b CU 0 Y v V O Z. ° t7 a CU �� a, w. o _ va H cv — a o °' to av 7a 00oo '� EA,,, , U ar . �. 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C _ , < -n m 'c a co Pp .0 0 , S z - A , 1 m C n O • S v, n o< (To ^ 0 m m „ C (-De' v' y 2 g O rD 2 ,....7,-• -. — TO m 17. Q N S ? < O (D cup n A, a 0 v -, 0 co rn v 0 ~ V, • CS council votes on rezoning plan College Station city council members Thursday will get a chance to add the final word on a zoning change that has drawn fire from nearby residents, the planning and zoning commission and the city staff. Petitions against rezoning two acres at Stallings Drive and Harvey Road to a commercial district have been signed 6y 353 residents, most of them from the Courtyard Apartments at 600 University . Oaks Blvd. .. Because the petitioners comprise more than 20 percent of the people within 200 feet of the area, at least six of the seven city council members have to vote for the change to overturn staff and planning and zoning commission recommendations to deny the change. At a Jan. 7 planning and zoning commission hearing, residents expressed concern about the traf- C fic, noise and trash inherent with commercial development. The staff opposed the application from Austin developer David Drapela because it does not meet city plans for Harvey Road and because vacant commercial sites are available. The -City council, which meets at 7 p.m. in City Hall, also will hold a public hearing on rezoning three tracts of land in the Woodcreek subdivision to commercial and single- family residential zoning. The planning and zoning commission recom- mended approval of the request but with a more restrictive commercial zone than that proposed by the applicant, Woodcreek Joint Venture. The Council Thursday also will consider appoint- ment of an assistant city secretary and of a member to the Bryan - College Station Chamber of Com- merce industrial development subcommittee. The Eagle, Wednesday, January 27, 1982 - TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: The ,College Station City Council will hold a public, hearing oh the question of rezoning the following pro- perty: - A 33.68 acre tract located on the south side of Harvey Road (SH 30) approximately 750 feet west of the intersec- tion of Harvey Road and Dartmouth Drive. from Apar- tment /High Density District R-6 and Sinle Family Re- sidential District R -1 to Admi nistrative /High Density Dis- trict R -6, and Single Family i Residental District R -1. The application is in the name of I James E. Jett. The said hearing will be held in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall, 1101 South Texas.Avenue at the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the City Council on February 11, 1982. For additiona information, please contact me. James M. Callaway • Ass't. Director of Planning The Eagle, Wednesday, January 27, 1982 • • Council authorizes survey Declaring an emergency, the College Station City planning and zoning commission, which also Council Thursday authorized a seismic survey in the recommended denial of the request. University Park subdivision for this Sunday. Developer David Drapela plans to resubmit the Sam Wood, representing Frank's Drilling and application as a request for an administrative- Seismic Survey Co., said 13 underground explosive professional zone. charges will be set along a line from the Bryan city The council approved rezoning of three tracts in limits to University Drive near the old Fed Mart the Woodcreek subdivision, which is located near , tore. The blasting is done to search for oil and gas , Texas Avenue and Rock Prairie Road. The tracts deposits. Were rezoned for single- family residences and low - The item, which was added to the meeting's agen- density commercial operations. da late Tuesday, was considered by the council on Employment of an assistant plumbing inspector • an emergency basis after Wood said the company was approved after a closed session. City Manager might lose its right to enter the land, which is up for North Bardell said the city issued more than $80 sale next week. million in building permits last year and has fallen , After consulting geologist Chris Matthewson as far as 20 inspections behind. Interviews for the , recommended approval, the council approved the new position will begin today, he said. request unanimously. Lori Martin and Sherry Albrecht, both city 41,0 The council also tabled a request to rezone two employees, were named as deputy city secretaries to acres at Stallings Drive and Harvey Road as a com- fill in for City Secretary Dian Jones when she is out mercial zone. of tire office. Bardell was named to the Bryan- Commercial zoning had been fought by nearby College Station Chamber of Commerce industrial residents, who submitted a 353 -name petition to the development subcommittee. The Eagle, FRiday, January 29, 1982 • t ; CS P &Z tables rezoning request on 22 -acre tract A rezoning request that could set the Properties, said sewer lines in the area pace for development on College Sta- can handle the development. City tion's west side will be reconsidered Planner Al Mayo said the area might Thursday by the planning and zoning be suitable for high- density housing, commission. since Texas A &M's west campus has a Commissioners tabled on Jan. 7 a re- projected enrollment of 24,000 quest for apartment zoning on a 22- students by 1990. acre tract near the intersection of FM The commission, which meets at 7 2818 and Holleman Drive. The city p.m. in City Hall, also will hold public staff was asked to look at possible hearings on four rezoning requests. developments in the entire 216 acres The changes include a request from bounded by Luther Street, FM 2818 Tony Jones for a neighborhood and an old railroad right -of -way. business district in Southwood Valley, a request from Edsel Jones for com- Commissioners were particularly mercial zoning to place a convenience concerned about the extension of sewer store on Dowling Road, a request from service to the area, which is near the Haldec Inc. for single - family zoning edge of the Carter Creek watershed. for parts of the Emerald Forest sub - Commissioner Anne Hazen also ex division, and a request from Wood pressed concern about the future creek Joint Venture for a planned unit availability of single - family residences development district in the proposed in the area. Woodcreek subdivision near Texas Jerry Bishop, representing Bar "6" Avenue and Rock Prairie Road. The Eagle, Wednesday, February 3, 1982 NOTICE TO BIDDERS Sealed Proposals ad- dressed to the City of College Station, Texas for the construction, including the supply of necessary labor, materials and equip- ment, of 138 KV electric transmission and 12.5 KV electric distribution lines will be received at the Office the City Secretary, City of College Station, Texas until 1:00 P.M. on the 18th day of February, 1982. The major components of the project are: 1.) Construct ap- proximately 3.32 miles of new 138 KV overhead trans- mission line. 2.) Construct ap- proximately 0.65 miles of three - phase, 12.5 KV, over- 1 head, single- circuit distribu- tion line underbuild to new 138 KV overhead transmis- TO WHOM IT MAY Sion line. CONCERN: 3.) Retire approximately 0.28 miles of existing three- The College Station Plan- phase, 12.5 KV, overhead, Wing and Zoning Commis - single- circuit distribution Sion will hold a public line. hearing on the question of rezoning the following pro - all as more fully described in petty: the Speciffcaiiions. Bids received by 1:00 P.M., A 9.0 acre tract located on of February 18, 1982 will be the north side to Krenek publicly opened and read in Lane approximately 2,000 the City Council chambers feet east of Texas Avenue of the City Hall In Coll ge from Single Family Re- Station, Texas,. at. 1:00 (M. sidential District R -1 to on the same date. Bids Townhouse- Rowhouse Dis- received after 1:00 P.1v1., trio R -3. The application is February 18, 1982 will be in, they name of James H. returned unopened to the Behling. sender. The said hearing will be Plans and Specifications for held in the Council Room of this project may be obtained the College Station City from the Engineer, Electric Hall, 1101 South Texas Power Engineers, Inc., P.O. Avenue at the 7:00 P.M. Box 9970, 203 Hpllemen meeting of the Planning and Drive East, College Station, Zoning Commission on Texas 77840 (Phone: Thursday, February 18, 1982. 713/693 -1777) upon payment of $20.00 per set, which For additional information. payment will not be subject please contact me. to refund. --� James M. Callaway Bids will be evaluated by the Ass't. Director of Planning City based on the quality of materials to be furnished, the qualifications and ex- perience of the Bidder, the Bidder's ability to meet the specified construction schedule, as well as the price offered. The City reserves the right to accept the Proposal that best suits its needs whether or not the price is lowest and also reserves the right to reject all bids or waive in- formalities. 1-31- 82.2 -8 -82 The Eagle, Sunday, The Eagle, Wednesday, January 31, 1982 February 3, 1982 Zf Murl Bailey files for CS council Murl Bailey, a 41- day, Bailey listed his ma- year-old profes or at jor concerns as planning, Texas A &M University, growth, stable city has announced he will government and city ser- Y run fo Place 2 on the vices. College Station City Monday was the first 7 lo ot Council against incum- day for filing for city � bent Bob Runnels. council slots that will be b` Bailey, a professor of filled by voters in spring 1 veterinary physiology elections. The filing and pharmacology, is deadline is March 3. vice chairman of the Col- Bailey obtained his Murl Bailey lege Station Planning doctorate in veterinary the U.S. Army Reserve, a and Zoning Commis- medicine from Texas is married and has two C: sion. He also has been a A &M in 1964 and com- children. member of the city's pleted post - doctoral Voters will elect three t zoning board of adjust- studies at Iowa State councilmen and the ment. University in 1968. He is mayor from the seven - In a press release Mon- a lieutenant colonel in seat council. • • ' - T - -- - ^ The Eagle, February 2, 1982, Tuesday III r, Pig in a poke? The City of College Station has a "pig in the poke" and is trying to get the taxpayers of Brazos County to bail them out. The site of the proposed new industrial park off Greens Prairie Road isn't attracting industry because it has no rail service. As an alternative, a fancy "superhighway" might en- tice new industry to locate here. Therefore, a new highway project — widening Highway 6 to four lanes divided, with frontage roads, is being crammed down the throats of the county taxpayers. The project takes 300 to 700 feet of right of way — virtually eliminating every small business and many family homes from College Station to the Navasota River. Until as recently as this past fall, the proposed widening of Highway 6 was to take only about 50 to 150 feet of right of way. The new proposal benefits only the developers of the proposed Industrial Park and the developers of the adjacent tracts of land. Practically no publicity has been given this project, which partially accounts for the poor attendance at the public hearing at the Brazos Center last Tuesday night (Jan. 26). As a matter of fact, it appears to me that it is delibetately being kept quiet. The taxpayers of Brazos Coun- ty are expected to pick up 10 percent of the costs so that a few developers can have a gold mine and the taxpayers and the property owners and renters along Highway 6 get the shaft. Carroll Bell and Mary Ellen Bell College Station The Eagle, Friday, February 5, 1982 ry W 5" 'vKa • f x ,�XxdA>r Y } 3 _ Y k Sy ¢• L Lynn Nemec Ples Turner Turner Nemec file for council spots Two more candidates have filed for city council positions in Bryan and College Station municipal elections April 3. In College Station, Lynn Nemec, a member of the city parks and recreation board, has filed for Place 6, which currently is held by Jim Dozier. Dozier has until the March 3 filing deadline to file for re- election. In Bryan, Ples Turner, a city councilman for six • years, has filed for a new term. Incumbents John Mobley and Henry Seale already had filed for of- fice, but no opponents have appeared for any of the candidates. Nemec, 33, helped organize the Raintree Homeowners Association and is now forming the College Station Association of Neighborhoods. She was active in the fight last year over rezoning land near Raintree to house the new Westinghouse Elec- tric Corp. plant. "I believe in a balanced city council to ensure the protection of our neighborhoods while encouraging adequate commercial and industrial development," she said. She has worked for the Bryan- College Station Chamber of Commerce and radio stations KTAMKORA, but is now a housewife. Raising her two children and serving on the city council would be a full -time job, she said. Turner, 59, has been a city mail carrier for 26 years. He survived runoff elections to win his first two terms in office, but ran unopposed in 1980. "With federal aid being cut, we need to take a close look at the budget and hold taxes to a minimum ;" Turner said. He also said he wants to see through the completion of the public works ser- vice center, programming of the new computer system and city drainage improvements. The Eagle, Friday, February 5, 1982 NOTICE TO BIDDERS Sealed Proposals ad -• dressed to the City of College Station, Texas for n, the construction, including Plans for three parks the Supply of necessary labor, materials and equip- ment, of 138 KV electric transmission and 12.5 KV to be discussed by board electric distribution lines will be received at the Office the City Secretary, City of College Station, Texas until Plans' for three city parks will be reviewed at a 7 1:00 on the major Thh day p. meeting Tuesday of the College Station Parks components of the project are: and Recreation Board. The meeting in the city hall council chambers, 1 ) Construct a p - proximately 3.32 miles of will include public hearings on Anderson' Athletic new 138 KV overhead trans- mission line. Park at Holleman Drive and Anderson Street, 2.) Construct ap- proximately 0.65 miles of Brother's Pond Park at Ponderosa Drive and Rio three - phase, 12.5 KV, over- head, single- circuit distribu- Grande Street and Raintree Park on Raintree Drive. tion line underbuild to new Public hearings were held last month to find out 138 KV overhead transmis- sion line. what residents would like to have in the arks but 3.) Retire approximately p 0.28 miles of existing three- • they were lightly attended. Tuesday, the city staff phase, 12.5 KV, overhead, single- circuit distribution will present preliminary designs for the three parks. line. Also Tuesday, parks board members will hear a all as more fully described in the Specifications. Bids status report on the city's parkland dedication received by 1:00 P.M., February 18, 1982 will be funds. publicly opened and read in the City Council chambers of the City Hall in College Station, Texas, at 1:00 P.M. on the same date. Bids received after 1:00' P.M., February 18, 1982 will be returned unopened to the sender. Plans and Specifications for this project may be obtained from the Engineer, Electric _ Power Engineers. Inc., P.O. 108 Legal Notices Box 9970, 203 Holleman Drive East, College Station, Texas 77840 (Phone: 713/693 -1777) upon payment ' until 10:00 a.m., FEBRUARY of $20.00 per set, which 22. 1982, at which time the payment will not be subject bids will be opened in the to refund. office of the Purchasing Agent at the City Hall. Bids will be evaluated by the Specifications may be ob- City based on the quality of tained at the office of the • materials to be furnished, Purchasing Agent. All bids the qualifications and ex- received after that time will perience of the Bidder, the be returned unopened. The Bidder's ability to meet the City of !College Station specified construction reserves the right to waive ' schedule, as well as the or reject any and all bids or price offered. The City any and all irregularities in reserves the right to accept said bid and to accept the the Proposal that best suits offer considered most ad- its needs whether or not the vantageous to the City. I price is lowest and also These items may be pur- reserves the right to reject chased with Revenue Shar- all bids or waive fin- ing funds. 1- 31 -82, 2 -8 -82 formalities. 1- 31 -82, 2 -8 -82 81 -82 -8 The City of College Station is accepting bidls) for: ONE -'/z TON PICKUP The Eagle, Monday, FEbruary 8, 1982 CS Council to decide on '82 bond expenditures College Station City the frontage request the of Mayor Gary Halter Council members will try improvements. The and council members Pat to decide how much of a policy allows a few large Boughton, Jim Dozier $27.3 million bond issue property owners, such as and Bob Runnels. to spend in 1982 when businesses which cause None of the in- they meet at 4 p.m. to- excessive street damages, cumbents have filed for day in City Hall. to force street re- election. Policies on assessing assessments on >< property owners for homeowners who may street improvements and not need better streets, on paying a share of the opponents said. cost of oversized streets, Owners of corner lots wa and sewer lines also have complained also will be reviewed. that they pay an unfair The city last year sold share not only because $4.5 million in bonds they can be charged for after voters in April ap- two streets, but also proved the $27.3 million because their longer side bond issue. Council lots increase their share, members will try to because they are charged decide how much more on the basis of the to spend this year, and number of feet of fron- when the most favorable tage. time to sell will be. Council members also Projects on tap in- will review a city policy clude the expansion of of paying a share of costs the College Station City to developers to build Hall, which also will be larger streets, water and discussed today. sewer lines to ac- The work session on c o m m o d a t e future property assessments growth. was scheduled after In its 7 p.m. meeting several landowners who Thursday, the council were sent bills for part of will consider a request the MacArthur and fora $4,000 grant to help P api a r street i m- pay the costs of bringing provements complained the Magna Carta to that their shares of pav- Texas A &M Feb. 28- ing costs were unfair. March 2. The Bryan City City policy is to charge Council rejected a street frontage owners similar request Monday. for two- thirds of con- A municipal election struction costs if Ian- for April 3 also will be downers of 51 percent of called for the positions The Eagle, Wednesday, February 10, 1982 NOTICE The Zoning Board of Ad- justment for the City of College Station will consider V a request for a variance in 108 , legal Notices the name Joe G. Marek hearing On the question of College l Sttat on, TX 77840 Said case will be heard b rezoning the following A n 0.81 y acre tract or parcel the Board at their regular of land situated in the meeting in the Council Crawford Burnett League Room, College approximately 200 feet Hall, 1101 Texas Aven Station ue City on southwest of the intersec- Monday, February 15, 1982, lion of Dowling Road and at 7:0n . of the case is as F . M . 2818 from Ad- The natu ministrative /Professional follows: District A -P to Planned APPlicant is requesting to Commercial District C -3. The expand a non - conforming structure. application is in the name of Edsel G. Jones. Farther information is The said hearing will be zon of the City of held in the Council Room of College Station, the College Station City 8868 ext. 249. (713) 696 - Hall, 1101 South Texas 1 Avenue at the 7:00 P.M. Jane Kee meeting of the City Council Zoning Official on Thursday, February 25, -- _ _ 1982. TO WHOM IT MAY For additional information, CONCERN: please contact me. James M. Callaway The College Station City Assistant Director of hearing will hold a public Planning rezoning the question of g the following • TO WHOM IT MAY property A 39.7: CONCERN: A 39.7 acre cte approximately 290 tract feet north d The College Station City k Prairie Road lo and Council will hold a public 1 2500 of feet east of the inter - a hearing on the question of rezoning the following I section Roc of Texas Avenue and Rock Prairie Road from property: Agricultural Open Space AportionofLot2A,Biock District A -O and Townhouse -Rowhouse Dist 46, Southwood Valley Sec- trict R-3 to Planned Unit lion 10A from Townhouse- I Development District P.U.D. Rowhouse District R -3 to (Dist. No. 1). The a Neighborhood Business is in the name of Woo District C -N. The application Joint Venture. is in the name of Tony The said hearing will be Jones. held in the Council Room of The said hearing will be the College held in the Council Room of Hall, 1101 outhon Texas the College Station City Avenue at the u 7:00 P.Ms Hall, P.M. South Texas meeting of the Cit Avenue at the 7:00 P.M. on February 2 Council meeting of the City Council For additional information, on Thursday. February 25, please contact me. 1982. James M. Callawa For additional information. Assistant Director of please contact me. Planning James M. Callaway Assistant Director of ___ ___ Planning TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: TO WHOM IT MAY The College Station City CONCERN: Council will hold a hearing On the public The College Station City rezoning the q fo lllowing Council will hold a public property: hearing on the question of Emerald Forest Phases 4 rezoning the following and 5, 22.2 acres, located property: adjacent to and east of A 8.876 acre tract located Emerald Forest Phase 3 on the south side of Un- from Agricultural O iversity Drive approximately Space District A -O to Single 1,000 feet east of the inter- Family Residential District section of Fedmart Drive R -1. The application and University Drive, from name of Hlec,Inc. is in the I Single Family Residential The said hearing I District R -1 to Townhouse- il wol of Rowhouse District R -3. The I held C the Council Room City application l lication is in the name the College Station Texas of Ronald Helton and Ave s PP Hall, 11 at South Te xanue at the 7:00 P.M. Associates, Inc. meeting of the City The said hearing will be on Thursday, February Council held in the Council Room of 1982. Y, 25, the College Station City For additional information, Hall, 1101 South Texas please contact me. Avenue at the 7:00 P.M. James M. Callawa l meeting of the City Council I Assistant Director of or February 25, 1982. Planning For additional information, please contact me. _ James M. Callaway TO WHOM IT MAY Assistant Director of CONCERN: Planning _ The _ College Station C '��-- - - - -_- -• - Council will hold a public f t The Eagle, Wednesday, February 10, 1982 Boughton to run for third council term College Station City Councilman "asset to the city during this critical Pat Boughton filed Wednesday to run growth period." She called for growth for a third term in Place 4 in the April 3 in an "orderly manner to ensure the municipal elections. citizens that College Station will re- She became the third candidate in main the great community that it is." the race for four council positions, and she is the first incumbent to file for re- She has served on a number of city v , election. Planning and zoning commis- council committees, including the staf- sioner Murl Bailey has filed against fing committee, which helped bring Councilman Bob Runnels and parks about city employee pay raises, and the ..., . _ :11 and recreation board member Lynn community center committee. Nemec is running against Councilman She obtained a business administra Jim Dozier. Mayor Gary Halter also is tion degree from Texas Women's '"' up for re- election. University in 1953. She and her hus Boughton, 50, said her four years of band Rick have four children and three experience on the council will be an grandchildren. Pat Boughton The Eagle, Thursday, February 11, 1982 04 »Egg-citing week 4.4 � F` f David Crisp , /' In case you hadn't noticed, last week was "Eg- gshell Fine Art Week" by order of the city councils of both Bryan and College Station. That may sound like one of those items you run across in "Bureaucratic Blunders ", but Dorothy Gill had samples of finely decorated ostrich and cassowary eggshells on hand to demonstrate that the 24 members of the newly formed Bluebonnet Eggshell Art Guild mean business. Purpose of the special week is to help guild members "get in touch with other eggers," Gill said. For the city councils, it was routine business. Since October, one council or the other has pro- claimed "National Patriotism Week," "The Great American Smokeout," "Bryan Viking Football Week," "We Believe in Marriage Day," and "Na- tional Vocational Education Week." Most of the problems of the citizens and city government of College Station could be solved if everyone was "filthy rich," Councilman Jim Dozier said at a meeting last week. "I think we ought to pass a law making us all rich," Dozier said. "But it'd be just like all the other ones," Coun- cilman Larry Ringer objected. "How would you ever enforce it ?" * ** College Station Mayor Gary A BFt Mayor Leslie D. Clayton have been named to a Texas Municipal League statewide task force on Texas' long -range water needs. TML president Alan Henry, who also is mayor pro tem of thirsty Lubbock, said the 50- member panel will look at both water supply and sewage treatment problems. Solving the state's water problems could cost $50 billion to $105 billion between now and the year 2030. The task force's job will be to present the 1983 Legislature with a plan to pay for it all. The Eagle, Sunday, February 14, 1982 Dozier seeking re- election By DAVID CRISP Boughton and Mayor Staff Writer it Gary Halter are running Jim Dozier, the dean without opponents. of College Station City ,E ' . In his next two years, Council members, has said Dozier, "I would filed for re- election , �,�.� . _ , against challenger Lynn ,e r 3 like to continue many of � the programs we've Nemec, who is running started here in the city, for her first elected of such as better streets, better utilities, better fice. Dozier, 58, has been , . traffic flow, better on the council for 12 recreational facilities and years, interrupting his better police and fire tenure to serve as College protection." Station city attorney Dozier is a native of from 1972 to 1974. He Waco, but has lived in said he was undecided Jim Dozier the Bryan - College Sta- about running again un- tion area since obtaining til Nemec filed, which race is the first contested a law degree from the m a d e r u n n i n g a city council race in either University of Texas 30 "challenge." College Station or years ago. He has lived Asked about issues in Bryan. In College Sta- in College Station since the April 3 election, tion, Murl Bailey has fil- 1955 and is an associate Dozier replied, "The on- ed against incumbent professor of finance at ly issue is that she wants Bob Runnels, who says Texas A &M. my job." he will run again. Incum- He is married and has The Dozier -Nemec bent councilman Pat three children. • The Eagle, Wednesday, February 24, 1982 • Gity council denies zoning change • on Universit y Drive • by Charlotte Boyd tract near Rock Prairie Road In other business, Mayor Battalion Reporter and Texas Avenue from an agri- Gary Halter signed a proclama- • A request to rezone an 8 -acre cultural open district to a plan- tion designating March 2 as • tract on University Drive for 112 ned unit development. Texas Flag Day. townhouse units was denied by the College Station City Council Thursday night during a 11/2 hour meeting at City Hall. Ronald M. Helton and Asso- ciates, Inc. from San Antonio, requested the rezoning to meet College Station's housing shor- tage for young professional families near campus and busi- ness areas. A spokesman for the developer said p the average con- dominium in College Station costs $53,000 to $55,000. The proposed units would cost $65,000 to $80,000. College Station resident John ® Crompton said prices are not in- dicative of quality. The develop- ers are building at the expense of existing residential neighbor- hoods, he said. City Planner Al Mayo said the request was denied because sew - er lines in the area do not have the capacity for the proposed units. In other rezoning requests, the council redesignated Emer- ald Forest Phases 4 and 5 as a single family district from an agricultural open district. The council also rezoned a .81 acre tract on Dowling Road and FM 2818 from a professional district to planned commercial. Also rezoned was a 39.7 acre The Battalion, Friday, February 26, 1982 Needed advantage The College Station police department is to be con- TO WHOM IT MAY gratulated for its decision to come down hard on drivers who CONCERN: i illegally park in spaces reserved for the handicapped. The College Station Plan - ning and Zoning Commis - Many retail stores, offices and shopping malls set aside son will hold a public hearing on the question of special parking spaces for the handicapped. Not only are amending Ordinance No. 850. the Zoning Ordinance such spaces generally close to entrances, they also are larger for the City of College Station, revising and clarify- ing District R -3. Townhouse - than regular parking spots to allow for wheelchairs, walkers Rowhouse Purpose: delet- and other special needs of the handicapped. ing duplexes as a permitted use in District R -3; establish- ing duplex construction as a Since 1975, it has been illegal in Texas for anyone other Conditional Use in District than the handicapped to park in such spaces, and College R -3: rpvisidg the permitted uses,4 for District C -2, Station police have begun vigorously enforcing that law. CommtirGial -I fidustrial and District- .'M -2, ' Heavy In- Violators face a possible $50 fine on first offense and a $200 dustrial;' amending the Dis- trict Use Schedule - Table A: fine thereafter. and revising Off - street Park- ing Requirements for The decision to enforce the law is both welcome and need- Veterinary Clinics. The said hearing will be ed. The average person may find it inconvenient and annoy- held in the Council Room of College Station City - frig to have to park half a mile away from a building entrance Hall. 1101 South Texas Avenue at the 7:00 P.M. len a parking spot sits unused -near the entryway, but a meeting of the Planning and Zoning Commission on hursday, March 18, 1982. h andicapped person may find it impossible to complete his or T For additional information, her business at all without the availability of that spot near please contact me. James M. Callaway Ass't. Director of Planning the door. Given the additional obstacles the handicapped face in negotiating public buildings and businesses, it seems a small sacrifice to reserve for their exclusive use parking spots which lessen that burden to some small degree. I iL, The Eagle, Wednesday, March 3, 1982 Needed advantage g The College Station police department is to be con- gratulated for its decision to come down hard on drivers who illegally park in spaces reserved for the handicapped. Many retail stores, offices and shopping malls set aside special parking spaces for the handicapped. Not only are such spaces generally close to entrances, they also are larger than regular parking spots to allow for wheelchairs, walkers and other special needs of the handicapped. Since 1975, it has been illegal in Texas for anyone other than the handicapped to park in such spaces, and College Station police have begun vigorously enforcing that law. Violators face a possible $50 fine on first offense and a $200 fine thereafter. The decision to enforce the law is both welcome and need- ed. The average person may find it inconvenient and annoy- ing to have to park half a mile away from a building entrance when a parking spot sits unused near the entryway, but a handicapped person may find it impossible to complete his or her business at all without the availability of that spot near the door. Given the additional obstacles the handicapped face in negotiating public buildings and businesses, it seems a small sacrifice to reserve for their exclusive use parking spots which lessen that burden to some small degree. The Eagle, Wednesday, March 3, 1982 Protecting Municipal growth ceases to be an unqualified blessing when the quality of life in a community suffers as a conse- quence. Indeed, all segments of a community — residents, businessmen, city officials and developers — have a vested interest in maintaining and improving the quality of life in their community. The quality of life, as much as any other factor, is what attracts new residents and new businesses to a community, and what keeps them there. That, in part, is what makes College Station's park land dedication ordinance both appropriate and necessary. The ordinance, which has been on the books in some form for more 'than a decade and is currently being challenged in court, requires developers of new residential areas in the city to either donate a specified amount of land for use as a city park or to pay the city a set fee to be used to provide a park to serve the growing population. The necessity for such an ordinance is obvious — without such a requirement, the city would be forced either to carry the burden created by additional growth or to allow the quality of life in the community to deteriorate. And cities carry such burdens by taxing those who already live here. Beyond that, however, the ordinance is appropriate in the same way that requiring developers to provide streets, easements and sewer connections is appropriate. Residential developers don't simply build houses, they build neighborhoods — and parks are an integral part of a neighborhood. As such, they are part of the cost of develop- ing residential subdivisions. Certainly the ordinance boosts the cost of a new home somewhat, just as providing streets, sewers, rights -of -way . and easements boost the cost of a new home. But there is a return on that investment for both the home buyer and the community — a return measurable in the quality of life the buyer and his neighbors will enjoy in the years to come. The Eagle, Thursday, March 4, 198V Planners to hold hearings Public hearings on two rezoning ap- 1A, a zone that allows a housing densi- plications will be held during the 7 ty of 12 units per acre rather than p.m. meeting today of the College Sta- eight. tion Planning and Zoning Commis- The change would permit the lots at sion. Highland and Fidelity streets to have The firm of Jerry Bishop and an additional single - family dwelling. Associates has applied for a planned Also today, the commission will con - commercial zone on a vacant three- sider a preliminary plat on the Brushy acre tract currently zoned as a Park subdivision on FM 60 nearly neighborhood business district. The three miles west of the West Bypass. tract, at Welsh Avenue and Nueces Final plats will be considered on the Drive, would be used for an office Courtyard Apartments subdivision complex with attached warehouses. along Stallings Drive between Universi- A hearing also is scheduled on an ap- ty Oaks Boulevard and SH 30, and on plication from Jack E. and Jonathan the first phase of the Eastmart subdivi- R. DeMuynck to rezone parts of two sion, located in an administrative - lots in the West Park addition from professional zone on Southwest single - family R - to single- family R - Parkway near the East Bypass. 1 (110/(fL - 7 - 1 1 ,,,,Jd yi `7700,Lei , 1)/9:2_, �ti v, a as ' > 0.) O al vi o w ', CO '� 0 o o i4 5 aaw ° `� c a ; ° b„ 3 a 0 a N 4 0o n u, CL u o b u • en 'a° a3 • ° 0 " uo ° w o 00 0 voCll. 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Sum of uses for District C -2, Avenue at the 7:00 P.M. fifty dollars (550.00) per set Commercial - Industrial and meeting of the City Counci (nonrefundable) to material District M -2. Heavy IN- on Thursday, March 25, 1982. s u p p l i e r s a n d Drainage and speeding dustrial; amending the Dis- For additional information. subcontractors. trict Use Schedule - Table A; please contact ro blems will be brou and revising Off - street Park- James M. Callall away h PUBLIC NOTICE ing Requirements for Assistant Director of before the College Sta- Veterinary Clinics. Planning The City of College Sta- The said hearing will be held lion City Council by the tion will hold a Revenue in the Council Room of the - - S haring proposed use hear- College Station City Hall, TO WHOM IT MAY Brison Park Community ing on March 25, 1982, at 7:00 1101 South Texas Avenue at CONCERN: 4 m. p.m. in the Council Room the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the Association In a P located at City Hall. This is City Council on Thursday, The College Station City a W ednes an opportunity March 25, 1982. Council will hold a public ior additional information, hearing on question Work session input regarding for citizen g the use of For contact me. r�ezoning the following Revenue Sharing Funds please during the 1982 -83 fiscal James M. Callaway property: Members of the com- year. Individuals or groups Assistant Director of A 3.34 acre tract located on s uch as senior citizens the north side of Welsh Planning munitY grow will Street at the intesection of y p groups are invited to come Park and discuss the use of these TO WHOM IT MAY Welsh Street and Nueces funds before the 1982 -83 CONCERN: Street from Neighborhood discuss a Brison ditch City that budget is presented to the C Business District C -N to ity Council. 3 -10 -82 The College Station City Planned Commercial District floods during rainy TO WHOM IT MAY Council will hold a public name The hearing on the question of Associates. weather and ways tO CONCERN: rezoning the following The said hearing will be property: slow speeding motorists The College Station City All of Lot 1 and /z of Lot 2, held in the Council Room of , Council will hold a public the College Station City -on on the 7, aron, on Dexter St hearing question of Block 7 West Park Addition, 1101 South Texas amending Ordinance No. (located at 107 Fidelity, Avenue at the 7:00 P.M. roblem 850. the Zonin Ordinance C.S.), from Single Family meeting latter p g for the City of Co Residential District R -1 to on Thursday, ri a Single Family March 25, 1982. of the City Council by Clty g g e R-1 Residential For additional information , was taken up y Station, revising and clarify- District R -1A. The applica� ng District R-3, Townhouse- please contact me. council members tW0 Rowhouse Purpose; delet- tion is in the name of Jack E James M. Callaway duplexes and Jonathan R. DeMuynck. in weeks ago, but tabled for use in D str R 3 permitted The said hearing will be Assistant Director lanning f further staff study. ing duplex construction as a held in the Council Room o The council W ednes- day also will look at final p lans for developing Anderson Park, Brothers Pond Park and Raintree Park. 9 \j co/ite,d(?(( of 2 L4 78-- - V1 5 p 0 2 c axi as c cd w 5 E. cd as 5-...--- y a) • c a o c `)' .. 0 as `� JD 3 � ';,� �s c a °0 • 3 0 p y e0 • o 0 ^, n �� se -0 0 o '..., C c- p y ov ° o o •��... ua�� o � o 2 3.0 r � al v a a A N� el o N CO • p titicd oc c) 0 T /1 �'" '- o v .+ �' u a o O o , ',- •, 0 ' 5 0 0 N O 'd ch 00.> ° C4 «C+ iC A q w O v, 8 'N o O 'O 3-5 00 00 y ' . 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O . ," • c 0 �^ O C cd w ,n 4 ., GL as y a ' " i a) as w rn as a) ca 0 cd se > , o as 3 0. 3 O c a. •0 a) v - ' •" as c o•- v yo ��ocp > " 0 cd o c M-� 'vp= o L. 0 $10,01 - -cam tia�a�d o>o t v� - ° = = , = «.. ,, . 0v� •o °o ° n ° o o o - ° > o x T a) a o° a 0 ,n - w a) U u O G. a) �,. u u„ a) N a) O H ^" y aS � as F., � O E c .0 ., a '" u, a A y 6. a) N as y a) a0 [L y .r ,n U � as �� as 9 ( ) U� F = •.> a' 0 E � - c ∎ ° 0 c =a " ) Y Q • C > c y v,� as a) 0. as O v `,'0' 3 - ° .0 .? °.9 0 o Q . cd O as = O a) p. " n of ., a v 00 v v n 4.- ., v v V 04.z c 3 a. , ti. i O a) sx w o O as O ., W .. T + c °0 a> ., 1- 3 a. ti .0 as • ... � 0 E as a = c o w cn s� c) yi . , 0. O w as v i. c ' CID OW 1 w - •c ._ ' = 01i ❑ a. ,�. 'b [ 0 •r•1 to -6. 3 cn b 0 � 0 P4 r ' u3 0OF -'cu E ,- E- 3 m3•° A ca3 a aa vi The Eagle, Sunday, March 14, 1982 Legal Notices Executive Order No. 11246 and Section 3 of the Housing and Community Develop- ment Act of 1974. The requirements for bidders and contractors under this order are fully explained in the specifications. INVITATION TO BID The Bryan Independent School District is now invit- ing bids on Large Cafeteria ADVERTISEMENT FOR BID Equipment. Bid forms and specifications can be picked 1. LINCOLN CENTER up at the office of Mr. Travis RENOVATION COMMUNITY E. Nelson, Director of .Fin - DEVELOPMENT PROJECT ance & Accounting Ser- No. P.I. 811 vices, 100 West 25th Street, Scopei?f work includes but Bryan. Texas and returned is not necessarily limited to to that office no later than the demolition and renova- April 1, 1982, 12:00 noon. lion of interior walls, doors, The Bryan Independent and electrical fixtures with School District reserves the in the game room. game right to accept or reject room office and gymnasium. any /all bid_ s . "RECEIPT OF BIDS Seated ;proposals will be accepted at the Office of the City Engineer until 2:00 p m Thursday, April 1, 1982, at which time they will be opened and read aloud. Bids should be marked with the . Project title on the envelope INFORMATION AND BIDDING DOCUMENTS Plans, specifications and bid documents may be obtained by contacting An- drew Czimskey at the Parks and Recreation Department Office, 1000 Eleanor street, College Station, Texas, 696- 4753. A plan deposit, bid bond and performance bond are required. This Project is funded with Federal Funds provided by The Community Development Block Grant administered through the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. Bidders on the above named ,project,: termed Lincoln Center Renovation, will be required to comply with • 108 legal Notices ADVERTISEMENT FOR BID 1 LINCOLN CENTER RENOVATION COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT .PROJECT No. P.I. 811 Scope of work includes but is not necessarily limited ao doors, demolition and , on of interior walls, ors, and electrical fm iooe game amh to the game room office and gymnasium. RECEIPT OF BIDS Sealed proposals will be accepted at the Office of the City Engineer until 2:00 p.m., Thursday April 1. be which time they will opened and read aloud. ith Bids should tbeim rke with on the envelope. INFORMATION AND BIDDING DOCUMENTS Plans, specifications and bid documecontacting An- obtained by at the Parks drew Cnmskey Department and Recreation Office, 1000 Eleanor street, College Station, Texas, 696- 4753. A plan deposit, bid bond and performance bond are required. his Protect is funded with Community provided by • i T advelopment Block Grant h the Det afrtment ofuHousing U.S ,S U.S. and Urban n Dhbo ment. Bidders on the e above rincoldn project, term ed w ill be required Center Renovation, comply with Executive Order No. 11246 and Section 3 of the Housing n- and Community Devel The ment Act of 19for bidders requirement or contractor s der are fully explai the specihcatidits. 011Inloso The Eagle, Tuesday, March 16, 1982 • "What happened to the trash pickup ?" College :Station City Councilman Larry Ringer wanted to ;know at a council meeting last week. Ringer said a neighbor's trash was on the sidewalk :tor a couple of weeks before city crews came by to :pick it up. Mayor Gary Halter said the problem is that not :enough sanitation workers show up for work on :Wednesdays if they have to pick up trash. "The obvious solution is to fire them, but then :there would be no one to pick up trash on the other • ;Sl ays," Halter said. Halter indicated that he has found himself with ;the same problem as Ringer's neighobr. "I finally gave upon the city and hauled it to the :dump myself," he said. • 7L Q6 , �( c,L, 19, 198 es OKd by P& Z Zoning Chang city council reviewed by y to be By DAVID CRISP ment should be changed to one turned down because it failed to Staff Writer space for every 150 square feet or provide adequate access to addi- A set of zoning ordinance for every 200 square feet, which tional parking in the Kroger and changes will go to the College Sta- would be the new standard under TG &Y parking lot behind the tion City Council next week after the ordinance for veterinary compaTyedaction came ac after the they were approved Thursday by clinics. the planning and zoning commis- The major change, taking recommendation of the commis - Sion. duplexes out of townhouse zones, sion's project review committee to The commission also approved was a "gesture to keep the peace," add parking access. site plans for two new motels, but developer Bill Fitch said. Site plans were approved for a turned down a plan for a Firestone City Planner Al Mayo said hardware and auto parts store Tire Co. store at Texas Avenue developers who want to build near FM 2818 and Southwood and Brentwood Drive. duplexes of ten ask for a Drive and for four- plexes in The changes would prohibit the townhouse zone to avoid public University Park and Southwood building of duplexes in townhouse opposition. When they build Valley. zones, allow lumber yards in duplexes there instead, residents A conditional use permit was ay commercial - industrial zones, "feel they've been tricked," Mayo grant to services Virginia f o r day care revise duplex lot widths and said. change off - street parking re- Site plans were approved for a W. Dexter St. Planner Jim quirements for veterinary clinics. Best Western Motel, which will be Callaway said that because Young The changes were approved located on Texas Avenue near the was incorrectly advised she needed unanimously after drawing the southern city limits, and for a no permit, the business already support of two speakers at the Quality Inn Motel on University has been in operation for a year public hearing. However, two Drive east of Tarrow Street. without complaint. speakers also asked the commis- The Quality Inn Motel will be sion to consider reducing parking located adjacent to the proposed requirements for medical and den- site for a new Sheraton Hotel. The Brazos County tal clinics. Sheraton has been delayed r The ordinance requires the because developers apparently on clinics to provide one parking have had to purchase additional space for each 100 square feet and land to provide adequate parking STOPPER one for each two employees. space, Mayo said. 775 -TIPS Three speakers said the require- A Firestone Tire Co. plan was _)liil*/ CL �d, 0 l 0 CS to open bond bids million package on � 6,9mi1 The College Station City Council and recreation office and maintenance will test the municipal bond market to- buildings, new parks des ;elopment, ex- day when it opens bids on the sale of tensions to Holleman and Dartmouth $6,925,000 in bonds. streets and expansion o f the police sta- tion and city hall. The council, which meets at 7 p.m. The bonds are set to manure in 10 at City Hall, plans to sell $2,705,000 in years in hopes of drawing lower maids. revenue bonds and $4,220,0()0 in The City of Bryan paid 13.4 percent in- general obligation bonds from a $27.3 terest on long -term revenue bonds and million bond package approved by 12 7 percent on general obligator voters last year. bonds in January. College Station In- The revenue bonds include $1.3 dependent School District recently sold million to pay for a well and cooling bonds at 12.3 percent. the city tower on Sandy Point Road, $1.5 In other business today, million for an elevated tank and other council will review the city bicycle path utility system improvements. plan, hear a report from the civic The general obligation bonds are center committee and review contruc- . slated for construction of new parks tion plans for the parks office building. Zoaa,°�Lt.. oda, � c l t 02,3 19a,_ c `2 r.)) ., .7w " A 0 0 a " ° N .., 7 '+ A . 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Ni r 9 3�'2 a S^• LETTERS tS Thursday, 25, 1982 For those satisfied to hunt witches, it will be sufficient to brand lawyers as evil, but for those who want to understand our legal system and its results, the biggest problem today, as L always, is that the law is a complicated and broad subject with few easy answers. This will always be so because the purposes of the law are as many as the endeavors and evils of men and women. It canr/+t be understood without con- siderable study and applicat. The public should better understand our laws and our legal system, though. The reason that the public does not is that there are too many journalists who write about legal subjects without analyzing or understanding them. Among other things, everyone has an opinion. But I think most paper readers and television watchers would prefer reliable in- formation and analysis over platitudes and prejudices about the law and lawyers that resemble those once applied to foreigners, women, and yankees. Medical science classifies Lawyers as Homo sapiens, just like Walter Cronkite and James Kilpatrick. The only real dif- ference is that they go to law school and practice law for a liv- ing. This educational distinction somehow marks them for derision and scorn. A lawyer applies his ability for his client's benefit. This is similar to the scientist, accountant, plumber, or electrician who applies his training and ability for the benefit of the person for whom he or she works. Yet, the press does not attribute troubles with carcinogens, taxes, employees, leaky faucets, or short circuits to the excess number of persons in those trades or professions. The real reason for this letter is not any perceived failing on Mr. Cole's part, but the general failure of the press to in- form the public on legal issues, and its willingness to adopt a superstitious, mythological, patent- medicine approach to such an important subject. A misunderstanding of the adversary system results in much errant criticism. The system has many faults which should be reported and discussed, but they must first be understood if the reading public is not to be deceived. In this way the system will continue to develop with society as it has for many hundreds of years. Defense attorneys are not required to prove their client in- nocent. The search for truth must include the critical analysis of the testimony of the accusor. "Elaborate strategies" are infrequently used in criminal defense, and less frequently successful. Blood and gore from the scene of a terrible crime doesn't help prove that the man in the courtroom is the murderer. These statements are true, accepted, and easily verified. The comments in the February 14 editorial are to the contrary. The "twisting and bending" attributed to lawyers is a two -edged sword, or perhaps a mightier two - tipped pen. In the Wylie axe - murder case discussed in the editorial, the jury could have convicted on the evidence presented. No ra- tional analysis of that case can fault the defense lawyer. The decision to acquit, based on insanity, was made by the jury, and I'll bet there wasn't a single lawyer on -the jury. I have a feeling that Mr. Cole didn't understand how an acquittal was possible and was angry about it. I sympathize, since I share the feeling that the result was unjust, and am personally afraid of the current prevalence of the insanity defense (which he never mentions or explains.) But that doesn't justify looking for a lawyer to blame it on. Most journalists do a poor job of reporting or commenting upon legal issues. I would challenge the Eagle to meet its duty to present the facts, and to explain the laws and legal pro- cesses which are involved in the news. During three years in this community, I have seen only one article in the Eagle that adequately explained a legal subject. That was a well resear- ched article on the admission of evidence of other crimes (prior bad acts) in the Wayne Williams case in Atlanta. Ar- ticles on legal topics are usually short on explaining legal principles, and long on emphasising personality conflicts at the courthouse. The newspaper staff should have access to independent lawyers or law professors who can be relied upon to furnish background for such writing when necessary, and reporters should be encouraged to use such resources. isagree with premise If the media would take seriously its responsibility to cover I d isagree with Richard Cole's premise in his Sunday, legal subjects, and do its homework, everyone would benefit. February 14 editorial page column, that "The biggest pro- The public would be served, real problems with the legal system could better be identified and understood, and more blem with the law these days is that there are too many lawyers involved with it." Being one of those villains myself, progress might be made toward resolving them. I may nOt be ably to objectively comment on this silly asser- Lowell F. Denton tion, but at leastjhave thought about what I have to say. Bt yd.; • may lose pavilion Oaks Park � Y By DAVID CRISP - Staff Writer - `- College Station's Oaks Park, just a month short of three years x\, , old, is in danger of losing its most, prominent feature. The Oaks Park pavilion is fall l ;- �� ing apart, eaten up with wood ants r � � ., `.� i � � �.. and decay. It may cost $2,000 to fit, - . ,.. ii tear it down. 5 v�S� R< `� , ." �. � � R V _ But J.W. Wood, who _ ' : . ,, t , ' 0 . , h " „' , � , ,f a� helped design architect the log pole struc t i p R ,. . , 4 � i ture, told the College Station City ,,� -:� - 4 - , t ► " . `- � " ,, Council Thursday it won't cost the , , � � � � ��►� a `` city anything to replace the $ ° " ' F' k a' _, ' pavilion, which was part of a �� s � �. � , ,41 $100,000 improvements project in °' , bad 4 �' \ a '''}.t� e4•. the park on SH 30. M p it` � "I'll put up the money to put :, " :,� 4 - ' :, the pavilion back," Wood said. .� , ,r,,,,,,,,,:-7::::,,, M -.. ' "I don't want the city out any Eagle photo by Kathy Young money." t Wood, who didn't know abou Larry Wynne at crumbling Oaks Park pavilion. the problem until Thursday's not, a crew v i11 begin tearing it until the extension is completed. council meeting, said the wood for down Monday morning to clear But City Manager North have the area before an arts and crafts Bardell said Southern Pacific the pavilion was supposed to been treated. But parks director festival scheduled next weekend wants an agreement to close the Steve Beachy said specifications begins. Luther Street crossing before had clearly called for untreated The council Thursday also nos Holleman Street goes through. wood. ed up against an impasse in Giesenschlag said the company Wood ants have crawled into negotiations with Southern Pacific will be "faced with disaster" if the the poles, hollowing most of them Railroad over a crossing for the city is still negotiating when the out and weakening one so much Holleman Drive extension west of duplexes are completed in June. that it snapped a week and a half Wellborn Road. ago. Since then, the pavilion has Tom Giesenschlag, representing The council referred the matter been fenced off, padlocked and Double Tree Joint Venture, said back to the planning and zoning posted with signs warning it is un- the planning and zoning commis- commission, which will reconsider safe. sion has stipulated the company its stipulation next week. Mayor Wood said he would take an can't get certificates of occupancy Gary Halter said the city is "mov- engineer to the pavilion this mor- for a 72 -unit duplex development ing as quickly as it possibly can ning to see if it can be salvaged. If under construction west of town to complete the project. 1 _ • 1 • _1 01 i j u2,66iieo, n/ te_v Cam/ /( ! U)--- NOTICE • The City of College Sta- tion is accepting bid(s) for: One (1) Strobe Light on the vehicle Car & Truck Wheel Blancer Misc. • Water & ,Sewer Ses: Poly' Tubing, BrFittings, Ductile Iron P Cast Iron Fittings, F Ci7f��11e. Qlamps & F �'r� 'Furnilu�d! hatKr� ces & EDesks, C quip - ment fo pliant r e City of College Station Civic Center. until 10:00 a.m., April 15, 1982, at which time the bids will be opened ir( the office of the Purchasing Agent at the City Hall. Specifications may be obtained at the office of the Purchasing 1 Agent. All bids received after that time will be returned unopened. The City of College Station reserves the right to waive or reject any and all bids or any and all irregularities in said bid and to accept the offer considered most ad- vantageous to the City. These items may be pur- chased with Revenue Shar- ingfunds. 81 -82 -11 3/28, 4/04 &8 ji'"\-daY) Y7na/t- ej} 281 Park roof structure cleared Part of the deteriorating Oaks Park causing one to snap wek has been pavilion is being torn down today by Since then, the pavilion workers from Tiller Corp. padlocked and fenced with signs warn - College Station officials hope to ing that it is unsafe. have the decaying roof structure of the Architect J.W. Wood, one of the 3- year -old pavilion cleared in time for designers of the structure, is working the spring arts and crafts festival this revised and the se design si si ne treated poles o ls weekend. The citrcouncil decided last week to up The ro of the pavilion will be left tear down the paviliodi �hkh they learned was built with untreated uncovered through the crafts festival, lumber. Wood ants and natturarig decay pa rks a by said recreation director Steve have hollowed out the supp ) ALe°67CLVi 7) el- (98 r ) • — O WHO E 1T R AY N CO- lillilly C Station Plan- Or The College Commis - Legal Notices sing Zoning a public lege station City Hall, 1101 Sion vuNl hold_ uestion of hearing or'. the gtesowing rezoning the Texas Avenue. - property: For ad c O t aaCt dames p , g 34 acre' tract 'Texas Pleas.@. CstIStat JaectO I On the east :sd`mae x CallaW.a�i As51st6 8 D' ext A ve r o appr in,tersedtron c ; P l a rtr>i fng , 69 886 f north Avenue and Rock TO _ of Texas from ,Drstnct TO WHOM 1 T M ' ' ' prair Open, t l A C General C E Station PW District C 1 1= Iral Corn- The andegge r. err .,a l. Ttie. App r Greg g and Zheld'1 Cvnrm , ame nln wil hod . ' i , r a a l r OD!) oo f 'i ca rr „ardo , ' ;ill bo 1 re a r q n th Q 1 v - .. -- n nJ'd i th hearing on rtt the r_ zo S`at C''Y A 5 66 ty In. .: 'l '\A Mt' College. sou DOTex:.� A 5.66 aE e l -ca -Fiat 1101 the P.M. q, F+arvay c o r , Avenue al 1 Wing and in It' 'U T - , te,Y, m eerirg of the P an on 1 Highway 136 e 1 t u thi N a r rt - - }on, . Co r mmissio n h a> 30 Thursday April 15, 1982aUO�. section r, ai e... iro, '�- For additional inform I t o trio `- -0' g iailtura OI en p cohtact C eiaway A O p ;.;Weis M. to District h 2 t^o mero ASS t. Director r Industr al, The AP iFreat u r, ul Plans rQ . u. - I in t nt'tte of ' � t (Cr 1T MAY CQ la • - r WHOM (O WHOM ff MAY co- N I r he ari r5rf K e N hf Goi!ey S te t r n � : ' C un d o Zoning 'Tile s aid' Confr r and Zoning nbiic The Plarn9 of held in the tali ,I nd hold -th Crty Ot t Cot. Te* ` the rluetion of C si a r n n hold a Room ' iol GAtfe Et a. the ayes 1 City Hall. 1101 so7 0C P 11 .,, or, 11 0 yv n9 blic Hearing 0� tie r 1 n,.n 9 P }r gg the Zoning Avenue at e P annn erRV' Ori1 of a7neeMon650. revismSi meet r” -,ins n' r t ' t0 1.4 Block t re y o zyct;i inane Building Length Zor i .,1ay AP ell t5 t9$ $ . A,' d n, u on 1 131 1 Genf I 1 sai lhome Bu , 0 held I Thu t otiB' in!or' fatiOn S t r from , 13 1 District C ' R 5 I the Aire N5 82 held at Fease.a � .,aa r ,',,. to Di G toe ComMiS wilt be o f , iaasP.9C�Fttac. ax C t Me iurr hP 1962 meeting p mes M. C, a11aWaY _ .r �.nYs the Ae , ou v• 0- P j ., i Ass 't Citecloi - nts M , , M toe Commission. 0 Go,- otBattY Council Room. planMrg hear nU w• I in the.Ccu !;:lid so r.l a t, , �,r r a'.t 110 thy, 7 60 P N:_ ,> t -= 1)0 and Comrn scion on jl �ny r <° l.i For a dditional = dt information, For me. l , please c ontac Callaway 'i l ,,lames M Asst. C`irector of Planning � I &57e-Jk: l,0 , a 1 (117 0"-..) 3 i, (9,9?„-- . . ,- A v� a c •. G G m c C y O 0 e4; en E © un O is :S +_ y ...y J ,g ^ a; 3.. c 5 _rn `" r 4. v , Y O v e.) ,r- O a 1H! w t..+ • co C v O v u a C.) Y — v .O y v " a Y G d V O cu O F O a d ,n ,,,..4 ( QQ� r w y N .fl Ofi d O V c3 . ct i O q Sri O� • O 0.1 -r, (y T, U G. 7,Z C U uJ Ly i; ? r Q O - is C am'+ ..z. v v ^ - C �. O e Peel to +.-3 t., .0 , ....G s • r.1 U . w ti Ci >. c l .33. 1.- a N a a. . '' ,n v v ,Rr ..= rJ G › n c � a Y FK,..M.' tU tK U O COI Y c. G J �' c as c0 cS C u ti" K V ; , =r' "- ' 1u, t:,.,.. .`1 F5 O = O v, •-' F" rn rn g V O G y • . c .„,.......A ..:P. . 1. + . '� ,, a ,.., 'ry . s-• -, 4.4 cd h O.. ‘4, "9 v . v .4 ,r, r ' c 3 ^ O U v -0 ton "0 ,.1• v O.Dr 'cs i s csi C;_ Y v C) cn E . v v) 0 3 —,...a . . 2, >-.4J, QE N v • f e) w u li; N y 8 O 10 .YC CIO O ..Z >.),"' . > (I) O Fe O 'S+' ca U rg on a r" v Ca .o a O O 0 a O > .0 O .� a) et -- c 0 -- � Y r. Cq 3 0 .z..• a) � �0 ���,0 a� E a "�, .0Ova U a0 b.O.0 �b >.t) ci �Tr .0 �..o cc c 0 ch . .o co 3 ca 0 ' � L L - 1 College to hear appeal P College Station Plannn and a� i Zoning commissioners today will with officials Southern - Pacific eg railroad w as ma Boone said the parking consider giving a break to a over a railroad track crossing. was made to al more prkthe developer who says he will face Tom Giesenschlag told the city zonee for a tavern located in the disaster if negotiations to com- council last week that the plete Holleman Drive aren't com- developers will be "faced with pleted soon. disaster" if the city fails to com- Also to be considered are final The commission, which meets plete negotiations or the planning plans for the Southwest Place ad- at 7 p.m. at City Hall, last year and zoning commission declines to dition, which includes Pelican's told Doubletree Joint Venture remove its no- occupancy stipula- Wharf restaurant and a proposed developers they can't be issued tion before the project is com- Best Western Motel, for the Welsh certificates of occupancy for a pleted. proposed condominium Street Office Park addition near project Commissioners today also will Nueces Drive, the Casa Lind ad- untl the proposed Holleman consider a 'zoning change from dition in Southwood Va ey, D ve extension is completed. single - family residence to general University Park subdivision, the he project is expected to be commercial on Wellborn Road Ramparts addition and the Brushy co pleted in early summer, but ci- near Southland Street. Applicant Park addition. ,9 eai.„, 4 A'pA:L-Z l l 84 ---- PUBLIC NOTICE i interested members of the public are hereby notified of the acceptance of bids by th ity of College Station for mineral leases covering oil, gas and other hydrocarbons in, d under the following described tracts of property owned or claimed by the City of :'allege Station: F abt 1 - 47.220 acres on Krenek Tap Road and East By -Pass Typct 2 - 1.000 acres at Foster and Walton rlact 3 - 1.800 acres at Montclair and Park Place i +' a f 4 - 10.670 acres at Haines and Dexter irari 5 - 15.550 acres at Anderson and Southwest Parkway Tract 6 - 7.950 acres at Holleman and Eleanor Tr apt 7- 5.440 acres at University and Tarrow rr ct 8- 4.160 acres at Longm ire and Todd T ack 9 - 4.560 acres at Merry Oaks Tract 10 - 7.500 acres at Highway 30 and Stallings "react 11 - 1.000 acres at Munson and Francis Tract 12 - .687 acres at Southland and Oney Hervey 114c 13 - 44.650 acres at Research Boulevard near Graham Road T,rac,t 14 - 16.100 acres at Francis and Puryear 1:ra 15- 4.360 acres at Montclair and Luther Tiact 16 - 36.310 acres at Texas Avenue near Krenek Tap Road Tiadt 17 - 3.500 acres at 1101 Texas Avenue Tract 18 - 2.350 acres at Jersey and Holick Tltt 19 - .200 acres at Patricia Street Parking Lot rri,pt 20 - 14.650 acres at Morgan Rector League East of East By -Pass ac't 21 - 9.740 acres out of Boriskie Tract Morgan Rector tact 22 - 6.500 acres near Post Oak Mall T %acf 23 - 1.850 acres at Wellborn Road and Church Street picot 24 - 4.000 acres at Texas Avenue and Holleman Tract 25 - 6-.043 acres at Dowling Road and Quail Run Estates Tract 26 - 20.960 acrs at Krenek and Texas Avenue Tract 27- 43.500 acres at Texas Avenue and Anderson Tract 28 - 7.690 acres on north side of Southwest Parkway out of Brentwood Subdivision Tract 29 - 9.200 acres at Jersey and Dexter LEGAL DESCRIPTIONS WILL BE FURNISHED WITH BID FORMS. Such bid forms, including the provisions of proposed leases, and all applicable terms and provisions acceptable to the City, are available and may be obtained from the City At- ; I,Qy's Office on Monday, May 3, 1982. Sealed bids will be accepted from any member of the public wishing to bid upon such mineral leases through 7:00 P.M., May 20, 1982. Bid opening shall be at the regular City Council meeting on May 20, 1982. Bid acceptance and award is within the sole discretion of the City Council, considering all proposed terms and conditions of the bids received. and the City may reject any and all bids or offers made for the leasing of such lands. -The City will make no warranty as to title in the lands to be leased. ' r a c _____ Ecz_o. i 1 U/l J • I le y ( 9 D___ L price in the bids, the Owner reserves the right to con- sider the most advanta- geous construction thereof or to reject the. bid. Un- reasonable or 'unbalanced unit prices will be con- . sidered sufficient cause for rejection of any bid. Bidders are expected 'to inspect the site of the work and di gnf themselves 08 Legal Notices regarding local conditions under the work is to ADVE .TISEMENT FOR be done. Attention is called BIDS t� the. • provisions of the Texas Minimum Wage Act of Sealed' proposals ad- 1970 and Article 5159a, Re- dressed to the City of vised Civil Statutes of College Station, Texas will Texas, concerning the be r e c e i v e d f o r t h e prevailing wage rate applica- construction of: b I e* l , n m u n i c i p a l ROCK PRAIRIE. INTER- construction. CEPTO.R': Contract Documents.. Pro- ' Forms, Specifications until 2:00 o'clock p.m., and Plans are on file and Tuesday. AprIh20; 1982. may be examined without Proposals will be received charge in the office of Mr. at the office, of Mrs. Dian Elrey Ash, Director of Capi- Jones, City Secretary, City tal Improvements, and may Hall, College Station, Texas be obtained from Riewe' & 77840 Wishcmeyer, Inc., Consult - Bidders •must submit with ing Engineers, 1701 Southw- their bids•a Cashier's Check est Parkway. Suite 203, or a Certified Check in the College Station, Texas amount of five (5 %) percent 77840, upon a deposit of of the maximum amount of Thirty ($30.00) Dollars. bid payable without re- Mrs. Dian Jones. City course to the City of College Secretary .�� Station. Texas, or a proposal Gary M. Halter, Mayor bond in the same amount from a Surety Company holding permit from the State of Texas to act as Surety, and acceptable ac- cording to the latest list of companies holding cer- tificates of authority from the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States as listed in latest Revision Treasury Depart- mee Circular 570, as a V guarantee that Bidder will enter r into a contract a act and l execute bond and guaran- tee forms provided within five (5) days after notice of 'award of contract him. 2 Bids • without checks or r J proposal bond will not be J ( 4) .- jL considered. In accordance with Article 5160, Revised Civil Statutes of Texas, 1925. as amended, the' sucessful Bidder will be required to furnish not only a performance bond in the amount of the contract, but also a payment bond for the protection of all claimants supplying labor and materials as defined in said law. The bonds must be executed by an approved Surety Company holding permit from the State of Texas 10 act as Surety and acceptable according to the latest list of companies hold'ing certificates of authority from the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States, or other Surety acceptable to the Owner. The Owner reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive informalities. In case of ambiguity or lack of clearness in stating the I. NOTICE TO BIDDERS Sealed dressed to proposals s City ad- College Station, Texas will be received at the Office of the City Secretary, City of College Station, Texas until 10:00 A.M. on the 16th day of April, 1982 for the construc- tion of electrical transmis- sion facilities including the furnishing of all necessary labor and a portion of the required materials. The major components of the project are: Furnish materials for and construct a foundation for support of a 65 foot steel dead -end pole all as more fully described in the Specifications. Bids received by 10:00 A.M., April 16, 1982 will be publicly opened and read in the City Council Chambers of the City in College Station, Texas at 10:00 A.M. on the same date. Bids received ' after 10:00 A.M., April 16, 1982 will be returned to the sender unopened. Each proposal must be in a sealed envelope bearing on the outside the name of the bidder and the City of College Station Contract No. CS- 82 -TR -2. Plans and Specifications are obtainable at the Office of the City Secretary, Col- lege Station, Texas, or from Electric Power Engineers, Inc., 203 Holleman Drive East, P.O. Box 9970, College Station, Texas 77840 upon payment of 55.00 which payment will not be subject to refund. Bids will be evaluated by the City based on the qualifications and ex- perience of the Bidder, the Bidder's ability to meet the construction schedule, the quality of materials to be furnished, as well as the price offered. The city re- serves the right to accep the proposal that best suit its needs whether or not the price is lowest and alsc reserves the right to rejec a l l b i d s or w a i v e informalities. Award of the Contract tc the Successful Bidder wil be made at a subsequen meeting of the City Counci of College Station. 4' - 4/9. CITY OF COLLEGE STATION By Gary M. Halter Mayor 101PILL , Iq 82- Public Notices PUBLIC NOTICE The City of College Station will hold a PUBLIC HEAR- ING to consider a request from Wood Energy pany for a permit to drill a well within the city limits of College Station. The pro- posed well will be located Block S, University earn Subdivision, and will be approximately 600 feet north of Autumn Circle and ap- proximately 600 feet southw- est of the Bryan - College ' Station city boundary adja- cent to the Bryan sewage treatment plant. The hearing will be ye Counc l on 8, 1 h8 e City y 00 ha8l, at 101Te as College Station___— (j 9 )- ....9....,...e.....„ 654.„8,62....../ NOTICE The City of College Sta- tion is accepting bid(s) for: One CO Strobe Light on the vehicle Car & Truck Wheel Blancer Misc. Water & Sewer Supplies: Poly Tubing, Brass Fittings, Ductile Iron Pipe & Cast Iron Fittings. Full Circle Clamps & Fittings. Misc. Furniture: Desks, Chairs. Appliances & Equip- ment for the City of College Station Civic Center until 10:00 a.m., April 15, 1982, at which time the bids will be opened in the office of the Purchasing Agent at the City Hall. Specifications may be obtained at the office of the Purchasing Agent. All bids received after that time will be returned unopened. The City of College Station reserves the right to waive or reject any and all bids or any and all irregularities' in said bid and to accept the offer considered most ad- vantageous. to the ��ll'City. These items may be, pur- chased with Revenue'!prhar- ing funds. 81 -82 -11 3/287.4/04 ORDINANCE NO. 465 .p ) 4)) q .....„.., Moble Herrera in runoff By DAVID CRISP and FRANK MAY Staff Writers Veteran College Station city councilman Jim Dozier was upset by homemaker Lynn Nemec, and Bryan councilman John Mobley was forced into a runoff election against And" Herrera in city elec- tions Saturday. In other races, Bryan Coun- cilmen Henry Seale and Ples Turner were re- elected by big margins and College Station in- cumbent Bob Runnels held off a challenge from Murl Bailey. Nemec, 33, a member of the ci- ty's parks and recreation board since last year, received 54 percent of 1,666 votes to Dozier's 46 per- cent in the race for Place 6 on the council. A Raintree subdivision resident, Nemec won handily over Dozier in her home box, Precinct 10, which includes most of the area east of the East Bypass. Nemec credited her victory to a "group campaign" that included supporters in all neighborhoods of the city. She said she greeted residents door -to -door and work- ed especially hard to carry Dozier's home precinct, which Turn to TURNER, Page 4A • Legal Notices TO WHOM IT MAY CON- CERN: The College Station Plan- ning and Zoning Commis- sion will hold a public hearing on the question of rezoning the following property: Resubdivision of Lots 1, 2, & 3, Block 1 Cooner Addition and Lots 1, 2 & 3 Burkhalter Addition (property on NE corner of Cooner & Texas Avenue) From C -1 General Commercial and R -5 Apart- ments Medium Density To C -1 General Commercial. Application is in the name of Roy W. Kelly The said hearing will be held in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue at the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the Planning and Zoning Commission on May 20, 1982 (Thursday) For additional information, please contact me. James M. Callaway Ass't. Director of Planning TO WHOM IT M41Y CON- CERN: The College Station Plan- ning and Zoning Commis- sion will hold a public hearing on the question of rezoning the following property: Lots 1, 2, 3, 4 & 5; Block 2; Fed Mart Development Corp. Subdivision From R -1 Single Family To C -1 General Commercial Application is in the name of J. W. Wood. The said hearing will be held in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue at the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the Planning and Zoning Commission on May 20, 1982. For additional information, please contact me. James M. Callaway Ass't. Director of Planning TO WHOM IT MAY CON- CERN: The College Station Plan- ning and oning Commis- sion will " old a public hearing on the question of rezoning the following property: A 16.08 acre tract in the Morgan Rector Leagur, located - northeast of and adjacent to the Lakeview Acre subdivision (south of and adjacent to the exten- sion of Miller's LaRe), from District R -1 Single Family Residential to District R -1 Single Family Residential, D i s t r i c t R- 3 Townhouse /Rowhouse and District R -5 Apartments Me- dium Density. The applica- tion is in the name o J. W. Wood, Agent. The said hearing will be held in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue at the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the Planning and Zoning Commission on Thursday, May 20,1982. For additional information, please contact me. James M. Callaway Ass't. Director of Planning 6°54 \; /' lc 5; l 8� V lOe< Legal Notices 108 Legal Notice on at me aoove TO WHOM address an is available tor IT MAY CONCERN public e pos requon anti The MAY CONCERN De- cThei09 upon request The City of College Station BIOdk Grant Ap Will undertake the protects plicauon for the City described above With Bioc College Station has been pubmitled l0 the U.S. De - Grant Funds from the U.S. arimenl of Housing Department of Housing and Urban Development p and Urban Developement iHUD1. under Title I of the (H.U.D.1: Copies of the Housing and Community application are on file in the Development Act of 1974. College Station Planning The City of College Station Department. City Hall 1101 is certifying 'to HUD that the Texas Avenue. The app City of College Station and tii7n will be made available to Mayor Gary M. halter. in his all interested parties 0n i official capacity as Mayor. to accept the Persons wishing t0 object Federal to approval of this app lunsdiclion of the is tion by HUD may make such counts is an action brought to enforce re objection known to the environmental en t in relation de- Department of Housing and environmening. and action: reviews. on: Urban Development. P.O. cision making. hpnf Box 10050. Dallas. Texas and that these re sponsi 75207. HUD will consider bilities have been PUBLIC OF objections made only on the TO PU satisfied' on following grounds. The the RELEASE the certification is legal theftect a up t o� plicanl's description 0f NOTICE its approval. the City needs and objectives is REQUEST FOR u se the . The City of College Station Block Grant funds and p inconsistent with OF FUNDS its Station may. available facts and data: or d HUD will have satisfied it' the activities to be under- Avenue sponsibilities under the taken are plainly i P 1101 Texas, - s re- National Environment ate to meeting the needs P. 0.80x will and objectives identified.by College Station. Texas 77841 policy Act • of 1969. HUD it .s the applicant: or the appltca accept an objection to t does ne ?comply with 1 69 I Extension 238 ED a pproval of the release of requirements of any I G T E R EST AND funds and acceptance of the the TO AL GROUPS applicable law: or the any AGENCIES. one th e f only g it is on ap p PERSONS: one of the following basis: pupation proposes activities On or about May 20 1982. tat That the certification was which are otherwise ineligi named City will not in fact executed by the ble under the law. Depart- chief executive officer or Such objections should the above other officer 0f the applicant• .include both an idenlifica Development the U. S. Urban a pproved by HUD. flop of the requirements not inept a Housing der Title met antl•• in the case o' Development lb tbt That applicant's En met and mahe on the of the Funds unand Com! grounds that the description 01 n i t L Housing 93- g ment Act of viro nmentalvie wnd indicated of needs and Objectives dscript is 197 1 Development the for the project plainly 93 -383 omission of a required generally wit 1974 (PL decision, funding. in step significant. inlin generally avail' following P rotects: in I. Rehabilitatio 0f ine to the project eview upon .facts and data. the •. app labl upon which the person Reh dwelli the environmental must Although HUD wl Nature: units process. Oble d s u rely. Loan n: Cotl gelinStation. consider objections bmit Location: Texas be Prepared and submitted fed at any time. sucl Brazos County. in accordance with t objections should .b su t Estimated the Street Construction required and (beCad Part 581 and may milled auo t0is a a th- IL Slree ee . Curmprov dressed to HUD at (Area For additional ion of t Info i atioi Nature: Pave. toujmprove Office. P. O. Box 10050 contact Michael St yens ,utter streets factors. Dallas. Texas 752071. Ob Community t n service delivery Station, jecltons to the release Of Planner. 696-8868 Michael ve 238 e ocBrao College Texas funds on basis other than e e Brazos Cos those stated abov HUD. No YOU will not Estimated Cost: 590.000.00 be considered by An Environmental Review �bt ecl5 n19received ivbe c ite 0 concerning the conce sid.1982by will be record ro ects boy referenced the above as •-en made by Chief Executive Officer: 1 ame`, City and documents Mayor Gary M. Halter P.O. Box 9960 • he e v oleCl ntalTh This En± e , ■ fet R Record College Station. Texas 77841 ,...., iron .�ntal Renew J " (0) �r. CS P&Z faces crowded The College Station Planning and Zoning Com- that includes three rezoning requests, three parking mission gets two new members today -- and loses lot plans, and a request for disannexation. two old ones — at its meeting set for 7 p.m. in Col- The rezoning requests include a change from lege Station City Hall. townhouse to low - density apartment zoning at Rio The new members will face a crowded agenda Grande and Balcones, a new townhouse zone on Krenek Lane and a change from administrative pro- fessional to planned commercial to accommodate a washateria at 303 E. University Drive. The commission also will consider a conditional use permit for a daycare center at 800 and 802 Autumn Circle and parking lots plans for a 40 -unit addition to E -Z Travel Motel, the Randolph office building on University Drive and the 115,000 - square -foot Post Oak Square shopping center next to Post Oak Mall. Mobile home park owner Ralph Hobbit also has requested his six -acre park at FM 2818 and Univer- sity Drive be disannexed from the city. The park, which has run afoul of city sewage and electricity requirements, has never received city services. Fq_e-e a 4 d) 1 1'7 /9169'°2" tO Legal Notices 1y8 Legal Notices latest list of companies inform themselves regard - holding certificates of ing local conditions under authority from the Secretary which the work is to be of the Treasury of the United done. Attention is called to States as listed in latest the provisions of the Texas Revision of the Treasury Minimum Wage Action of Department Circular 570, as 1970 and Article 5159A. a guarantee that Bidder will Revised Civil Statutes of enter into a contract and Texas concerning the execute bond and guaran- prevailing wage rate applica- tee forms provided within b l e in m u n i c i p a l five (5) days after notice of construction. award of contract to him.. Contract Documents, Pro - Bids without checks or posal Forms, Specifications proposal bond will not he and Plans may be obtained considered. In accordance in the office of Mr. Elrey with Article. 5160, Revised Ash, City Engineer, upon Civil Statutes of Texas, 1925, the deposit of Twenty -Five a performance bond in the ($25.00) which sum so de- amount of the contract, but posited will be refunded also a payment bond for the provided the Contractor protection of all claimants submits a bid and returns all - - - - - -- -. - -_ _ - -__._ supplying labor and documents to the Engineer ADVERTISEMENT FOR BID materials as defined in said within 72 hours after bid. law. The bonds must be Nonbidders returning plans Sealed proposals ad- executed by an • approved within 72 hours after bid dressed to the City of Surety Company holding a opening will be refunded ten College Station, Texas will permit from the State of ($10.00) dollars. Suppliers be received at the office of Texas to act as Surety and returning plan with 72 hours Elrey Ash, City Engineer, acceptable according to the after bid opening will be City Hall, College Station, latest list of companies refunded their deposit. Texas, until 2:00 P.M. holding certificates of o'clock April 22, 1982 for authority from the Secretary furnishing all necessary of the Treasury of the United ' material, equipment, and States, or the Surety accep- labor required for the con- table to the owner. struction of: Jane and The owner reserves the Eisenhower Street right to accept or reject any sewerlines. or all bids and to waive Bidders must submit with informalities. In case of their bids a Cashier's Check ambiguity or lack of clear - or a Certified Check in the Hess in stating the price in amount of five (5) percent of the bids, the Owner re- the maximum amount of bid serves the right to consider payable without recourse to: the most advantageous con - City of College Station, struction thereof or to reject Texas, or a proposal bond in the bid. Unreasonable or the same amount from a unbalanced unit prices will Surety Company holding be considered sufficient permit from the State of cause for rejection of any Texas to act as Surety, and bid. Bidders are expected to acceptable according to the inspect the work and to eaCe We CA , , -� ` 7 /98 Cs • cit coun t t ik • on C C en t er policy by Lori Weldon of groups wanting to use the facility, resolution was passed recently by the Battalion Reporter but allowing alcohol would result in Bryan city council. Policy for the new city Civic Center additional clean -up and security Mayor Richard Smith of Bryan said will be discussed in the regular meet- costs. at that time that the unit would consist ing tonight of the College Station City "The council will hear any protests of a police officer from Bryan and a Council at 7 p.m. or suggestions about the Civic Center police officer from College Station Issues being considered by the policy before bringing the proposed patrolling together in order to pro - council include possible use of alcohol policy to a vote tonight. vide dual jurisdiction in cases requir- on the premises and fees to be ing narcotics arrests. charged for use of the facility by pri- Also being considered tonight by �. vate non - profit groups and commer- the council is a resolution to allow Another public hearing will be held cial or political gatherings. Mayor Gary Halter to enter into an concerning the consideration of a North Bardell, city manager, said agreement with the city of Bryan and permit application by Wood Energy that not allowing use of alcohol at the Brazos County which would form a for an exploratory well in the Univer- center might cut down on the number narcotic traffic control unit. A similar sity Park subdivision. i ACA) ) --- Th btAACI10 iqp i 1 8) OB3- Colorful realizes now that he had mis- judged the people, that many of • his supporters didn't bother to DozieI1I O zi er vote and that many new residents r don't know him or had been of- fended by his "acid tongue." t b And he wouldn't run the per - not sonal sort of campaign that has i l been a College Station hallmark By DAVID CRISP since Lorence Bravenec was elected mayor in 1976. Staff Writer "People seem to want local Ir took six months with no in politicians to ask for their votes," come and a Texas Supreme Court he said, "but that's contrary to decision to get Jim Dozier off the my whole outlook on life. I was College Station City Council the willing to serve if the people last time he left office. wanted me, but I could not bring He left office again Wednesday, myself to ask them to elect me." defeated not by the state's highest court,,but by the grassroots, door- A lawyer and associate pro - knocking campaign of Lynn fessor of finance at Texas A &M, Nemec, who took his place as Dozier got into politics as part of a Place 6 councilman in ceremonies group that was trying to raise at City Hall Wednesday. funds to back candidates in the Characteristically, Dozier chose 1968 city elections. to stay away from his final "I was short of funds, so I meeting as a member of the coun- decided to contribute myself as a cil. It was the 35th meeting he has candidate," he said. His election missed in the past two years, a made him the "youngest and most failing Nemec used against him in liberal" member of the council. her campaign. "When I first ran, I advocated "I will miss serving, but I will that there should be some young not miss city council meetings," blood as well as old blood on the Dozier said Wednesday. "I'll ad- council," Dozier told the League mit I got awfully bored in the last of Women voters during his cam - couple of years because the talk paign this year. "Now that I'm on —FI L(2_, went on interminably." the other end of the stick, I think The 58- year -old ex- councilman, Turn to page 5A who had planned to quit anyway �N J after one more term, was inter- viewed at his kitchen work-and- dining 1 l room table on Walton 8)\ (f— Street, where he could watch the I ` "largest collection of Inca doves in Brazos County" compete for birdseed against the raucous boat - tailed grackles. He was without his classically old- fashioned bow tie, but his slightly askew hair was boyishly parted, as usual, deep on the right side. Saturday's 146 -vote loss to Nemec had been the first close . 4 election in Dozier's career. When he first ran for office in 1968, he beat Homer Adams by a margin of nearly two to one. He did just as well in 1974 against Mae B. Holleman and against Bob Bell in 1976, the last time he had faced an opponent. That sparkling record may have made the loss doubly hard. "I was terribly disappointed — you might even say heartbroken — when I was defeated because I felt the people of College Station may have felt I was no longer of I. NOTICE TO BIDDERS tillW Sealed proposals ad- dressed to the City of __ _ _ College Station, Texas will 108 Legal Notices be received at the Office of the City Secretary, City of College Station, Texas until NOTICE 10:00 A.M. on the 16th day of iqt April, 1982 for the construc- The City of College!Sta- lion of electrical transmis- tion is accepting bids) for: sion facilities including the 1. Four (4) Battery operated furnishing of all necessary tape labor and a portion of the traffic counters with printers required materials. The 2. Miscellaneous furniture major components of the desks, chairs. appliances project are: and equipment for the City Furnish materials for and Station Civic construct a foundation for of College Center until 10:00 a.m. �� � support of a 65 foot steel ; ,30 April , dead -end pole all as more 1982, at which time the bids fully described in the will be opened in the office Specifications. the City Hall. Purchasing S Specifications Agent at Bids received by 10:00 A.M., thall. pecifications � April 16, 1982 will be publicly may be obtained at the opened and read in the City office of the Purchasing Council Chambers of the Agent. All bids received City in College Station, after that time will be Texas at 10:00 A.M. on the returned unopened. The same date. Bids received City of College Station after 10:00 A.M., April 16, reserves the right to waive 1982 will be returned to the or reject any and all bids or sender unopened. Each any and all irregularities in proposal must be in a sealed said bid and to accept the envelope bearing on the offer considered most ad- outside the name of the vantageous to the City. bidder and the City of These items may be pur- College Station Contract No. chased with Revenue Shar- CS- 82 -TR -2. ing funds. 4/16, 4 /2381 -82 -12 Plans. and Specifications are (Attainable at the Office ' of the City Secretary, Col - T � I El ef3 Station, Texas, or from TLC Electric Power r Engineers, l a y Inc ; 203 Holleman Drive � , , i ►��.� a t East, P.O. Box 9970, Co e �Q11l .� �rr� 1 Station, Texas 77840 upon � �� � � �.I���' /. ` / payment of $5.00 which ' �� I payment will not be subject LIF to refund. Bids will be evaluated by the City based on the qualifications and ex- perience of the Bidder, the Bidder's ability to meet the — construction schedule, the quality of materials to be 108 Legal Notices furnished, as well as the bidder and the City of price offered. The city re- College Station Contract No. serves the right to accept CS- 82 -TR -2. the proposal that best suits I. NOTICE TO i Plans and Specifications its needs whether or not the BIDDERS are obtainable at the Office price is lowest and also Sealed proposals ad- of the City Secretary, Col- reserves the right 10 reject dressed to the City of lege Station, Texas, or from all bids 0 r w a i v e College Station, Texas will Electric Power Engineers, informalities. be received at the Office of Award of the Contract to Inc. 203 Holleman Drive the City Secretary. City of East, P.O. Box 9970. College the Successful u will be made at a subsequent 10:00 A.M. on the 16th day of payment of 95.00 which meeting of the City Council April, 1982 for the construe- payment will not be subject of College Station. 4 -4/9. lion of electrical transmis- to refund. CITY OF sion facilities including the Bids will be evaluated by COLLEGE STATION furnishing of all necessary the City based on the By Gary M. Halter labor and a portion of the qualifications and ex- Mayor required materials. The perience of the Bidder, the major components of the Bidder's ability to meet the project are: construction schedule, the - - urnish materials for and quality of materials to be construct a foundation for furnished, as well as the support of a 65 foot steel price offered. The city re- dead -end pole all as more serves the right to accept fully described in,' the the proposal that best suits 4Pr el Specifications. , ' its needs whether or not the T h WW I I ) 1 ?Bal. Bids received by 10 :00.KM., price is lowest and also C F ./ 1 April 16, 1982 will bp publicly reserves the right to reject pened and read inflie City all bids or waive Council Chambers 9f the informalities. City in College Station, Award of the Contract to Texas at 10:00 A.M. on the the Successful Bidder will same date. Bids received be made at a subsequent after 10:00 A.M., April 16, meeting of the City Council 1982 will be returned to the of College Station. 4 -4/9. sender unopened. Each CITY OF proposal must be in a sealed COLLEGE STATION envelope bearing on the - By Gary M. Halter outside the name of the Mavor 1 c gricla -0-pj9, 198.)--- Council , „ perm to dr ill grants `f roil in U Park area o .. , , by Lori Weldon geological studies and monitor be used would be no heavier civic center submitted to the Battalion Reporter the project. than cement trucks normally in council by the committee of t. Advocates of off-well drilling the area. He also said that muf- Mayor Gary Halter, and council - within the limits of College Sta- A number of representatives Hers would be used to keep the men Tony Jones and Pat >: tion filled the College Station of local oil interests spoke to the noise levels low, and the equip- Boughton. The policy includes a City Council room Thursday to council to recommend approval ment would be moved in and out fee schedule which will charge_ encourage the council to grant a of the grant. The contractor for quickly, with the entire project commercial groups and some permit for an exploratory well in Wood Energy answered some of lasting about 30 days. political groups the highest •: the University Park subdivision. the objections to the drilling as In other business, the council rates, while non - profit groups The council granted a permit ' explained that the trucks to approved the policy for the new would pay a much smaller fee. to Wood Energy to drill for oil p on land just off University Drive . east of Texas Avenue. The per- • mit was granted with the provi- sion that the company use the best available technology to in- sure a dean, contained opera- tion and the understanding that the operation be consistent with existing city ordinances. Another provision for the granting of the well permit was that the driller and operator of the well allow the city to conduct 4 -k..... J 4,0A...a 9, /g66 3-- ,...... cSOKs oil well in developed area By DAVID CRISP Staff Writer College Station for the first time opened up a developed area of the city to oil and gas exploration by granting a permit for a. well in the University Park subdivision Thursday. Only one resident argued against the well, which will be drilled by Wood Energy within about 30 days. The well will be near Bryan's south sewage treatment plant 660 feet from the city limit line. Consulting geologist Dr. Chris Matthewson recommended careful monitoring of the well as a test case to gather information about a "number of unknowns." Information collected at the company's expense will be used to write a new city ordinance on drilling for oil and gas in the city limits. Mayor Gary Halter said one well has been permitted under the existing ordinance in an undeveloped area of the city and another has been drilled within 10 feet of the city limits. In moving to approve the permit, Councilman /9g01-1 Larry Ringer said other applications for wells may / �J be delayed until the information is gathered and the 47-2A"4"'e- kir ordinance rewritten. Wood Energy presented its case for the well with representatives from Blocker Drilling Co., Getty Oil Co. and the chamber of commerce on hand. Some of those present said denial of the permit could jeopardize oil leases they have on other land within the city. Matthewson said the well has about a 50 -50 chance of becoming a producing well, which would then pump oil for seven to 10 years. Wood Energy has agreed to use the best available technology and meet zero discharge standards, he said. Duane Cote, who lives on Dexter Drive was the only speaker to oppose the well. "I don't see how this operation can contribute to the quality of life in College Station," he said. Director of Planning Al Mayo said the nearest residences to the site actually are in Bryan, some 800 feet away. Parts of University Park within a few hundred feet of the site have been platted, but drilling operations are expected to be completed before residences are built there. The council Thursday also approved policies for the new civic center, which is expected to open on Jersey Street in June. The policy sets rates for using the center ranging from as little as a $5 charge on a 1 small room for six hours up to $265 for a large ban que, New well to receive final testing in CS Final testing is scheduled Monday for College Station's newest water well, which is expected to be in operation in time to avoid hot - weather water shortages. Officials from the Dallas -based Whalen Corp., Layne Western Co. Inc. and two consulting engineering firms joined city officials in a successful test Thursday as the well gushed out 2,800 gallons of water a minute from a depth of 2,900 Blaine Williams of Layne Western, the well drillers, said the test was the third in a series of step tests, in which water flow is tested at various depths for three hours each. water for 24 On Monday, the well will pump hours to see if it lowers water levels at the city's two nearby wells., All three wells are located along San- dy Point Road about eight miles north of Bryan. Officials said the well is one of the best in the county into'the Simsboro Sand formation. It is an • artesian well, in which water rises without pumping, to a depth of about 400 feet, where an underground pump is installed to bring it to the surface. Water hit the surface at a temperature of about 112 degrees, and was diverted into a ditch that led to a pasture south of Sandy Point Road. which The well is owned by the Whalen Corp., will sell 3 million gallons a day to the city at a fixed rate of 17 cents per thousand gallons. After 12 years, the city will assume ownership of the well. Ca #, • 1470-A-A---L I g CS P &Z to hear site requests Three rezoning requests along with for two apartment projects, one near two site plan permits and two parking Longmire Drive and Brothers lot plans will be considered in a 7 p.m. Boulevard and another at Wellborn meeting Thursday of tiie College Sta- Road and Holleman Drive. tion Planning and Zoning Commis- Parking lot plans will be reviewed sion. for a 117 -unit Manor House Inn on Public hearings will be held on ap- Texas Avenue near Southwest plications to rezone a 12 -acre tract Parkway and for a Firestone tire store north of the Texas Avenue -Rock at Texas Avenue and Brentwood Prairie Road intersection from open Drive. The Firestone request was district to general commercial; to denied at an earlier meeting. rezone a five -acre tract on Highway 30 Commissioners also will consider east of Linda Lane from open district three final plats and hold a public hear - to commercial - industria;, and to ing on zoning ordinance amendments rezone one lot at 131 Meadowland St. that would delete the maximum from commercial to an apartment building group length and revise set - district. back and firewall requirements for Site plan permits will be considered townhouse - rowhouse developments. • ')k (oJ e) rte &yy , ,f-ipri i I4) I9 ,9Z • s tftr Legal Notices TO - Legal Notices le al Notices 9 108 Legal Notices 9 108 — Board of __ The Zon TO WHOM College Station will a ia n a In The Cl will Station Clic Adjustment for the City of IT MAY CONCERN: a request for a variance In Hearing to I cons I der a the 1982 College Station will consider the name of: Statement of Community a request for a variance in Arthur Wright the name of The Zoning Board of 1008 Holt Development Objectives Col S for the City of prior to the submission of 305 Pershing College Station will consider College Station, Texas 77840 and Projected Use of Funds Michael Murphy the request for a variance in Said Board will be heard by p Said case will be heard b the name of: the Board at their regular the application to the De- College Station, Texas 7784 Enloe Construction University Drive Resting in the i nu it y Urb n D of Housing and theetioa in the Counci' 4g4 St t T xa Hall 1101oTe9asSAvenue on In addition, the Council will meeting Board at their regular Co Saidease will Texas heard Hall, 1101 20, 1982 at p.m. consider several amend- Room, College Station City Hall, 1101 Texas Avenue or SaB aide at be hee by April m9 April 1982 at s:00 p.m. u Community Develop A ril 0, 1982 t the case is the Board at their regular The nature of the case is ments to the current 1 meeting in the i Council y as follows: eApplicant is appealing Program. The epp will be held in as follows: Room, College Station City Applicant is request Hall, 20, 1982 Texas 7 Avenue on an he Zoning Official egg ding the Room, College ^TThe v A p plic to is 2q' real April 20, nature at of th case f City 1101 Texas apartment project Avenue, at the 7:00 P.M. setback in order to expanc The nature of the case is toscraren ots requirement Station Cit Hall, his existing house at 30`_ as follows: The Applicant is request- located at 601 Turner Street. meeting of the Council on ing a variance to the re- Further information is Thursday, April 22, 1982' Pershing. quired lot depth for a duplex available at the office of the Copies of the 1982 State- Further information is in the name of Enloe Con- Zoning Official , the City 696- Projected Use jCommunity unds and College Station, office ty the of BlockiN i v Lots 3 & 4, College Station, (713) 696- veojectedt Use o f Funds may • Zoning Official the City 6 - Block her inform Park. Jane Kee be obtained during 8868 Further information is 0 f t i c i a 1 business hours from the Jane O Kee f i c i a Z tae office of the Z ^ l^ g ;ommunity Development Z o n i n g Zoning Official of the City of _ Office, College Station City _ - - - -- - College Station, (713) 696- NOTICE OF Hall. 8868 PUBLIC HEARING Jane Kee For additional information, please contact Michael M. Zoning O f f i c i a ! The City of College Station Stevens, Community De- TO WHOM has been notified of it's velopment Planner, at 696- IT MAY CONCERN: eligibility to apply fora 1982 8868 Ext. 238. Community Development - -- • The Zoning Board of Grant in the amount of IT MAY WHOM RN: Adjustment for the City of 8317.000.00. TO WHOM \ /11-4.* ealti.1 11�.�.� 7 °CPAI:j) l f 98 a' .0 O, 0 O w 8 ., a • N c o .b as o I. '«, u a, «+ X O . a,• co O C" a .. 6 , v C . O 5 C X a.� • - a. C v v i C O 1) •B • b 'v, u > 'p cC a C N 'U .� C S O 7 . a ' , ,n C u a N • _ p ° a .., O > al a C y cd ;-1 3•- � v 0.0,0 a " as °Ly 3 a ~ ° >, O , ,. C a-0 u s cl C O 04 0 ct 0 o a c 3 0 '° $ •... — E o a : ° _ on . - 'u O v N 3 . .5 3 v) c „ 0 v a, t' • v y v ra = a c °J a, v)� p ' � o =� E 3 a = c- 5 � ov a°, o c °` - a to a.) c o - > aT a > v �4 O v v o a M Q � •vb a, ' o a ' , c c o cz ct u C r, ° � �,a'°u ° Qv =9- o o� �vo 0 u•- o o0` <f t a v .n to ov�'�U c a o uE- a-. c ,-,,,....= > E �� o =r o =; E 7:z : as • C 'O .0 c; - 0 a O o C ., O 'b o as i u ` a v 3 i _ a C U L y 'c� u C , E s a, . Y oo v ,, ,n E p 4 (�, 6. N I v O - C v _PU 3 t)>, -0 v v - D a v , O \�'�� \J a a � 3 c a eu -, � = u 3 = ' n c .. E E > Ca =x ' >, v.4 E v • v . 1 1 to '= v � • = � G a .. ' . 3 ..6. 3 C ,n al . > L C a, C Rs O 0 u ' O 2 a, o V (t a � A \v `. ca a _O v a' v On _ , C G ° E= O = 'b u .r S. v L 'b -0 v u as ° ._ • _ ° v v D -14) 00 ��� ct$ "-. y ` O 6 . C C 'E a o = - a TN � - 0 � � v, ° D ° 3 a . � >,.= o � ▪ v N a)w as us v ` mac° vo ° v > v 3 o cE � oo U a E ia � i > � • u 'o ro y C 'n y >, o a' o , r---4 4 0- tz C 0 '> .0 c , 3 E p a 4 o- O ° . ,n >. Q. 0 n o E 0 ,n i� .0 , i t .- • " a O u 'C 3 . • E v C E.., •-, c c, E 3 C y o`4 as h w C • • ' •0 RI ill . 0 u 3 vM «, O V C ` ?? • i...= O. •� , ou ate, ., v'n 3 I Ii9 li ! v 3 o E a ` l o = .0 T-t V o v-osy vxo°° > V a - c , v .g 63 0. p._ =w.C 0s o n. -- c . vb on' r' ..v =� a�i O.. ` cc a. cd -a . 0 u c 0 a v 3. O b v C c7i C` ^ Z 3 % oo�TS� .c a 4 p 09= ° a,' E c o C/ a .S'. 8 V' L 8 ■ L + L ." C� ---4 >i O C ., N -d O O . c� O u� N 0 .= C ,n H ._ w 7 a . • T3 O T «± 3 ro C O is a, •••4 0 E O _ ca u O a V V) .CI C E ,n , ''''.0-- E o p s . ,, = ,n 0 .o .. ; 'u 0 - V 0 V o .cl N ,30 g c • r,�, 1:d 0.) 0. u -0 a,o'�3 QovcE C CU T O '� o y _ � E�� c D a � L o p V- h. ►- c 'b Y o E E' 3 as M is o v 3 "" O E a c� N 0 3 u C $. a, ° O Z ,_ as . O ro • 0 r' a > v a, a .a >, v) T .� ..y 3 b� 3 O R1 u " , v iii 04 O u ro 0 0 C c� v oq a, v c c . a73 c � .,�. � o „ , tu3 ; s. - 108 Legal Notices 108 Legal Notices Highway 60 and Highway line of the Ralph Bobbitt 2818. more particularly de- tract; scribed as follows: THENCE N 44 °36' E for a COMMENCING at a con- distance of 82.62 feet to the crete post in the northwest northeast corner of the right -of -way line of Farm -to- Ralph Bobbitt tract: Market Road (FM) 60, said THENCE S 45 °24' E for a concrete post being 125.00 distance of 1,718.94 feet to a feet from and at a right angle point in the southwest to FM 60 centerline station right -of -way line of FM 2818; 136 15; THENCE S 10 °29' E along THENCE N 10 °29' W for a the FM 2818 right -of -way line distance of 140.10 feet to the for a distance of 286.10 feet PLACE OF BEGINNING; to the PLACE OF BEGIN - THENCE N 45 °24' W along NING and containing 6.012 the common boundary line acres of land more or less. between the Ralph Bobbitt The said hearing will be held tract and the M.L. Kinman in the Council Room at the tract for a distance' of College Station City Hall, 1,163.54 feet to a point in me 1101 South Texas Avenue, westerly existing College College Station at the 7:00 Station City limit line; P.M. meeting of the Plan - 'THENCE N 35 °34' W along ning and Zoning Commis - the city limit line that lies sion on Thursday. May 6. • 500.00 feet from and p3>tallel 1982. TO WHOM IT to the southwest right -of- For additional information MAY CONCERN: way line of FM 2818 for a on this matter, contact the distance of 270.75 feet and Director of Planning, (713) The Planning and Zoning corner; 696 -8868. THENCE continue along 4/15/82 Commission of the City of the city !AK line for the -_ College Station, Texas will followin calls: YOU ARE INVITED TO BID hold a public hearing to hear N 41 °59 W for a distance of ON THE FOLLOWING comments on the considera- 378 23 feet; WORK: tion of the disannexation of N 40 °33' W for a distance of an area of appro 146.20 feet to a point in the NAME OF PROJECT_: PE- 6.012 acres, including the most northwest boundary P L A C E M E N T OF northwest corner of - J • • 4„,,_ 61 4 /,z.c co. 4at /5 / 982 I Council CD committee to meet Members of the Bryan City Council, dinator Audrey Crafton said the coni- which holds the purse strings, and the mittee will meet again Wednesday in an Community Development advisory effort to complete its work by the end committee, which has a $777,000 of April. purse, will put their heads together in a Community Development funds in meeting Monday. the past have been used for a variety of The boards will meet at 7:30 p.m. in street and housing improvements in the the Bryan Utilities building conference city. Funding this year has been cut room in one of a series of meetings bet- back about 12 percent as part of Presi- ween the city council and the two dent Reagan's federal budget cuts. dozen or so advisory boards and com- missions it appoints. The citizens advisory committee is nearing the end of deliberations over how it thinks the city's federal Com- munity Development allotment should be spent this year. After a series of • public hearings, their budget will go to the city council for final approval. Community Development coor- gt-it a )*/ / /7,/ • Attitude defeated Dozier The people of College Station can take heart in the defeat of Jim Dozier by Lynn Nemec. Jim Dozier was beaten by a lady who will look out for the people of College Station, not for the big businesses. Lynn Nemec is a resident of Raintree, and Jim Dozier was defeated for his general attitude toward the Raintree problem of a few months ago. Maybe this will serve notice to other council members and the mayor that the people are more concerned with their lifestyle than with br- inging business into our neighborhoods. Thank you, Lynn. N.B. Chennault College Station & /9) 1 9■6 • Check railroad fac Referring to the report in the Eagle Friday, April 2 by David Crisp (City Hall Report,) in which Mr. Crisp com- ments about ownership of property over which the Railroads operate through Texas A &M campus. Mr. Crisp says that the railroads, Missouri and Southern Pacific Rai soads, have been asked to remove their tracks from property owned by the University or campus. I wonder just where he got his information that the land used by the railroads i; not their own. I was a.;sociated with Southern Pacific for many years, in this area, was the local Southern Pacific Employee in charge of work , vhen the changes were made to re- arrange the tracks when the underpass was built to let Highway 60 go under the tracks w hich was quite a big project. In all he prints of the properties that I saw showed a pro- nerty line cetween the university and Railroad property. Now a word as to moving the tracks because they are on campus property, if the tracks are moved west or southwest they will still be on campus property, so WHY move that direction. Now would it be sensible to move to the east side of Bryan - College Station cities, it would be very expensive, and would have to be paid for by taxpayers, you and I. JLQ-4-04,7 I think we have a group of people that tend to forget or who do not know three things. No. 1, how much tax revenue that the taxing systems get �� from the Railroads, every one should find out. Without this / tax our schools alone would have to raise our taxes. No. 2, do the people who want these tracks moved know how much cargo these two Railroads move daily through here that it would be impossible to move through here by ILII Highway. They move stone, gravel, grain of all kinds, all 0,6 19aJ---) bound for the Gulf Cities. They also move common freight of all kinds. No. 3, do any of the people who complain about the Railroads know that if it were not for the fact that a railroad, the now known Southern Pacific, had not built tracks through at the time they did there might not have been a Texas A &M here. At the time they built they were the only means of transporting mass freight to the area, thus making possible for the area to grow in the early days. Some people need to review history and see what took place to small towns that the railroads missed by just a few miles in the days when they were built. I might add a fourth reason our railroads are so important in which our national leaders as well as our people as a whole are forgetting. Remember, you who are old enough, the great load that was placed on the Railroads nationwide to move men (troops) and supplies during World War II. Many of you are not old enough to have seen this movement. Let those who are concerned give consideration to the needs for the Railroads and consider the benefits that offset disadvantages and see which is most important. H.B. Horn Retired Southern Pacific Employee an Budget proposal planned A brand new budget and a proposal for an employee cost of living raise will be presented to the College Station City Council in a work ses- sion Wednesday. The council, which meets at 4 p.m. at City Hall, also will go behind closed ,doors to consider city board and commis- sion appointments to replace- members whose terms expire this month. Wednesday's meeting on the new budget will be 413 ' just the first step in a process that is expected to last until late June. As part of the process, the council will consider granting across -the- board pay raises to com- pensate employees for increases in the cost of living. Assistant finance director Glenn Schroeder said a raise in the six to eight percent range pro- bably will be proposed. i)-/-c-e- r CS to review new Community Development budget, oil well A $332,696 Community The Community Development The company got informal ap- Development program for 1982 program is funded this year with proval from the council earlier this will be considered by the College $317,000 in federal funds, plus month to drill the well using the Station City Council in its regular unobligated funds from previous best available technology as a trial meeting at 7 p.m. Thursday. years. This year, the program also case. The city plans to use in- includes $150,000 in lending com- formation from the well to revise Consideration will follow a mittments from local financial in- its oil and gas ordinance. public hearing on the proposed stitutions to subsidize rehabilita- budget, which includes $90,000 tion loans. In other business, the council for street construction, $201,000 The council also will consider will go into closed session to con - for rehabilitation of homes and an ordinance granting Wood sider appointing new city board rental housing, $31,697 for ad- Energy Inc. a permit to drill for oil and committee members and con - ministration and a $10,000 con- and gas in the University Park sider a cost -of- living increase for tingency fund. subdivision. city employees. Clk-Q eAl 464:(-6 ° • L 108 Legal Notices 108 Legal Notices the 7:00 p.m. meeting of the the Council Room, College Planning and Zoning Com- Station City Hall, 1101 Texas mission on May 6, 1982. Avenue, at the 7:00 P.M. For additional information, meeting of the Council on contact the City Planner's Thursday, April 22, 1982. Office, (713) 696 -8868 Copies of the 1982 State - Extension 237. ment of Community De- Albert O. Mayo, Jr., velopment Objectives and Director of Planning Projected Use of Funds may , NOTICE O F PUBLIC NOTICE O F PUBLIC AOM:jk be obtained during normal HEARING: HEARING: j business hours from the - -- Community ity Development NOTICE OF Office, College Station City I The College Station Plan- The College Station Plan- PUBLIC HEARING Hall. • sing and Zoning Commis- ning and Zoning Commis- For additional Information, sion will hold a public sion will hold a public The City of College Station please contact Michael M. hearing on the question of hearing on the question of has been notified of it's Stevens, Community De- granting a Conditional Use granting a Conditional Use eligibility to apply for a 1982 velopment Planner, at 698 - Permit for Permit for Community Development 8868 Ext. 238. A daycare center to be A daycare center to be Grant in the amount of located at 800 & 802 Autumn located at 800 & 802 Autumn 8317,000.00. NOTICE Circle In College Station, Circle In College Station, The College Station City Texas, Lots 1 & 2, Block C, Texas, a location which is Council will hold a Public TEXAS STATE DEPART - University Park Subdivision, zoned R -4 4 -plex- vacant, Hearing to consider the 1982 MENT OF HIGHWAYS AND Phase I. Lots 1 & 2, Block C, Statement of Community PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION University Park Subdivision, Development Objectives N 0 T 1 C E T 0 The request for Use Permit Phase 1. and Projected Use of Funds CONTRACTORS. is in the name of Somana prior to the submission of Sealed proposals for con - Corporation, Don Farek, The request for Use Permit the application to the De- structing Asphaltic Con - V-P, and Syed Naqi and is In the name of Somana partment of Housing and Crete Pavement Overlay on Syed Hyder. Corporation, Don Farek, Urban Development. various highways covered The hearing will be held in V -P, and Syed Naqi and In addition, the Council will by MMC 917 -29 -9 in Brazos the Council Room of the Syed Hyder. consider several amend- County will be received at College Station City Hall, The hearing will be held in mgnts to the current 1981 the office of the District 1101 South Texas Avenue at the Council Room of the Community Development Engineer. 1300 North Texas the 7:00 p.m. meeting of the College Station City Hall, Program. Avenue, Bryan, Texas 77805, Planning and Zoning Com- 1101 South Texas Avenue at Said hearing will be held in until 2:00 p.m. local time May �-C�/' LGtJVI ay) d )2,9,;__ c edpesday, April 21, .198 108,.1: Legal Notices The said heari@ g,,will. be held in _the Coucil Room of the' City Hall. 1101 Texas.4v - Lue at the. 7:00 P.M gle0ih9 of the - Planning . nd Zoning Commission }i`T11Grsday. .May.6, 1982' - ' '} - N` For additional intorr please contact - Ube C ty Planner's Office; 17131 696- 8868, ext. 23 James M. Callaway Asst. Director of Planning TO WHOM IT 4/21/82 MAY CONCERN: TO WHOM IT • TO WHOM IT The Planning and Zoning MAY CONCERN MAY CONCERN: Commission of the City of College Station will hold a The' Pranning and -- Zdning The Planning and Zoning Public Hearing on the ques -_. Cbmrriission of the City of Commission of the City of tion of 'rezoning the loll'ow- College Station will hold a College Station will hold a ing property: . Publte Hearing on the ques Public Hearing on the ques- Lot 12, Block 8 of Collgge do 0t rezoning the folibw- tion of rezoning the follow- Heights Subdivision (303" ing property: ing property: E. University Drive), Lot 2A,,DIk 46, Southwood A 9.0 acre tract located on presently being used .for alley -lOA Subdivision the north side of Krenek s t o r a g e , 1 r o mr ' (Corner of Rio Grande & ' Lane approximately 2,000 A d m i n i s t rat i ve Calcones) ' feet east of Texas Professional A -P to, From vac -ant R- 3 Avenue. Planned Commercial C -3. • TownhouseRowhouse • to R -4 Apartments Low De nsity.(torCondos) , The said hearing will be held in the Council Roorn of the College - Station City. � Hall, 1101" Texas Avenuei at' 1 the 7700 P.M. meeting of the Planning, and Zoning Cqm -" mission on Thursday, May 6.' -' 1982. i • 3 For additional information.: please contact the cityi, Planner's Office. (71 -8868, eXl..2-37 t. 77Lj2--) J id a � �� �1 J j I . 9 M. Callaway � l �JI�CJ � I: Asst. Director of PlanniA� . 4121/82 - Legal Notices tO8 Legal Notices AGENCY .. /es ), in an said bid and to accept the amount noO ., less than 5 .offer considered most ad- percen: \ of the total amotint vantageous to the City. bid. -i - These items ay be ue pu shar- r- T E X .4$ M U N 4C LP q L chased with Reven POWER AGENCY reserves ing funds. 4/16, 4/2 - 81 -82 -12 the right a reject any or all - bids. J.W.Cookeey, C.P.M. Manager of Purchasing NOTICE 9-)--- The City of College S 1 ( - � lion is accepting bid(s) for: 1. Four (4) Battery operated traffic counters with tape � l prinat. ers m for t 12 . MikscechairsStat llaneous ., Ap furniture dess, , appl until 10:00 a nd f College equip ment e ril City o i Center j on Civic h iances 30, 1982, at which time the bids will be opened in the office' of the Purchasing Agent at the City Hall. Specifications may be obtained at the office of the Purchasing Agent. All bids received after- - Mat- {„ f- will-- -be-_; returned unopened. The ' ,, City of College Station reserves the right to waive or reject any and all bids or any and all irregularities in • board reshuffled reshu n e 11 J�. this l C Z o will stay on the — was raised year to supple- Y Murl Bailey also wtl Y ment $150,000 in lending com- By DAVID CRISP c ommission. Stpl Writer The council also named David mittments from local financial in- planning and zoning LeUnes and Donita stitutions. The loans will be used Two new P Morris, Judy to extend benefits loans to homeowners third commissioner were named and a Haden to the parks and recrea- who make ene much money to be third commi4sionpr was reap- board, replacing Dee Spr- tion b a 4 -3 split vote of the Bruce Miles and Nemec, eligible for full grants, Stevens point by Council finger, eaid. Thursd Station City who has been elected to the city The program this year also in Thursday night. council. Steve Biles was reap- cludes a new project to concen- i After meeting behind closed pointed as chairman of the trace enforcement of city building doors for more than 90 minutes, board. and environmental codes in an A $332,696 Community area bounded by Holleman Gerald co named David Hill and Develop Eleanor, Welsh and Gerald Miller, both Texas A &M ment budget and a Drive, assistant professors, to the CO m- $475,274 sewer line also were ap- D streets. will use Roy Kelly was reappointed to p mission to replace Jim Gardner proved Thursday. Stevens said the city The Community Development the S program the work with the commission, but only after hearing at which no one spoke, and Anne Hazen. program, approved at a public g esidents in the area to clear up oke such violations in t he a uncut lawns, up housing ro ram and litter and unsafe buildings. with V a move a r him includes a $18prog The and d council Thursday also ac materials Vicky Reinke, a Texas $90,000 for street construction. tested a bid from E.P. Brady materials specialist at appoint Paarts f Eleanor and Nevada Inc. d build from intercepter line Re The attempt was supported to aPP streets will be paved and which was supported by from the city's sewage treatment Bob Reinke, from to Rock Prairie Road. council members Lyn Nemec, the street construct on cash with The project, airs e with 1981 was Runnels and Y was Community Development bond m r o jec will serve the south was defeated 4-3 and Kelly the pro- end of town, including the Fox - - reappointed im Bhl by the same p margin. Planner ehabilitation budget Stevens said the end addition which lies outside Jim Be commission was c raps ass. d commi it io counc l a for poor and low income families the city limits on the East Bypass. defeated city Th e- e-0 le, frid , 4, t 9 83_ CS city budget y u p 29 percent By DAVID CRISP Staff Writer A $29.5 million total city budget for the new fiscal year was proposed by College Station city of- ficials to the city council Wednesday. The proposal, up 29 percent from last year, in- cludes an 8 percent employee cost -of- living raise plus money to pay for new capital and manpower requirements. Finance Director A.E. "Van" VanDever said the increase primarily will be funded by growth of the tax base and increases in sales tax and utility revenues. But the council will have to decide after it gets a detailed breakdown of the budget if it wants to raise sanitation and utility rates to meet expenses proposed for those departments. The council Wednesday assigned the pay raise proposal to a committee and set a special work ses- sion next Wednesday to begin review of the budget, which is expected to be completed by late June. VanDever said the 8 percent pay raise would maintain the pay position of city employees in rela- tion to other workers in the area. Based on the in- - flation rate in the Houston region, a 6 percent raise would be reasonable, but might make it harder to recruit new employees, he said. The proposed pay hikes make up $605,000 of the proposed budget increase of nearly $8 million. The biggest budget hike is in the utility fund, which would increase 25.8 percent. That increase is mostly due to higher electricity costs because of consumption by new homes and businsses in town. It does not allow for Gulf States Utilities' recent request for electric rate hikes of up to 83 percent. Any rate hike will have to be passed on directly to consumers, VanDever said. The new' budget predicts a federal revenue shar- ing allotment of $350,000 for the new fiscal year. The council at its 7 p.m. meeting today is ex- pected to set a May 5 public hearing date on the budget and on the use of revenue sharing funds. In other business Wednesday, the council designated the week of May 9 -15 as Small Business Week and as National Nursing Home Week. Pro- clamations honoring the Fightin' Texas Aggie Band and designating Saturday as Frank G. Anderson Day in honor of the former mayor and A &M track coach also were approved. °�L h I 02(32)14_2- CSFi to consider raises The College Station CityCc ncjl will consider an 8 percent;employc°e pay hike, .tte- go behind closed doors to discuss board and committee appoint- ments in a special meeting at 4 p.ni. •Wednesday. The city staff has proposed a $605,000 cost -of- living raise in the 1932 -83 budget, which was presented to the council last week. The 8 percent re- quest was based-on a of the rise in living ex- penses throughout the Houston area. The r::qucst was referred to a council committee, which is scheduled to make a recommendation for Wednesday's council meeting at City`,Hall. • The council Wednesday also will go back into ex- ecutive session to try to finish appoirting;naw board and committee members. After spending more than 3" hours behind clos- ed doors last week, the council came up with ap- pointments to six of its boards. In a split vote, David Hill, Murl Bailey, Gerald . Miller and Roy Kelly were named to the planning and zoning commission. David Morris, Judy "" LeUnes and Donita Haden were appointed to the parks and recreation hoard. All present members were reappointed to the plumbing appeals and advisory board, the cemetery committee': and the `electrical examining board. Mary Kay Donahue, Rosalie Gross and Linda Busby .vere added to the community appearance board. Ea--6- 1 ( 1 -- / - (310.9 a 7,19 TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: The College Station City Council will hold a public hearing on the question •of rezoning the following pro- p e r t y A 9.0 acre tract located on the north side 0 Krenek 2,000 Lane approximately feet east of Texas Avenue. The said hearing will be held in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue at the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the City Council on May 13, 1982. For additional information, please contact me. James M. Callaway Assistant Director of Planning T.O WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: The College Station City Council will hold a public hearing on the question of rezoning the following pro - A 12.934 acre tract located on the east side of Texas • Avenue approximately 200 feet north of the intersection of Texas Avenue and Rock Prairie Road. from District A -O Agricultural Open, to District C -1 Genreal Com- mercial. The application is in / the name of Greg Scamardo. The said hearing will be ',4) rCLger held in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall. 1101 South Texas Avenue at the 8 7 7:00 P.M. M. meeting of the City Council on May 13, 1982. —511 '6°L 7 For additional information please contact me. James Callaway Assistant Director of of Planning nnini ng — • TO WHOM IT MAY i CONCERN: The College Station City Council will hold a public hearing on the question of rezoni the following pro - Lot 19 of the Meadowland Addition (131 Meadowland Street) from General Com- mercial District C -1 to Apart- , ment District 13-5. The said hearing will be the in the legeOUStation City Avelnue 1101 South Texas at the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the City Council on May 13, 1982. For additional information, please contact me. James M. Callaway Assistant Director of Planning TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: The City Council of the College Station City Council will hold a Public Hearing on the question of amending the Zoning Ordinance No. 850 revising the Townhouse lROwhouse De- finition, deleting the Maximum Building Group Length, and revising the District Use Schedule - Table A. The said hearing held in the Council will Room e of the College Station City Hall. 1101 South Texas Avenue at the regular City Council meeting on May 13, 1982 at 7:00 P.M. For additional information. contact the Planning Depart- ment, 696 -8888 Ext. 238. James M. Callaway ' Li Assistant Director of Planning 8 percent raise tentatively OK y for CS employees by Lori Weldon employees, Ringer said. Battalion Reporter Members of the new Civic All College Station city em- Center Committee were also ployees may receive an 8 percent appointed at the meeting, after cost -of- living salary increase more than an hour of discussion next year. by the council in closed session. An across - the -board raise Al Pedulla was named to chair was approved Wednesday dur- the committee, along with mem- ing the workshop meeting of the bers Kristin Dahlem, Ann College Station City Council. Hazen, John Richards, Vicki Actions taken during workshop Reinke and alternate Betty meetings are recommendations; Dean. the Council will discuss the Appointed to the Zoning proposal at its next regular Board of Adjustment were meeting. Violetta Burke -Cook, a former Councilman Larry Ringer said the pay increase would member returning to chair the make the city of College Station committee; Gale Wagner and a competitive employer. Any- Jack Upham, who are members thing less than 8 percent would returning to serve another two - require a much greater increase year term; and new member in the future just to keep up with Mary Kaye Donahue. local salaries, he said. Councilman Lynn Nemec • The council will direct the suggested that in the future a city staff to report on the possi- policy be developed stating the bility of a merit -based pay sys- procedures for applying for tem in the future, to replace the committee membership. She present seniority -based pay also proposed standardizing the schedule. A merit system would way in which the members are require efficiency ratings for chosen by the city council. f I ♦ 1 i • di 6 0.,..A.....Le c;e...))9g;----- • i • CS Council to meet Funding for an ar- to discuss new appoint - chaeological study and ments to city boards and for new emergency committees s also medical equipment will scheduled. be considered Thursday by the College Station City Council. The council, which meets at 7 p.m. at City Hall, also will consider rezoning requests to change a 13 -acre site near Texas Avenue and Rock _Prairie Road from agricultural•,to commer- cial land ais :'a lot at 131 Meadowland St. from Thr• • commercial to,apartment zoning. � (� , /] The council also will �f�tt �`f / t5 (� discuss putting up mat- ching funds to pay an an- / J 948) thropologist this summer l �/ ( to search for the grave site of Richard Carter, the reputed first resident of College Station whose grave is thought to be in the Glenhaven Estates area. The council also will consider paying $6,450 in matching, funds to purchase communica- tions equipment that would enable doctors to monitor the condition of patients who are en route to St. Joseph Hospital. The council Thursday also will hear from Den- nis Driscoll of 213 Red- mond Drive about a series of water fine brtaks in his yard over the last 10 years. Another closed session fOt Legal Notices Council will hold a public hearing on the question of rezoning the following property: Lot 12, Block B of College Heights Subdivision (303 E. University Drive) presently being used for storage, from Adm Inistrative- Professional A -P to Planned Commercial C -3. The said hearing will be heard in the Concil Room Of the College Station City Hall, 1101 Texas Avenue on Thursday, May 27, 1982 at 7:00 p.m. For additional information, please contact me. James M. Callaway Assistant Director of Planning TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: The City Council of the City of College Station, Texas will hold a public hearing to hear comments on the consideration of the dis- annexation of an area of approximately 6.012 acres, Including the northwest cor- ner of Highway No. 60 and Highway No. 2818, more particuiary described as follows: COMMENCING at a con- crete post in the northwest right -of -way line of Farm -to- Market Road (FM) 60, said concrete post being 125.00 feet from and at a right angle to FM 60 centerline station 136p1us15; it/ THENCE N W for a distance of 140.10 feet to the W PLACE NE GINN G; THENCE E N 45 5°°2424' ' W along the common boundary line between the Ralph Bobitt • tract and the M. L. Kinman tract for a distance of n feet to a point in the westerly existing College State Station City limit line; THENCE N 35 °34' W along the city limit that lies 500.00 feet from and parallel to the southwest right -of -way line of FM 2818 for a distance of 270.75 feet and corner; THENCE continue along the city limit line for the following calls; N 41 °59' W for a distance of 378.23 feet; N 40 °33' W for a distance of 146.20 feet to a point in the most northwest boundary line o the Ralph Bobbitt tract; THENCE N 44°38' E for a distance of 82.82 feet to the northeast corner of the Ralph Bobbitt tract; THENCE S 45 °24' E for a distance of 1,718.94 feet to a point in the southwest right -of -way line of FM 2818; THENCE S10 °29' E along the FM 2818 right -of -way line for a distance of 286.10 feet to the PLACE OF BE- GINNIHNG and containing 6.012 acres of land more or 4 less. The said hearing wll be held in the Council Room at the College Station City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avehue, College Station at the 1:00 P.M. meeting of the City Council on Thursday, May 27, 1982. For additional information on this matter, contact the Director of Planning, (713) 696 -8868. TO MAY CONCERN: The Zoning Board of Ad- justment for the Clty of a est for nawvariance en the name of: Mac Randolph 700 University ttativonEast Texas ,_ TO WHOM I N:AY Said case will be. heard b the Board at their ou Board of Ad- meeting In tho n Cif' The Zoning Room, College S Clt justment for the City of Hall, 1101 Texas . ]:0 College Station will consider Tuesday, May Y8 ca a request fora variance in P.m the name of: The nature of thA cage is a; Automotive Service World follows: � 2200 Longmire The Applicant is re re College Station a variance to the require Texas 77640 setback on Lot A Block 701 _ Said case will be heard by In University Park East. _ _ Fulable information is I N L egal Notices the Board at their regular meeting in the Council available at the office of thi Room, College Station City Zoning Official of the City o TO WHOM IT MAY Hall, 1101 Texas s Avenue on 7 0 College Station, (713) 696 CONCERN: Tuesday, May 8868 ext. 247. p.m. Jane Kee The nature of the case is as I Zonin Offi The College Station public follows: pBalias TO WHOM IT MAY Council will hold a p The Applicant is aPf CONCERN: hearing on the question of T h interpretation of Sect. property: g rezoning the following a-D 10 of Ord. 850 o Sern- p 6-0 Fuel O r d Signs for - The Zoning Board of Ad Lot 2A, Bik 46, Southwood justment for the City o Valley Subdivision commercial project at 2200 r of Rio Grande & College Station will conside Longmire. The appeal rice a (Corner terns whether fuel p a request for Balcones) r a variance i( the name of: signs can be portable a r cant R -3 must be permanently Centex Subway, Inc. From va d l ul a Subway tached to either a building or 1701 Southwest Parkway, TownhouselRowhou the detati�sdnessn for the _ Suite No. 204 R -4 Apartments Low Density College Station, TX 77840 (for Condos) will be Further information is b) Said case will be heard la The said hearing aFuirthe at the office of the m e Board at their ounc heard in the Concil Room of Zoning a a t t hl of the 3 it 89 e meeting in the Counci the College Station City College Station, of Room, College Station City Hall, 1101 Texas 27, 1982 on 8868 ext. 247. • Hall, 1101 Texas Avenue or Tuesday, Thursday, May Jane Kee ..., say, May 18, 1982 at 7:0C 7:00 p.m. Z onin Official P •m For additional information TO WHOM IT MAY The • nature of the case is as please contact me. CONCE follows: James M. Callaway yy� The Applicant is requesting rqie Assistant Director of The College S {slice City parking a vkf to the st o od Planning_ -- ndfor a at g11foLin sandwich shop iversity Drive, College Sta• capacit y itY tor has 30 customers on the and no premises. Further information is available at the office of the Zoning Official of the 1 3 1 ityof College Station, (713) 6 9 8868 ext. 247. Jane Kee Zonin Official TO MAY CONCERN: The Zoning Board oe Ad- justment for the Clty of a request will consider variance in the name of: Southlanda rporation c/o J Austin, Tallwood TX787 AustX 78759 Eaa I 4 Said case will be heard by the Board at their regular ill m eeting in the Council Hoom, College Stati on Co Tuesday, May y Hall, 1101 TexaB A982 ae7 pm. d eFfkY, The nature of the case is as l �l (9`'),-- follows: / The Applicant is requesting required a variance to the rear wetback for a bilding o L C Bo et Addition. Further W Further information is ' available at the office of the Zoning Official of the Clty 89 of College Station, 8868 ext. 247. ' Jane Kee Zonin Official un CS planners unveil Plan 2000 By DAVID CRISP many families into apart- and noise, showed com- the map could be misus- Staff Writer ments or smaller homes mercial development ed by residents who fail- College Station in the also may ease, they dominating the city's ed to take other land -use year 2000 could have a noted. major thoroughfares: factors into account. population of 71,000 A map included in the Texas Avenue, the East Consult4nn Wayne people and cover an area presentation and depic- and West bypasses and Snyder said the map up to twice its present ling a computer analysis Wellborn Road. reflects or4y current uses size, planning con- of the most suitable Planning and zoning and doesnt anticipate sultants said Tuesday. development for each commissioner M u r l such thins as new The planners, who 1,000 square feet of land Bailey said the plan thoroughf +es and in- unveiled the first draft of in the city drew the most could encourage dense dustries. It also doesn't the city's Plan 2000 to ci- attention from city of- commercial development consider the effect of ty officials, said the city ficials. The map, based in areas where the city Bryan's future develop - could add 30,000 people on such factors as soil, doesn't want it. Other ment policies on College to its current population drainage, accessibility officials were concerned Station, he said. and still be less densely populated than it is now. They expect the population within the present city limits to hold at about 55,000 people, because of traffic condi- tions and difficulties of expanding utility ser- vices. The 2,300 -acre in- dustrial development planned south of the city also will act as a magnet to draw the population — and the city limits — out along Texas 6, con- sultant Samuel Wyse said. But Wyse predicted the city would not reach beyond the industrial E park by the turn of the ThC / l The_ 1 y century. The development, which is being planned as I ! 124 )9 a high- technology research park by the Col- lege Station Industrial Development Founda- tion, could skew the 71,000 population estimate, Wyse said. "How accurate that's going to be is up for grabs, but it is a rational basis for developing a comprehensive plan," he said. The consultants an- ticipate that population density will lessen as university growth tapers off and the city develops a more mixed economy. The current interest rate crunch that is forcing 108 Legal Notices the 7:00 p.m. meeting of the Planning and Zoning Com- mission on Thursday, June 3, 1982. For additional information I NOTICE OF contact the Ciiy Planner's PUBLIC HEARING Office (714:1696 -8868, The College Station Plan - Extension 237;. ning and Zoning Commis - James M. Callaway sion will hold a public Assistant DireCtor hearing on the question of of Planning . granting a Conditional Use The Navasota ISD is ace'ept- Permit for expansion of the • ing bids 'until 4:00 P.M. June A °M Consolidated 'High 14 for one portable dgiuble School: Welch - 701 West classroom unit (approx. size 24' x 64'). Building t0 be . The request for Use per- located on east end of mit is in the name of Collette Elementary campus. For • Station Indeggpdent SS,.00I additional information and District. - specifications, contact Dr. [ the Councit The hearin 9 oom' dt the 1 be geld in John C. Webb, Ph. 825 -6555. - College Station City Hall, 1 1101 South Texas Avenue at 109 Public Notices , the 7:00 p.m meeting of the Plahfang _anal Zoning Com- 1 mission on hursday. June NOTICE OF 3, 1982. PUBLIC HEARING For additional. information The College Station plan- contact the City Planner's ping and Zoning Co,Unis- Office, (7131 .6 66 -8868. sion will 'hold a public Extension 237. hearing on the question of James M. Callaway granting a Conditional `Use Assistant Director of Permit for additions and Planning. renovations public.schoOl at northwest corner of Timber NOTICE OF and Jersy. PUBLIC HEARING • The request for Use'Per- 1 The College Station Plan - mit is in the name of College ' I ning and Zoning Commis - Station Independent School sion will hold a public District. hearing on the question of The hearing will be hle1V in granting a Conditional Use the Council Room ofn the Permit for expansion ,of a College Station City , Hall, parking lot at South Knoll 1101 South Texas Avenije at Efementary School, and the 7:00 p m. meeting Of the renovation. Planning and Zoning Com- ;fie - request 'for Use, Per- mission on Thursday, .June mit is in the name of College 3, 1982. I Station Independent School .For additional information District. . contact the City Planner's - The heariniwitttre hetdin Office. (713) 696 -8868. I the Council. Room of the Extension 237. College Station City Hall, NOTICE OF P U 8 L I C James M. Callaway 1101 South Texas Avenue at HEARING: Assistan4 Director of the 7:00 p.m. meeting of the Planning- - Planning ,and Zoning Com- The College Station Plan- NOTICE OF mission, on Thursday, June ning and Zoning Commis ., PUBLIC HEARING 3, 1442a, sion will hold a public The Cofle e Station Plan- For dditional information hearing on the question of q .coiit3ei the City Planner's granting a Conditional Use fling and Zoning Commis- Wee. (713) 696 -8868, Permit for - sio will hold a public Extension 237. a Veterinary clinic located heating 6a'the question of ,./ amps M. Callaway on the East feeder road of granting a Conditional Use Assistant Director of @ Hwy Permit for Site work. renova- Plannin . approximattely '44 mile south tion and parking addition of -- of Hwy 30. College Hills Elementary 44 'school. The '- The " request for Use Per - he request for Use Permit is in the name of miYis in the name of College Jeanna C. Fiske, DVM Station Independent School District. The hearing will be held in The hearing will be held in the Council Room of the the Council Room of the ll, College Station City Hall. College Station City Ha 1101 South Texas Avenue at 1101 South Texas Avenue at the 7:00 p.m. 'Meeting of the Planning .and •Zoning Com- mission on Thursday. June 3. 1982. For additional information contact the City Plarther's Office, (71.3) 696 -8868, Extension 237. James M. Callaway Assistant Director of Planning. T4- W d / aY /9 CS planners to hold hearings Public hearings on three rezoning requests, two of which would add commercial areas to Col- lege Station, will be con- sidered Thursday by the planning and zoning commission. The commission, which meets at 7 p.m. at City Hall, also will review site plan permits for a new business, an apartment project and a shopping center. Architect J.W. Wood Lap/if/ filed two wo o of the rezoning 111 � requests, the larger on a n tract at the east end . / qs, end d o of Miller's Lane. �� Wood wants to leave part of the land as a single-family residence zone, /�t zone, but add a townhouse /rowhouse r5( ,. t { / district and a medium - density apartment zone. Wood also has applied to rezone five lots in the FedMart subdivision at Tarrow Street and University Drive from single - family to general commercial. Commer- cial zones presently lie both east and west of the property. An application from planning and zoning commissioner Roy W. Kelly to rezone six lots at Cooner Street and Texas Avenue as a general commercial district also will be considered. The lots presently include both general commercial and apartment zoning. The commission will look at site plan for the 15 -acre Post Oak Square shopping center propos- ed just west of Post Oak Mall on Texas 30. CS Council to consider disannexation By DAVID CRISP ty services and has had problerhs meeting pected Thursday, with a review of funding Staff Writer city health requirements. requests for new or expanded programs The College Station City Council could College Station Independent School scheduled at the council's first meeting in shrink the size of the city limits by six acres District officials are expected to attend June. Thursday when it considers disannexation Thursday's meeting to ask for an exemp- The council will consider two rezoning of a mobile home park on the west end of tion from local fire code requirements for a requests that also have gone before the town. sprinkler system at its new elementary planning and zoning commission. The The requirement commission has recommended approval of a e council also will look at a request to school. The state fire code has no sprinkler � uirement for schools. Councilman Tony Jones' request to rezone exempt the new Southwood Valley Elemen- q - tary School from automatic sprinkler re- Mayor Gary Halter has proposed the 2.4 acres at Balcones Street and Rio quirements, take up a proposal to create an council create an historic preservation Grande Boulevard as an apartment zone, historic preservation committee and con- committee funded the first year with but it voted against recommending a plann- _ sider adoption of the basic budget for $6,000 in hotel -motel tax funds. The com- ed commercial zone at 303 E. University 1982 -83. mittee would act to preserve information Drive. The planning and zoning commission about the city's early history before it is The council meets at 7 p.m. at City Hall. has recommended approval of the disan- lost, Halter said. In today's 4 p.m. work session, the council nexation, which was requested by park The council Thursday also will hold will consider a permit to Pet Paradise to owner Ralph Bobbitt. The park, which lies public hearings on its revenue sharing and keep animals and birds for sale and hear a just at the edge of the existing city limits at operating budgets for 1982 -83. Action on presentation from William R. Nash of the FM 2818 and FM 60, has never received ci- approval of the base budget also is ex- Keep America Beautiful organization. 7 7 i t?91 wpdarsday, Hay 26 TO WHOM IT MAY CON- CERN The College Station City Council will hold a public hearing on the question of rezoning the following property: Lots 1,2,3,4 & 5; Block 2; Fed Mart Development Corp. SubdivisiQ} From R -1 Single Family to'O-1 General Com- mercial, Apt Heaton is in the name oltJ,W. Wood. The said hearing will be held in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue at the 7:00 p.m. meeting of the City Council on June 10,1982. ' For additional information, please contact me. James M. 'Gallaway, . As- sistant Director of Planting TO WHOM IT MAY CON - C£R1� The College station • City Council' will,., - Id a public .,�� hearing on question of rezoning trt •- following p property: f^ Resubdivlsion of Lots 1,2 & 3 / Block 1 Cponer Addition and Th -Lat Lots 1,2 & 3` Burkhalter Addition _(property on nor - et lCom of Cooner viedikz9floty) Texas Avenue) From G-1 General Commercial and R-5 ... Apartments Medium Density Gen to C -1 General Commercial. Application is in the name of Roy W. Kelly. The said hearing C� be held ld the Council Room m of the College lege Station City Hall, 1101 South Hall ) 1% Texas Avenue at the 7:00 p.m. meeting of the City Council on June 10,1982. For additional information, please contact me. James M. Callaway. As- sistant Director of Planning The - Navasota ISD is accept- ing Aids until 4:00 P.M. June 14 for one portable double classroom unit (approx. size 24' x 64'). Building to be located on east end of Elementary campus. For additional information and specifications, contact Dr. John C. Webb Ph. 825 -6555. run • plea fo r clean city Cuncil hears By DAVID CRISP joining the program until its first public works director J ack Cor- Staff Writer meeting in June in order to give nish, Miller and businessman the city community appearance Marvin Tate, who all went to Keep Am Beautiful pitch to th Inc., to con- Houston earlier this year for train - officials made a pitch to the Col- committee an opportunity lege Station City Council Wednes- sider the proposal. But most coup- ing in the program. day to join in a nationwide com- cil members expressed support for Nash said the program is not the idea. concerned so much with litter as munity cleanup campaign that with littering and the attitudes that already has signed up 270 cities in Dorothy Miller of the Beautify Brazos County Committee, which produce it. As much as 80 percent 37 states. just completed a month -long spr- of litter does not come from Among those taking part is the ing cleaning effort here, also en- motorists and pedestrians, but City of Bryan, which paid a couraged a joint effort under a from improperly packaged 82,000 fee to join the Clean Com- single name with the fee for join- household and commercial trash, munity System in March. Keep ing combined for both cities. construction sites, trucks and America Beautiful vice president Joining the system would re- loading docks, he said. William Nash as'ed the council to quire appointment of at least a The Clean Community System join in a group effort with Bryan t h r e e - m e m b e r c o m m i t t e e could reduce litter by 32 percent in a program that he said could cut representing business, government the first year and produce cost - litter by 65 percent in five years. andyic interests in; a communi- benefit savings that far exceeed The council deferred action on ty. The Bityan cfitee includes the cost of the program, he said. Jr) Til C-- 1— --t-ku, Jr/ kiay fig, lqg )--- BRAZOS CS l ets schools g o without sprinklers By DAVID CRISP facilities. Denton said his ordinance City Manager North Bardell said Staff Writer was unnecessary and shouldn't be pass- that stringent city fire codes allow the The College Station Independent ed. city to maintain a small fire depart- . School District got half of what it That exemption gives the school a ment and reduces its fire liability which warted Thursday when the City Coun- green light on construction of the is "a damn large consideration." cil took no action on a request to ex- elementary school, but some city of- School architect Ted Wotherspoon, empt schools from automatic sprinkler ficials are still pressing for installation SHWC, Inc., said that a sprinkler system requirements. of sprinklers in the assembly areas of system would not pay for itself in in- The district requested exemption for the high school. The council has so far surance costs in 24 years. School all school facilities from two city left that issue unresolved. children go through regular fire drills amendments to the Southern Standard City Fire Marshall Harry Davis feels to diminish any danger from fires, he Building Code. School district ar- that, since the high school's been ex- said. chitects said the requirements could panded by more than 50 percent, the But, Councilman Larry Ringer said `, have added $80,000 to the cost of the entire structure will have to conform to schools are used by groups other than Southwood Valley Elementary School city codes, meaning retroactive in- students and that it would be false - and more than to renovation stallation of sprinklers. econoityta - restrict the buildings to of the high school. Davis said the existing building was students who practice fire drills. The amendments require that all of Type 4 construction rather than the School district consultant Ned buildings with more than 15,000 square more fire - resistant Type 2 construction Walton, in asking for a total exemp- feet and all assembly areas that seat at school district architects claim for the tion, said he had no reservations about least 100 people have automatic building. Type 4 construction would building Type 1 and Type 2 buildings sprinkler systems. require complete sprinkler systems, without sprinklers. Sprinklers are not But City Attorney Lowell Denton, while Type 2 contruction would not. there for saving lives, they are there for who last week had prepared an or- Davis said there have been two fires the protection of property, he said. dinance exempting the schools, said in College Station schools in the past Vicky Reinke, an employee of Texas before Thursday's discussion that the five years, both potentially serious. He A &M University who spoke on the 15,000- square -foot requirement ap- said he was "strictly against a blanket issue as a concerned citizen, said that parently does not apply to educational exemption" for the school district. saving even one life would be worth the expense of installing a sprinkler The mobile home park hay hid trou- system. ble meeting city health code re- in other business, the council agreed quirements, especially water and sewer to disannex a six -acre mobile home requirements, partly because the city park at the northwest corner of FM 60 has been unable to reach an agreement and FM 2818 at the request of owner with the university to extend water and Ralph t. sewer lines across intervening universi- Ringer, who cast the only vote t property. against the disannexation, said he was Mayor Gary Halter said he had "not convinced we're doing the people received a letter a few days ago from attempting to live out there a favor by A &M President Frank Vandiver that (oCI that cooperation ti Ringer also complained ration from Texas A &M has flatly turned down any agreement to l - S� ye, that copera 1 �-- been "extremely lacking in the last few extend water tines to the property. (� months." - ` E - ' _mom a. \q2 L 108 Legal Notices TO WHOM IT MAY CON- CERN The City of College Station Planning and Zoning Com- mission will hold a public hearing concerning a requ- est for annexation of the following property: A 52.30 (more or less) acre track located on the west side of Texas Avenue adja- cent to and south of the . current College Station City Limits. The application is in the name of Area Progress Corporation. The said hearing will be held in the Council Room of the 1 College Station City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue at the 7:00 p.m. meeting of the Planning and Zoning Com- mission on Thursday, June 17,1982. Foradditional information, please contact the City TO WHOM IT MAY CON- Planner's Office. (713) 696 - CERN 8868 Extension 238. The City of College Station Albert O. Mayo Planning and Zoning Com- Director of Planning__ mission will hold a public TO WHOM IT MAY CON - hearing on the question of CERN rezoning upon annexation The City of College Station the following property: Planning and Zoning Com - A 53.28 acre tract located mission will hold a public on the west side of Texas hearing on the question of Avenue adjacent to and rezoning the following south of the current College property: Station City Limits, from A 9.30 acre tract located Agricultural Open Space on the southeast corner of District A -0 to Commercial Southwest Parkway and Industrial District C -2 and Texas Avenue from Single Apartment Low Density Dis- Family Residential District trict R -4. The application is R -1 to General Comrercial in the name of Area Pro- District C -1. The application gress Corporation, is in the name of Gerald Applicant. Farrar. The said hearing will be held The said hearing will be held in the Council Room of the in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall, College Station City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue at 1101 South Texas Avenue at the 7:00 p.m. meeting of the the 7:00 p.m. meeting of the Planning and Zoning Com- Planning and Zoning Com- mission on Thursday, June mission on Thursday, June 17,1982. 17,1982. Foradditional information, Foradditional information, please contact the City please contact tho City Planner's Office, (713) 696- Planner's Office, (713) 696- 8868 Extension 237. 8868 Extension 237. James M. Callaway James M. Callaway Ass't Director of Planning Ass't Director of Planning ( 6,L_k11\cL ■0( ._i:t • TO WHOM C IT MAY CON - The City of College Station mission will hold Zoning public hearing on t Q rezoning the following property: A 6.76 acre tractlocated on the south side of Southwest Parkway approximately 600 feet eastof the intersection _ of Southwest Parkway and r` ', F.M. 2154 (Welborn Rd), 1 from District R -4 Apartments Low Density. The app tion is in the name of Kenneth Schick. The said hearing will be held III u C in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue at the 7:00 p.m. meeting of the mission Thursday, June 17,1982. Foradditional information, please contact the City Planner's Office, (713) 696- 8868 Extension 237. James M. Callaway Ass't Director of Planning ID } ` 7 �T Lay �• - J ‘ i nu LICE TO BIDDERS The City of College Station is accepting bids for: One (1) Pad Drum Vibratory Roller until 10:00 a.m.. July 1, 1982, at which time the bids will be opened in the office of the Purchasing Agent at the City ' Hall. Specifications may be • obtained at the office of the Purchasing Agent. All bids received after that time will be returned unopened. The City of College Station reserves the right to waive or reject any and all bids or any and all irregularities in said bid and to accept the . offer considered most ad— vantageous to the City." These items may be put -' chased with Revenue Shar - ing funds. 6/6/82. 6/13/82.'. • . 81182/14. • `'. By Glenda ruy,.,, _ TO.WHOM IT MAY CONCERN The City of College Station Planning and Zoning Com- mission will hold a public hearing concerning a requ- est for annexation of the following property: A 52.30 (more or less) acre track ,located on the west side of Texas Avenue adja- cent to and south of the current College Station City Limits. The application is in the name of Area Progress Corporation. The said hearing will be held in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue at the 7:00 p.m. meeting of the City Council on Thursday, June 24, 1982. For additional information, please contact the City Planner's Office, (713) 696- 8888 Extension 238. Albert O. Mayo D_ irector of Planning _ TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN The Zoning Board of Adjust- ment for the City of College Station will consider a requ- est for a variance ih the name of: Robert H. Hensarling P.O. Box 3389 Bryan, TX 77805 Said case will be heard by the Board at their regular meeting in the Council Room, College Station City Hall, 1101 Texas Avenue on Tuesday, June 15, 1982 at 7:00 p.m. The nature of the case Is as follows: Variance to Rear Setback. E Ie �u V\ 0 a ga TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN The College Station City Council will hold a public hearing on the question of rezoning the following property: A 5.88 acre portion of Block 4, Harvey Hillsides; located on the south side of State Highway 30 approximately 1,138 feet east of the Inter- section of State Highway 30 and Linda Lane, from Dis- trict A -0 Agricultural Open Space to District C -2 Com- mercial Industrial. The ap- plication is in the name of Sherman Click. The said hearing will be held in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue at tJe 7:00 p.m. meeting of the City Council on June 24, 1982 (Thursday). For additional information, please contact me. James M. Callaway Assistant Director of Planning 8 -9 -82 4111 Ecrat,(2_0_ �!3 a _ \ i a �� Cs may up tax rate Possible increases in taxes and utility rates will be utility department. Major requests include money at stake Thursday when the College Station City for electrical distribution lines, two new backhoes, Council studies a one -penny tax increase and a holedigger- polesetting machine and a dozen re- budget decisions for the utility, sanitation and quests for new employees. hotel -motel funds. Requests also will be considered for the sanita- Mayor Gary Halter has suggested a one -cent ad- tion fund and for the hotel -motel tax fund, which is dition to the city's 31 -cent tax rate to get more the only area in which the council received a specific money for street maintenance, which council request for more money at a recent public hearing. members have ranked as a top priority this year. Lorence Bravenec, president of the Arts Council The property tax hike, which would net about of the Brazos Valley, requested that one - eighth of S68,000 in additional revenues, could be added to the 4 percent hotel -motel tax fund be designated for other funds to boost the street maintenance budget cultural improvements. A $510,000 hotel -motel tax up to $150,000, Halter said. budget is proposed for this year. Assistant finance director Glenn Schroeder said, In other business Thursday, the council will con - however, that the staff plans Thursday to propose sider bids on the lease of city property for oil and other sources of street maintenance funding gas drilling. The city got just two bids on the 29 without raising taxes. tracts up for lease at its May 27 meeting and refer - City officials have already proposed increases in red them to a council committer for study. • all utility rates, including an 11 percent jump in . electrical rates, a S2 -a -month sewer rate hike and a Rezoning of five single -family lots in the Fed - 14 percent increase in water rates. Mart Development Corp. subdivision and of three The Council Thursday will go over requests for lots at Texas Avenue and Cooner Street as commer- $1.2 million in new and expanded programs for the cial districts also will be considered. 0 \ O _ S • 1 • 1 `9 , , ' Q tC) n :s CS streets don't need tax ilcrease The City of College Station needs no tax increase to fund a proposed boost in street maintenance, city finance director A. E. "Van" VanDever told coun- cil members Wednesday. VanDever told the council members in a workshop session that a suggested one -cent increase in the city's 31 -cent tax rate would not be needed to help fund the street proposal. Mayor Gary Halter had suggested using the in- creased tax receipts and uncommitted funds to add between $135,000 and $150,000 to the street maintenance budget. VanDever, however, said preliminary informa- tion from the Brazos County Appraisal District, which currently is reappraising properties in the ci- ty, indicate the city will receive about $80,000 more in tax revenues than originally projected. He said he also neglected to include revenues of about $70,000 in the general fund budget, giving the city $150,000 in additional funds available for the street program. VanDever made the statements before council members skimmed through 73 departmental pro- gram requests costing more than $1.5 million. Council members took no action on the requests which will be voted on in final budget meetings this month. The council did agree to hire the auditing firm of Hereford, Lynch Co. for a third straight year. Mayor Halter signed a proclamation declaring Saturday A &M Consol Choir Day in honor of the high school's singing group that is raising funds for a trip to Austria. • � � J ���� * C8t-WYQ wi CS stick th current cunc 1 1 to tax rate The College Station City Council ed a one -cent tax hike devoted strictly Thursday officially decided to stick to street maintenance, but the staff with a 31 -cent tax rate for 1982 -83 and said the additional maintenance could ordered a $25,000 study of sewage in- be paid for in other ways. filtration. Only one change was made in City The council, which reviewed funding Manager North Bardell's list of requests for the utility, sanitztion and priorities for expansion of programs in hotel /motel funds, accepted a staff the utilities department. On a motion recommendation to stay with the 31- by Tony Jones, the council voted to cent tax rate. The council had discuss- fund a draftsman position for the elec- l'V 1• ' • .. Lrical distribution department. In other business, the council agre( It was one of 43 requests for $1.2 to pay an estimated $25,000 for smol million in availab)e utility funds that testing and television camera testing were recommended for funding. The city sewage lines to find areas whe council made no changes in recommen rainwater leaks into the lines at dations for the hotel /motel and sanita reduces sewage capacity. tion funds. The study, which was recommend( by consulting engineers Riewe ar The budget is slated for formal Wischmeyer, eventually could cost L adoption June 24. to $175,000 if used throughout the cit: 1 t WN\C L_a \\ cta 4830. PUBLIC NOTICE • The City of College Station will hold Revenue Sharing and Operating Budget ' hearings on May 27, 1982, at 7:00 P.M. in the council room located at City Hall. This is an opportunity for citizen input regarging the use of Revenue Sharing and Operating Budget funds during the, 1982 -83 fiscal year. Individuals or groups, such as senior citizen groups, are invited to come and discuss the use of these funds as a part of the 1982 -83 budget input process. 5 -17- 1982. `40 p' • Q p " . O = 0 S A , � = Z� C 1 ' a B y n O G . w w (T� . r. a r a EA O ( lD a) n N tat ^ ...,, D CD a c a'. C >4 •.• fl a Y' .=••• Fi v, " .•-Z E3 0 1 • b = cD O '~ is: _. Cl. a • a _ a co N 0- ? O C so 00 0 n C y a� a• - G .» . slo 0. oo a X' G,e = Fw Her ¢ ..j c O 5 �'b a y m cy 0 ,...'7: TD CD CD CD • 0 0 M 0 y ^'H a O Q y aa " Z , a °' A , ° 0 0 • r^ y 1L7 k w 0 .-. T Po al p, a' a ( 9 - a go o :o � a w w , < w (1 � O c . 0 p, H V ^,_ a = r) -, ..:- p er, a- , • = y O .. a r. < OQ A � r.3 0y • � iD p n c w w ^•a * _ ^ �.r• a O w c -, c_ ' • x "C O co a cD '+ o - „ O tu le o 0y -cam Q _ ,, et a C° O 5 O a 0 CO a N C a .-1 a pt a C- /'� • � noaaA o • lJ • y co y a iD w Co *- < �a . 'o 0 0 . 0 N .., - C 3 a / � x O Q p a a r I cn », y B oo a o • Fs o a� W C a: N a . T a� c a .� w = yo el+ 6y9 w• --J _co a `G 11 5 J = 0 O f R CD a `< 0 U 9 a y y (D , -1 eu a7 a, _ § ,. C C n ^ 0 ,'',i; •-• LI > a Cl. s a 0 . __ . 0 v CD co ..aooa-p 1 • Q r A y ti l" a 0 r. ' _ co C C 7q O^ p' a rip y ' rr-. n O 0 y . a H 00 NOTICE TO BIDDERS - a The City of College Station I is accepting bids for: One (1) I Pad Drum Vibratory Roller 1 until 10:00 a.m., July 1, 1982, at which time the bids will be opened in the office of the i Purchasing Agent at the City 1 Hall. Specifications may be I obtained at the office of the 1 Purchasing Agent. All bids received after that time will 1 be returned .unopened. The 1 1 City of College Station 1 reserves the right to waive or reject any and all bids or any and all irregularities in said bid and to accept the I offer considered most ad- vantageous to the City. These items may be pur- chased with Revenue Shar- t ing funds. 616182, 6/13/82, 81/82/14. 1 4a.Q tilir I +Q_ al.??_(L J CS Community Center dedicated By KEN LANTERMAN old structure and then seeing that The building that was finally Staff Writer the money was spent wisely. constructed at 1300 Jersey Street For City Councilwoman Bonnen, who later served on the had a library, two offices and six Patricia Boughton and her father school board from 1944 to 1958, classrooms. Math, English, C.A. Bonnen, the new College said one of the ways he raised the foreign languages or those courses Station Community Center is a money for the building, which that didn't require laboratory family project that has been four eventually cost $75,000 to build, equipment were held in the new decades in the making. was to double the property valua- school, while those that did were Open house and dedication of tions in the district. held in the old building. the new center, a $1- million city "Four hundred people ap- "They didn't want to put any renovation of a 42- year -old school peared before the school board," more money into it than they had building, was held Sunday after- Bonnen said grinning. "But they to," Bonnen said, referring to noon. More than 100 people at- didn't raise a fuss. They just costs the district would have had tended the first hour of the open wanted to know what was going to meet for new laboratory equip - house, which featured music by a on " ment. string quartet, a display of the Bonnen said the high school The building, called A &M Con - municipal art collection and a then was quickly becoming too solidated School, continued to short speech by Mayor Gary small for the town's growing stu- serve the school district in various Halter, who thanked those dent population and something capacities — a junior high and responsible for making the "badly needed to be done qu ckly, so he meeting place for the school board needed" center a reality. raised the small dist (ri's scti6p1 for 15 years — until three years Two who helped make it a reali- taxes. -; ; oughton and Bonnen — << V ' �+ ty are B Bonnen's daughter, Patricia ty are B Bonnen's contribution We had to double it (the tax Boughton, graduated a year although rate) and we still didn't have much before her father's project opened was a little more indirect than that to work with," he said. and never got a chance to of his daughter's, who served on Once the money was raised, classes in the new school house. the City Council committee Bonnen and superintendent A.M. She served on the council commit - responsible for the center's con- Whitis traveled the Texas coun- tee with councilman Tony Jones struction. tryside looking at other school and Halter. Bonnen served on the Board of buildings in other Texas citys. She said the committee chose Equalization for the College Sta- "That was the way things were the old building because of its tion school district ill the early done back then," he said. "The structural soundness and location. 1940s. He was responsible for rais- superintendent and I looked at "We thought it had a lot of ing the funds to build the 42 -year- ones in our range of finances." potential," she said. LP ' - T E EGLL ono ND n ` " ,_) k ti II-4 n. NOTIG O BIDDERS The City Station is currently accepting bids for the demolition and clea- tance of condemned re- sidential properties. Bids will be received by the City at the Planning Department until 10:00 a.m. June 28, 1982. and at that time publically opened and read aloud. Bid documents, plans, and specifications may be secured at the Planning Department, City Hall, 1101 Texas Avenue, College Sta- tion. Texas. For additional information contact Michael M. Stevens. Community Development Director at 696-8868. ext. 238. The City reserves the right to reject any and all bids, and waive any informality in bids rece vetl Michael l phens Commu ty Development Director' 6- 14,21 -82 (MrnClIC A A°i/)s- /3 /9g°1' r .u• , 'NOTICE OF CALCULATION OF EFFECTIVE TAX RATE ANO PUBLICA- ;'' "''• ` • ' + TION OF ESTIMATED UNENCUMBERED FUND BALANCES ' ' . IN r t . 1, Glenn nroeder, ax kl�soossori'col) star for the City of College Ste- . The estimated unencumbered balances for Maintenance & Operation . ton, In accordance witl� provilron$ of Sec. 28.01 of the Property fund: 81,301,818 Tax Coda, have cafutat..,. the tax rat! may not be exceeded by The estimated unencumbered balances for Interest & Sinking fund: more than three percent by the governing body of the City 01 College 1769,558 I If1 Station without holding a public hearing as required by the code. Thal Glen AnsSSchro ` r- COItacI • rate is arl'ollows: 1.3329 per 8100 of value. WORKSHEET. ' C)Subtrac11981 Debt Service (16S) • vy FOR THE CALCULATION OF (Assumption 60.3) '9803,961 THE EFFECTIVE TAX RATE (D1 Subtract TUBS Levied for • CITY OF COLLEGE STATION Maintenance and Operation (M60) 0 ' Taxable Value of Properly Becoming I, ASSUMPTIONS ` Exempt in 1982 (Assumption No. 8) - 89,871 1.1981 Total Tax Levy form the 1981 Tax (E) Subtract 1981 Taxes Levied for Roll 61,281,583. . Maintenance and Operation (M60)on •. • 2.1981 Tyr Rata4$.1448M60 and 8,1852 Taxable Value of Property Lost Becau MS) 9 31161 • Property is Required to be Appraised 1.... • 3.1981 Dept Service (1451 Levy $8133, .1 1982 at Less that Market Value • 4.1961 Maintenance end Operation (M&0) (Assumption No. 7) '81,126 Levy $59 ,499. (F) Adjusted 1981 Tax Levy Ior 5.1981 Taxes Levied for Maintenance and Caiculslion 8527,202 . Operation (M&0) on Property in Territory 3. (Al Adjusted 1981 Tax Levy for Calcul n Mat Has Ceased t0 be a Pgrt 91 00 City (2 F above) , 8587,202 m 1982 8 0• (B) Divided by Adjusted 1982 Taxable !l,;i e 6.1981 Taxes Levied for Maintenance and . lor Calculation (I D above) '8629,3114,089 • Operation (M60) on Taxable Value of Multiplied by 8100 Valuation r . x8100 Property Becoming Exempt In 1982 89,871 IC) Operation Ma Rate Ban and •' 1 8.093318100 7.1981 Taxes Levted l Ta xaebi Value c1 a and • INTEREST AND SINKING RATE FOR 19' Property 9 Operation prty Lost Bocause Property xDt perly is lu 4. (Al 1982 Tax Levy Needed to Sat : ".' • perty ost Bep Required 1050 Appraised M 196911 Bonded Indebtedness or Debt i ,li ice Leas Than Market Value ..11,426 '165) (Assumption No.11) i 91,6291,124 8.1962 Total Taxable Value of All (B)1982 Total Taxable Value of..:;, • ' Property 9 , ,184,885 Property (Assumption No.8) 'l 1707,164,885 9.1982 Taxable Value of New Improvements (C) Divide the Adjusted 1982 • •Levy Added Since January 1,1981 8 ,160,536 Ior Debt Service (l&S) (4A . el by the • 10.1982 Taxable Value of Property Added Adjusted 1982 Taxable Va ' for Since January 1,1981, by Annexation 01 • l&S (48 Abovel _ 1002298 Terrdory 8 1- (81.626,124:S707,164,•:. - ..` 8 11.1982 Tax Levy Needed to Satiety Bonded Multiplied by 8100 Val +'on 4100 Indebtedness 0r Debt Service ID) Calcdlate -: Interest and Sinking (16S) (165) St ,l• .,124 Rate for 1982... 82299)8100 5. (A) Calculated , nlenance 5041 Operation 11. CALCULATION ' (M&O) Rate I. ,. '82 (3C above) 8 093318100 MAINTENANCE AND OPERATION (M&0)TAX RATE FOR 1982 (8)) Add d Cali 1 (411 arestaj and Sinking 1229911100 1. (A) 1982 Total Taxable Value of All Property Assumption No. 8) 8707,184,885 (C) . i aged 1982 Effective Tax (8) Subtract 1982 Taxable Value of New i e ' . ' • 8 323211100 Improvements dded (Assumption No. '82 Entente Tax Rate is the lax rate published by the lax assessor. as re. 9) 471,780,596 ;pored by Sec 26.01 of the Property Tax Code. (C) SubtrliC11982 Taxable Value of 111. MAXIMUM TAX RATE Property Added by Annexation • 1. (A) Calculated 1982 Effective Tax Rate 15C (Assumption No.10) - •8 -0- Above) 9123219100 (D) Adjusted 1982 Taxable Value for 11829,381,089 (8) Multipliep by Three Percent x.03 Calculation ' 2. (8)1981 Total Tar Levy from the 1981 Tax IC) Equals Amount of Increase Allowed by _ _0001 L Roll (Assumption No. 11 • 81,281,583 b. •4 , (8) Subtract 1981 Taxes Levied for • (131 Tax Rale (IA • IC, Maintenance and Operation (MOO' on - ° 'love).. . 13329)1100 Property m Territory that HaxCeased • 1982 Mi9imum Tax Kale is Ihr ix rate which, 19 exceeded, triggers the public to be a Part of the City to 1982 • nonce art public hearing requirements of Sec. 26.06 of Ole Property Tsx (Assumption No. 5) ... . ... . .............. 1 - Code. i 1 k, T< ;.lz t !dl<la' i •jr• u ,. -{ .iy • c'iti '„ • • tor Jane. l4- ,1182. . Cir LEGAL NOTICE The City of College Station is accepting bids for: Group I. Traffic Signal Poles Group II. Traffic Signal Controllers & Cabinets Group Ilf. Traffic Signal Heads. ' until 10:00 a.m 29, 1982, at which time the bids will be opened in the office of the City Secretary at the City Hall. Specifications may be ob- tained at the office of the Purchasing Agent. All bids received after that time will I be returned unopened. The City of College Station reserves the right to waive or reject any and all bids or any and all irregularities in said bid and to accept the otter considered most ad- vantageous to the City. These items may be pur- chased with bonds sold to financ Capital Improvements for 1982. This equipment will allow the City to construct traffic signals at the inter- / sections of FM 2818 -Texas A v e n u e a n d F M 2818- Southwood Drive as approved by the citizens of College Station in the 1981 Capital Improvements Bond Election. (GiV.1- 81 -22) 6 -15,6- 22 ® !1\--(2-- �A_krY v 5 '5 LEGAL NOTICE The City Council of The City of College Station will hold a public hearing concerning a request for annexation of • the following property: ' A 52.30 (more or less) acre tract located on the west side of Texas Avenue adja- cent to and south of the current College Station City Limits. The application is in the name of Area Progress Corporation.,,, The said 'earing will be held at the Oil Well Site on the above mentioned pro- perty on -Wednesday, June 23. 1982 at 2:00 p.m. For additional information. please bon(pct the City Planner's Oftice. (713) 696- 8868, Extension 238. Dian Jones City Secretary 6-15,17,20-82 L Credit where credit's due When, working for a municipality, employees rarely are Pi publicly credited for a job "well done." Although I am a city employee I would like to thank some people I work with. • Thanks to my employees who repair tractors, pick up • disposable diapers, fight fire ants and poison ivy, and mow • • acres of grass. Thanks to the electrical department for keep- : ing our ballfields lighted and erecting numerous flagpoles. • Thanks to the public works department for helping keep our equipment running and providing mechanical advice. Thanks to the water department for letting us borrow your cement mixer all the time and fixing our water leaks. Thanks to the engineering department for syrveying our ballfields to keep them level. Thanks to the finance department for listening with a sym- • pathetic ear while we ask for more money or a new piece of equipment. Thanks to the City Manager, Mayor, and the • Council,w have always been supportive of the parks pro- . . 4 gram. Thanks to my boss and the other parks staff who really • try to develop a parks system that we citizens can enjoy and • be proud of. And most of all, thanks to our park patrons for their sug- gestions and support. You make it all possible.! David B. Whatley Parks Superintendent College Station 1 / J \1 \ - C '?}kLprv_Q__,‘ 108 t41I Notkos TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN The College Station Plan- ning and Zoning Commis- sion will hold a public hearing on the question of rezoning the following property: Lot 28 of the Richards Subdivision at the southeast corner of Texas Avenue and Richards Street, from Single ° -'° °' — - -- Family Residental District NOTICE OF PUBLIC R -1 to Administrative- HEARING Professional District A -P. The College Station Plan - Request is in the name of ning and Zoning Commis - Kevin G. Schachterle, O.C. sion will hold a public The said hearing will be held hearing on the question of in the Council Room of the granting a Conditional Use College Station City Hall, Permit for site work and 1101 South Texas Avenue at expansions to the existing the 7:00 p.m. meeting of the police station located at 2811 Planning and Zoning Com- Texas Avenue, College mission on Thursday, July 1. Station, TX. 1982. The request for Use Permit For additional information, is in the name of The City of please contact me. College Station. James M. Callaway The hearing will be held in Asst Director of Planning the Council Room of the ' 6-16-82 College Station City Hall, TO WHOM IT 1101 South Texas Avenue at MAY CONCERN the 7:00 p.m. meeting of the The Planning and Zoning Planning and Zoning Com - Commission of the City of mission on Thursday, July 1, College Station will hold a 1982. public hearing on the ques- For additional information tion of amending the Zoning contact the City Planner's Ordinance (Ordinance No. Office, (713) 696 -8888, ext. 850) of the City of College 237. Station, revising the parking James M. Callaway requirements for Medical Assistant Director of 1 and Dental Clinics. . Planning The hearing will be held on 8- 1.6 -82 Thursday, July 1, 1982, a NOTICE OF PUBLIC regular meeting of the • HEARING Planning and Zoning Com- The College Station Plan - mission at 7:00 p.m. in the ning and Zoning Commis - Council Room, College Sta- sion will hold a public tion City Hall. 1101 Texas hearing on the question of Avenue. granting a Conditional Use For additional information Permit for site work and contact James M. Callaway, expansions to the existing Asst Director of Planning. City Hall located at 1101 (713) 696 -8868 ext. 238. South Texas Avenue. 6- 16 -82 _ The request for Use Permit TO WHOM 11 is in the name of The City of MAY CONCERN College Station. The Planning and Zoning The hearing MN be held in Commission of the City of the Council Room of the College Station will hold a College Station City Hall, public hearing on the ques- 1101 South Texas Avenue at lion of amending the Zoning the 7:00 p.m. meeting of the Ordinance (Ordinance No. Planning and Zoning Com- 850) of the City of College mission on Thursday. July 1, Station, adding a definition 1982. of Mobile Home and Modu- For additional information lar Home, Revising the contact the City Planner's District R -7 Mobile Home Office, (713) 696 -8868, ext District to provide Modular 237. Home Sites. James M. Callaway The hearing will be held on Assistant Director of Thursday, July 1, 1982, a Planning regular meeting of the 8 -16 -82 Planning and Zoning Com- mission at 7:00 p.m. in the Council Room, College Sta- tion City Hall, 1101 Texas Avenue. For additional information contact James M. Callaway, Asst Director of Planning. 1 (713) 696 -8868 ext. 238. 6- 16 - -82 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING The College Station Plan- ning and Zoning Commis- sion will hold a public hearing on the question of granting a Conditional Use Permit for site work and expansions to the existing City of College Station Warehouse located behind the police station located at 2811 Texas Avenue. The request for Use Permit • is in the name of The City of College Station. The hearing will be held in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue at the 7:00 p.m. meeting the �/ Th9/) Planning and Zoning Com mission on Thursday, Juu /{' /1 ly 1, 1982 For additional information contact the City Planner's Office. (713) 696-8868, ext. i2/vic/a 237. James M,Callaway Ai"rtt Director of DLO Planninanning Jt7 e /6 /982- Idi oft wow A&M,censolidated High School t To upper auditorium (Second floor) 101 `+ lel Exposed steel needing protection 226 •;• 223 •1 ' °Constructed of wood on sides ■�� '•�•� �r 1 210 : i 213 ' %V , l 0 Skylights replaced with wood ■ P. Imo h ,• n syl, •, Corridors not separated •t ;;•; ' % from classrooms • //�� g . 11 I�wr, , 1 1 1 1 ��Aw:.0 H / 111 g /1 moism. .1 1' gi 1 •,..., • 114 . 1 e e, MINIMI � 215 202 : 205 2I6 AN 11 11 11 • • ■ = a 111 11111111 1H1114114 s = 441//111 1 44� 4 .!!! 1,1,1, 11111/11111.11111•- - Wel,44444A* Corridor 1111111111111 IIII I llli , Library il w !/ I ' , J Upper gymnasium I .1 I I .+�s.ene ,III111111111111/1 1 II , II1 1 V t `SNOI.LSaDOfS OI mini, •dgi1 auj v loops zip alum suollvlo!A aml imp uou loops my Jarinau `,Cl2uawwddV - aadsu! ayl Imp plus `Kind ' loops `Jopadsu! 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M ac0iO4,, E c ° n50 3 Q T o T Cl. u 3 U cn >,-= o rn u ' ., Ca rn 3 s w s U LEGAL NOTICE The City Council of The City of College Station will hold a public hearing concerning a request for annexation of the following property: A 52.30 (more or less) acre tract located on the west side of Texas Avenue adja- cent to and south of the current College Station City Limits. The application is in the name of Area Progress Corporation. The said hearing will be held at the Oil Well Site on the above mentioned pro- perty on Wednesday, June 23, 1982 at 2:00 p.m. For additional information, please contact the City Planner's Office. (713) 696- 8868, Extension 238. Dian Jones City Secretary R-15 17.20-82 v.. • , r }. -C � / 7 / �l F Residents want Vette graphics in Plan 2000 By DAVID CRISP ty's new comprehensive In the other major Staff Writer plan. Other concerns of item on Thursday's College Station residents addressed were agenda, commissioners residents want to see the transportation plan, had no trouble recom- what their city will look lower densities an- mending annexation of a like in the year 2000. ticipated in the future, 52 -acre tract. The City Most of the comments the role of the proposed Council will hold a of eight residents who 2,300 -acre industrial public hearing on the spoke to city planning park south of the city matter next week. and zoning commis- and the lack of a bicycle But commissioners sioners during the first plan. split 5 -2 on approving public hearing on Col- Former planning and zoning for the area, lege Station's Plan 2000 zoning commissioner which Area Progress centered around the lack J i m Gardner also Corp. has asked be zon- of easily seen graphics il- presented what he called ed for commercial - lustrating projected land Plan 2000: Alternative industrial and low densi- uses of the future. Local C, which presents a plan ty apartment districts. architect Duane Cote for more compact future called the graphics a development that "disservice" to downplays the im- residents. portance of the in- City planner Al Mayo dustrial park. said better maps will be Other residents on display at the next wanted to see a more public hearing at 7 p.m. thorough transportation Tuesday. Copies of the plan, including a plan Plan 2000 also will be for bicycles. Raintree available to check out subdivision resident Bob for weekend study begin- Webb wanted to know ning today in the plann- why that area seems to ing department at City have been singled out for Hall. future medium -to -high The hearing was the density residential first in a series on the ci- development. `r. The opening of the Col- given up on the city and lege Station Community is negotiating with other Center Sunday was a College Station Ian- momentous occasion for downers for a site. He the city, but a sad day said he couldn't reveal for a family of raccoons who those owners are that had taken up until a deal is made. residence there. Councilman Tony City employees trap- Jones, who is on a coun- ped "four babies and a cil committee that is momma" raccoon looking into the renova- before the center open- tion of the Northgate ed, center director area, said the City Hall is Sherry Albrecht said. located on land that is The animals, who had that is now the subject of taken up residence in the negotiations in a com- attic, had to go after they plicated land trade -off began gnawing on the scheme that may deter - panels in the center's mine the outcome of the new ceiling. renovation plans. The raccoons were The fate of the City trapped. live and released Hall building, like that in the wild, bringing to a of the Community close what city officials Center raccoons, re- jokingly had billed as the mains uncertain. center's first wildlife ex- * • * hibit. * * * Bryan has had a lot of With the raccoons out bad news about its parks of the way, College Sta- lately, but here is some tion still has to decide good news: parks and • what to do with the old recreation director Dr. City Hall building on Jay Williams said Church Street, which Wednesday that terms had functioned in- have been reached on a formally as a civic center $107,000 trust fund for years. grant to build a group One interested shelter north of customer had been Blinn Municipal Lake. College, which hopes to The grant from the set up a College Station Astin Foundation will be branch this fall. The col- administered through lege hoped to build four First City National or five classrooms to Bank. Next step in cater, to an estimated 600 building the shelter, students who live in Col- which also will include lege Station. parking spaces, is to find But 3.B. Carrington, an architect, Williams director of the Bryan said. branch of Blinn College, The Bryan parks says the school now has board this week also ap- • �• • / / .702 LEGAL NOTICE The City Council of The City of College Station will hold a public heari - Foncerning a request for nnexation of the followi roperty: A 52.3D (rn less) acre tract locate the west side of Texas ls?nue adja- cent to and sbuth of the current College)Sl d s L The app the name of Area Progress Corporatio\ The sail! hearing will be held ,,at the•.Oi Well Site on the'!above mentioned pro- perty on Wednesday, June 23, 1982 at 2:00 p.m. For additional information, please contact the City Planner's Office. (713) 696- 8868, Extension 238. Dian Jones City Secretary 6- 15.17.20 -82 • • 4 u/x-k-. 02 6 /9 42- _ _ ' b w v v" o ' b' v' v C C C • b 4 a b 6. .r li• C A C O •0 • a ° 0 ` F X. • c ° N 0. 3 0 5 N O y° v v 0.0 C o0 6 .0 v v a «S „. p - 'p G) C N w V C.) U ccdd 03 .vC h • o s 0 V a �.� 0' 4) - N 1 C N G '. v v >...5g c . 0 Q V" E oo ° n c O N a, y E b 61u v 25 . 4 6 . 13 -1 E U a 0 `" C O C c.: v v O a N 0 v 0 v , 0 O v a `•' b.• �_ ° . 1. Cd v ..� w+ N O f.. fd .~.. N 1.. v v ...� a N v U a 1 ...• •..• E oo cs• co ....co E c a1 ., ' •,.• a1 v � 'w . al w. 8 c O H 0 1 0 • C v a o • es u 5 >. _ '1- a.. i u N _O m p up uao..v 3 �a O ¢_ v ' ' a •_ cd .0 C ' U v V„ 0 O CI v a ¢ a 3 a O G v I. d O • • 0 v • O 8 y 1 X' V 0 d _ •b �, 0. O 1-4 N E C^ id 3 w • — 6 1 1 a w v p 3 v ) v ° a U a v o • ° E 61 G ° v: 0 .• 4 ,7 a • . x3� _ v cv? co a ^oat— o w , c v„0' N ' 1 -. p c c•a Re cn E N a._ a E u a•a'N o «. o.•..x:c eo 03 cd'O N v o °O ..T. 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N •O . o v E Y N• ^ 0 o C 0 • a S• a v .~+ �. •v c ¢ o v e, - • 0, v • s • � • a •• G �• , ,, • C- `cd •.. c E.E U cd id «3 o N¢ U A a ,..... / - rues A.c(A , Tun. e gD 1k " Utility re airs p on CS agenda �ghwdy6 .0 .. g 0 cc T exas d College Station's policy on who should pay for t o g ten�e repairs to Lone Star Gas lines will be debated by the a. t °C City Council in its 4 p.m. work session today. ~ aina l-onsmir e 0 / - - Bryan requires homeowners to pay for repairs Proposed C -2 and new lines, a policy that has caused complaints to the gas company from customers who have been billed $ 100 or more for repairs of leaky lines in their ,lo Proposed R - / / � /�� QIN yards. Ni � But in College Station, the cost of repairs and new lines are rolled back into the rate base, where they are absorbed by both Bryan and College Sta- . tion gas customers. The situation has caused con- , cern among Bryan officials and some outraged residents, who say that Bryan customers are sub- sidizing College Station consumers. It% E tation Bryan asked College Station in January to recon- C Station J sider its position, but the city council there has u taken no action. After talking to Bryan officials last week, College Station City Manager North Bardell ___City Limits -- —•0 said that he would put the matter back on the coun- _. cil agenda. Last 52 new College Station acres Last year, both city councils adopted franchise ordinance amendments directing Lone Star to The first of two hearings on annexation of "own, operate and maintain" customer service this uninhabited 52 -acre tract south of Col - lines, which is the part of the gas line between the lege Station is set for 2 p.m, today on an oil company's main line and the customer's meter. But the Bryan council reiterated its position that well site there. The landowner, Area Progress the gas company can bill customers for repairs and Corp,, has asked for annexation with C -2 maintenance between the main and the meter. commercial zoning and an R-4 low density Those costs in College Station have remained with apartment zone. A second hearing is set the company. before the City Council Thursday. 108 Legal Notices TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN TO WHOM IT MAY The College Station City CONCERN Council will hold a public The College Station City hearing on the question of Council will hold a public rezoning the following hearing on the question of property: rezoning the following A 9.30 acre tract on the property: southeast corner of the A 6.76 acre tract located on intersection of Southwest the south'side of Southwest Parkway and Texas Avenue Parkway approximately 600 from Single Family Resider' - feet east of the intersection tal District R -1 to General of Southwest Parkway and Commercial District C -1. F.M. 2154 (Welborn Rd), The Application is in the from District A -0 Agricultural name of Gerald Farrar. open to District R -4 Apart- The said hearing will be held ments Low Density. in the Council Room of the The application is in the C ollege S tation C ity Hall, name of Kenneth W. Schick. 1101 South Texas Avenue at The said hearing will be Meld the 7:00 p.m. meeting of the in the Council Room of the City Council on Thursday, Clg Sat City , July 8, 1982. 1101 Sout h t Texas ion Avenue Hall at For additional information, the 7:00 p.m. meeting of the please contact me. City Council on Thursday, ' James M. Callaway. July 8, 1982. Asst Director of Planning For additional information, 6-23-82 �, �__ - -- olease contact me. James,M. Callaway, ' Ass't Director of Planning 6 -23 -82 j�;w,� � 3, � 9 Pa. C a "c5 1 .c 8, c w ' ci I. 1. .+ v v t Cr . O s. vs ° N V x,5 u = Q U • b O0 u O en U O . td O • .b p y 'p C v �.' 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O c etj u c 4, cut H t a C ° V O ttJ a . / 1 . a c a .se ° ° 6 _ 2 0 a ( y= w U v a « etJ 0 r1 coca K O u y c° p u °° a v >.a > > UE«t° . ;g E" v F v o v y.- „ es ° v) n V y :2 i ' u E v v i C �, ° 00 u u H u -`7 . 1.: C .� ... 61 c y. s c a 3• , c 0 oG22U °o 5 ° ', i a En U' C 0+4 ° ›N JD $ a T'O 4) w O w ?.. ❑ v, ° 2 0 L «, CI C O, C a V O (4 . w, C V •� E eE O u 0 Z v° O E 5 e 0 " � w 00 L V Z b0 --' H N d, � ° > 7 c .5' a ..• v ., c r •�, G' y 0 U 'Ci C O .0 - • 4w a 1 O Q a.> .E 0 . 00 1 •r 0 N • 00 t1 E - > c. es ° C O A a - . 2 7 g 4., V O � 0 c a= 0 O • C V Q a 0 11.1 0 6 N •C al t t--- 4: .. . :. b a 0. agenda council a Budget tops g By DAVID CRISP to retire the debt on bond issues Lane has been approved 4 -3 by the Staff Writer dating back to 1968. planning and zoning commission. The College Station City Coun- But the council Thursday also But the city staff has recommend - cil will set new utility and sanita- will vote on rate hikes for utilities ed denial of the request because tion rates and consider emergency and sanitation services. The city the land is near single - family funding to help send the A &M staff has proposed an 11 percent residences and is planned in the Consolidated High School Honor increase in electrical rates, a $2 -a- proposed new Plan 2000 as a low - Choir to Vienna in its meeting to- month hike in sewer rates and a 14 density residential area. day. percent increase in water rates. A Several city council members The council, which meets at 7 20 percent hike in sanitation rates also told Harvey residents during p.m., will also consider final also is proposed. heated annexation hearings in budget adoption, an annexation In other business, the council 1980 that the area would be pro - hearing and a potentially con- will hold a hearing on annexation tected from commercial develop - troversial rezoning request. of an uninhabited 52 -acre tract ment. The biggest item on the agenda south of the present city limits The emergency assistance to the is approval of the $29.8 million near Texas Avenue and Rock A &M Consolidated Honor Choir budget for the fiscal year that Prairie Road. Action on the an- and the utility rate hikes were add - begins July 1. As proposed, the nexation request from Area Pro- ed to the agenda at the last budget includes major increasess gress Corp. is scheduled for the minute. The choir is trying to raise in street and parks maintenance council's July 22 meeting. an additional $10,000 for a trip to spending and a big jump in the The council also will choose Vienna, Austria, on July 6. utility fund, mostly because of an- from conflicting recommenda- Additional funding for a new ticipated increases in electricity tions by the city staff and the plan- animal shelter jointly operated by consumption. ning and zoning commission on a College Station, Bryan and Brazos Council members already have rezoning request from Sherman County also will be considered. agreed to keep the present 31 -cent Click in the Harvey Hillsides area. The Bryan council recently voted tax per $100 of property valuation Click's application to rezone 5.6 $7,500 to finish the shelter, which to fund the budget. Twenty -four acres on the south side of Texas 30 has run short of funding since cents of the tax rate will go merely between Linda Lane and Pamela groundbreaking a year ago. m uter te r c .,, ,,. CS p o to enter co p By KEN LANTERMAN Vandever, College Sta- two months ago and he is used as a crime preven- them plan more effective Staff Writer tion finance director. eager for its installation. tion tool. p olice p atrols and other The computer age will He said the computer "We've been talking In other citys using crime prevention efforts. be coming soon to the will be moved as soon as about it for a year," he computers — such as < "Thre are all kinds of College Station Police a renovation of the cur- said. Its going to make Austin — police com p ile ossib Feldm Department. rent computer room at our workload a lot crime profiles of all sec- P If all goes according to City Hall is complete. easier." tions of the city to help added. schedule, by this time . But as yet, no construc- Feldman said the com -. next year, the, depart - r tion has begun. puter will serve many ment will have its own "We're still awaiting uses. computer to help fight " commitment from con- "We haven't' really sat crime and keep records. tractors to begin," he down and figured what The computer, which said. "That will have a we want, but it could be is now being used by the bearing on it." used for keeping track of City of College Station ' Major 'Edgar Feldman warrants, court records, at City Hall, is expected said i renovation of of- arrests and reports," he to be moved to the police ficesiit aloe police depart- said. department sometime in ment to prepare for the In addition, Feldman July 1983, said Van computer was completed said the computer can be 37 :::---__. L.Q. CI-C-1-1 , - <N2 <-69,rt::2_, Cs rates increase' Council tables tax rates unchanged ed rezoning rdcluest. From page 1A • By DAVID CRISP hike for water and a 33 percent : as proposed by the city staff. It includes an 8.85 Staff Writer jump in sewer charges. The new basic bu i e b n nt increase percent i the dg et for the general College Station residents next rates will affect bills mailed out on per • plus new funding as mu street and parks week will begin paying $4.20 a or after July 1. maintenance improvements. The utility fund in- month for garbage pickup, $8 for Council members Thursday also creased nearly 26 percent. sewer service and $1.25 for each approved an ordinance keeping In other business Thursday, the council tabled a t gallons water they use, the same tax rate as last year, 31 rezoning request in the Harvey Hillsides area after a the e Citty y Council decided Thurs- cents per $100 valuation. Actual half -dozen neighborhood residents objected to day. tax bills may go up or down, Sherman Click's plans to build a cabinet shop and' The rate increases, which were depending on new property values warehouse on a 5.6 -acre tract. approved along with a $29.8 assigned by the Brazos County The rezoning request had been approved narrow million budget, also include 11 Appraisal District, Mayor Gary percent across-the-board hike ke in ly by the planning and zoning commission, but the Halter pointed out. the average electric bill. The basic p city staff opposed it because of the lack or a buffer $4 a month charges for water and No one appeared to oppose any zone to nearby residential areas and because the site for electric service won't change. of the rate increases and the is designated as a residential area in the proposed The hikes represent a 20 percent budget was adopted substantially new Plan 2000. raiSNiYt garbage rates, a 14 percent Turn to COUNCIL, page 12A In 1980 annexation hearings, Harvey residents also objected to commercial development along Texas 30, which runs just north of Click's commer- cial zoning request. Residents objected to possible noise from saws at the cabinet shop and said the land might someday be used for a more offensive commercial use. Some also said that the commercial zone would encourage additional development along the highway. Council members Tony Jones, Pat Boughton and Mayor Halter voted to table the request to work out a compromise. If the request had been denied, C r a would have had to wait six months to reapply zoning change. - Lynn Nemec and Bob Runnels, the only other council members present, voted against tabling the request. ``` The council Thursday also bailed out the A &M Consolidated High School honor choir by agreeing to pay up to $10,000 to cover any deficit in funding for its trip to an international choral competition i Vienna. The donation adds the last of $60,000 the 3 member choir needs for the July 6 trip. the choir will present a free bon voyage concert here next Thursday. u. �, 15 J AL,d_ a.4.4- c2 6 P S" oZ, 1011 Legal Notices ADVERTISEMEN FOR BIDS You are invit8d t&Bid on the following project ANDERSON PARK DEVELOPMENT Project No. G- 81- 8 -09 of SCOPE OF WORK. Scop not work • includes but o necessarily limited to shcoe- struction of, a park with restrooms ands storage. . parking area. courts, playground, soccer fields, irrigation system, landscape and earthwork. RECEIPT OF BIDS. Sealed proposals will be accepted at the office pf the Director of Capital Improvements until 2:00 P.M.. Tuesday July 13, 1982, at which time they will be opened and read aloud. Bids must be marked with the project title on the envelope. INFORMATION AND BID- DING DOCUMENTS. P Plans, sgecitication,§ documents may be obtained by contacting e An P d a rew C and skey at Recreation 1 000 Eleanor Street, Cdtlege Station, (713) 696- • 4753. A 825 plan deposit, bid band, and pr-rtorman bond are iequired. 6127182- 713) z5 �-��- 9) / 9 (1;2_-. TO WHOM IT TO WHOM IT NOTICE OF MAY CONCERN MAY CONCERN PUB LIC NOTOT CE The College Station Plan- The College Station Plan- ning and Zonin g Commis- ning and Zoning Commis- The College Station Plan - sion will hold a public sion will hold a public ning and Zoning Commis- hearing on the question of ' hearing on the question of sion will hold a question public rezoning the following rezoning the following hearing on the q uest property: property: granting project plan appro- A 4.35 Acre tract, being a Approximately 16.168 acres val for establishing a con - portion of Lot 35R, Block 16; on the south side of Southw- venlence center In a Southwood Valley Section 3. est Parkway approximately neighborhood commercial Said tract being generally 600 feet east of Texas zoning district. located on the southside of Avenue, from Single Family The application for the Brothers Blvd. and ap- Residential District R -1 to project Is in the name of the proximately 1,000 feet west General Commercial District Cruse Corporation. of the intersection of C -1 and Apartments Medium The hearing will be held In Brothers Blvd. and Texas Density District R -5. Applica- the Council Room of Hall, Avenue. Applicant requests tion Morris F. Hamilton, Jr. College Station, City rezoning of the aforesaid The said hearing will be held 1101 South Texas Avenue at 4.35 acre tract from Apart- in the Council Room of the the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the mnt Building District R -6 to College Station City Hall, 1 Planning and Zoning Com - Planned Unit Development 1101 South Texas Avenue at , of Thursday, July District No. 2. The applica- the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the 15, 1982. lion is in the name of Planning and Zoning Com - ' For additional Information Bandera Construction Co., mission on Thursday, July contact the Planning Office, 1701 Southwest Parkway, 15, 1982. (713) 696 -8868, Ext. 238. Ste. 105, College Station, For additional information, James M. Callaway Texas. please contact me. Assistant Director The said hearing will be held James M. Callaway of Planning in the Council Room of the Ass't. Director ofPlanning 06/30/82 - - - College Station City Hall, 06/30/82 1101 South Texas Avenue at TO WHOM IT the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the RN ONCE MAY C Planning and Zoning Com- The College CONCERN Station Plan- mission on Thursday, July ning and Zoning Commis - For 198 F sion will hold a public le add. n ta ditional reformation, hearing on the question of James M es rezoning the following James Ass't. Director Callaway me. y y ector of Planning property: All Lots in all Blocks of 06/30/82 Emerald Forest, Phase VII, TO WHOM IT from Agriculture -Open MAY CONCERN Space District A -O to Single The College Station Plan- Family Residential District ning and Zoning Commis- R -la. Application is in the sion will hold a public name of Haldec, Inc. hearing on the question of 1 The said hearing will be held rezoning the following in the Council Room of the property: College Station City Hall, Lots 1 -4 Block 1, Lots 1 -29 1101 South Texas Avenue at Block 2, Lots 1 -16 Block 3, the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the and Lots 1 -5 Block 4, all in Planning and Zoning Com - Emerald Forest Phase VI, mission on Thursday, July from Agriculture -Open 15,1982. Space District A -O to Single For additional information, Family Residential District please contact me. R -la. Application is in the James M. Callaway 1 name-of Haldec. -lnc_- Asst. Director of Planning The said hearing will bo ,ieid 06/30/82 in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue at the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the Planning and Zoning Com- mission on Thursday, July 15, 1982. For additional information, please contact me. James M. Callaway Ass't. 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El. 9' 2 ra. ... .., . ... c.., „, A '0 C) 0 > cn .0 "" ''. 9 a- CD go ••J - • '' 4(Af_,(t, 1 , / 9 0i Kudos to council Kudos to the College Station City Council for helping the A &M Consolidated High School Honor Choir finance its trip to Austria this summer. The choir members and their parents have been working diligently at a variety of fundraising ac- tivities for several months and must surely appreciate the Council's support in reaching this goal. This positive interaction between our city and our school district certainly gives one a good feeling about our com- munity. Janet A. Natowitz College Station Appalled by gift I just heard where the College Station Council GAVE up to $10,000 to the Consolidated Choir so they could finish paying for their trip to Austria. I was just appalled. I first want to say I am happy the choir has a chance to go to Austria but they should have thought about not being able to raise enough money. I do not think the council has the right to take OUR money out of the city budget and give it away when our town needs it so bad. Why give it to people so they can have a pleasure trip when we can help people in our OWN community? To name a few, the policemen, firemen, animal shelter and many more. The council keeps saying they need money for streets and other things. They raise our taxes then they play Santa Claus in July. If I had wanted to donate to the choir I would have. But I do not like someone else giving my money away. 1 was told next year the Bengal Bells are going to Mexico. Will they want a free cash gift? If you give to one you should give to all. If not that would be discrimination. Someone said the money was coming out of Hotel -Motel tax fund. This money is to go to community entertainment. That's fine. I will be glad to sing or dance for $10,000. The point is, it's still budget money. I wonder how many other times people or organizations will want to receive the same gifts. Lastly, it amazes me how the Eagle broadcast it — as the last three line paragraph at the end of the City Council article on Page 12A of the July 25 edition. Sandra Robertson College Station \_/ � y / Cl /OC._. Developers want ordinance denied By DAVID CRISP cording to single family restric- With that exception, condi- Staff Writer tions. tional use permits were granted to Developers of the Northgate Mayo pointed out the ordinance add 2000 square feet to the police condominium project Thursday was "in no way meant to shed any station, to build a new purchasing asked the College Station Plann- light on the Northgate project." and warehouse facility and to ing and Zoning Commission to Under a 1981 act of the Texas build the first two stories of what recommend denial of an or- Legislature, mobile and modular ultimately is planned as a four - dinance that would restrict homes are exempt from local story expansion of City Hall. modular housing to mobile home building and fire codes, a fact city Ci the the condemnation beca a u spoke residents dents spoke a zones. officials were unaware of until the Several l res dents it Ed Brooks of the Texas Northgate project began. Brooks City Hall aexpansion se se i t Deveopment Group, developers defended the safety and integrity requires the of four of the project, said passage of the of the project and invited city of- lots directly additional parking, structure for east ordinance would "by implication ficials to inspect it. Capital I additional rkie, but CImprovements g alter - of "adverse publicity" surroun- sioners gave the city a dose of its natives were too said other expensive. ding the project. own medicine by voting to In presenting the ordinance to withhold a building permit on The commission also turned the commission, City Planner Al construction of a city warehouse down a plan for a convenience Mayo said it was an interim because of a lack of landscaping store at South Texas Avenue and measure that would give the city plan. an East Bypass feeder road and some sort of control over modular Commissioners recently had recommended rezoning of the home construction by restricting delayed a building permit on Col- - tract from a commercial to them to mobile home zones and lege Station school district con- administrative-professional es requiring them to be built ac- struction for the same reason. district. ORDINANCE NO. 1372 An ordinance relating to speed zones which specifically designates additional areas in the City of College Station in which rates of speed of Thirty (30) miles per hour or more are authorized; rescinding all parts of ordinances in conflict here =with; and declar- LEGAL NOTICE ing that attendant facts necessitate immediate action. The City of College Station is accepting bid(s) for: One (1) - 18PTO -HP Diesel Be it ordained by the City of college Station: Tractor with 60" mower Two (2) - 112 ton Compact SECTION I. That any and all ordinances or parts of or- Pic (2) Pick-ups 3/4 ton Cab dinances relating to speed zones on SH 30 in the City Two of College Station are hereby rescinded, and the Chassis One (1) - 1l2 ton Long following are additional specifically designated areas Wheel Base Pick -up in which a rate of speed of thirty (30) m.p.h. or more is One (1) - Rotary Mower 72 authorized. inch (a) SH 30, for traffic moving in an easterly direction One (1) - Turf Tractor 45-50 Diesel 150 CID for the first 0.250 mile from the intersection with Loop One (1) - 314 ton Crew Cab 507, the speed limit shall be forty (40) miles per hour. 1 I Pick -up For the next 1.390 mile the speed limit shall be forty- ugg2 a0w t me the ., l ti ds I five (45) miles per hour. For the next 1.744 mile the will be opened in the office I speed limit shall be fifty -five (55) miles per hour. For of the Purchasing Agent at the next 0.200 mile the speed limit shall be fifty (50) the City Hall. Specifications he miles per hour. For the next 0.157 mile to the east city may be of o bta in Purchas limit the speed limit shall be forty (40) miles per hour. Agent. All bids received after that time will be For traffic moving in a westerly direction, for the first returned unopened. The 0.157 mile from the east city limit, the speed limit shall City of College Station the right to waive be forty (40) miles per hour. For the next 0.200 mile the or reject any and all bids or speed limit shall be fifty (50) miles per hour. For the any and all irregularities in next 1.744 mile the speed limit shall be fifty -five (55) said bid and to accept the miles per hour. For the next 1.390 mile the speed limit otter considered most ad- vantageous to the City. shall be forty -five (45) miles per hour. For the next i These items may be pur- 0.250 mile, to the intersection with Loop 507, the chased with Revenue Shar- speed limit shall be forty (40) miles per hour. ing funds. 72, 7982-83-1 SECTION II. WHEREAS, the preservation of the general welfare of the public necessitates immediate action, this Ordinance shall be effective from and after the date of its passage as provided by the Charter of the City of College Station. Passed and Approved this 24th day of June, 1982. Signed: Gary Halter Mayor Attest: Dian Jones City Secretary J,/L.C;d- y , (--- * ,? / 9 / L Energy program audit can cut electricity costs, specialist says y s p Y By DAVID CRISP identical to one in Conroe known program will become increasingly Staff Writer as a CAP system, for a calculator- important to College Station College Station residents wan- assisted audit procedure. Using a residents as utility rates soar in the ting to battle utility costs that are programmable calculator to cut next few years. The City Council expected to double in the next arithmetic chores, the system in- voted an 11 percent utility rate in- three years had best contact Tim eludes 27 different checks on ways crease this year and Gulf States Layne, the city's energy specialist, to conserve energy in the home. Utilities, which sells the city for a free energy audit. The checks include looking at wholesale electricity, is asking for Layne, who plans to get the such things as insulation, weather increases of up to 80 percent. auditing program in full swing this stripping, caulking, the age of the He hopes to audit 200 homes in week, says he will advise residents home, solar heating and swimm- the first year of the program and on how to buy energy- saving ing pool heating. Layne said he eventually to cover the entire city. devices that will pay off in lower usually won't recommend im- As energy costs go up, the utility bills. provements that will take more payback time on energy- saving Layne has been on the job here than seven years to pay for devices becomes shorter, Layne since last January, but he is just themselves. said. Energy conservation could now ready to begin erasing a Layne said the system enables be a $65 billion industry by 1985, backlog of homeowners who have him to conduct an audit in about he predicted. requested audits since he came to four hours. Without the program, College Station. the job would take two days. "The field is literally wide Layne has settled on a program _ Layne expects that the audit open," he said. — tin sewers moke tes 1 C S to beg in s g By DAVID CRISP Park and on to the University Park and of Gutierrez, Smouse, Wilmut and Staff Writer Chimney Hill subdivisions. Testing in the Associates Inc. The College Station Fire Department is Northgate and Hensel Park areas alone is The testing is part of a $25,000 first bracing for an outbreak of fire calls this expected to take eight to ten days. phase of a program to locate leaky lines week as the city begins smoke - testing sewer Residents in the other areas will be warn- throughout the city. The program is aimed lines to find spots where water leaks into ed again as the testing moves to their at reducing the load on city sewer facilities. the lines during rainy weather. neighborhoods, Ash said. During heavy rains, the city sewer plant is City Engineer Elrey Ash said notices Before the testing begins, residents are pushed to its capacity of 12 million gallons have been sent to residents about the advised to fill seldom -used drains with a day, consultant Ed McDow said. testing and firefighters have been warned water to fill the trap that prevents sewer The citywide study is projected to cost to expect calls about smoke pouring out of gases from entering homes. Drain traps holes in the ground or the vent stacks of always should be kept filled with water to $175,000, but City Manager North Bardell houses. prevent toxic and potentially explosive told City Council members recently that The smoke used for the tests is non- sewer gases from entering buildings, , city figure is a small percentage of the city's $10 toxic, odorless and creates no fire hazard, consultants said. million to $12 million capital investment in Ash said. But residents shouldn't assume If smoke enters a home, it may be caused sewer lines. any smoke they see is from sewer line by faulty plumbing, they said. Residents The city expects the study to pay for testing. Check for a fire first, he warns. who see smoke in their homes can notify itself several times over by increasing the The testing will begin Tuesday in the inspection crew workers, who are part of sewage treatment capacity and reducing the Northgate area, then proceed to Hensel the Dallas environmental engineering firm size of lines needed in the future. CS Council to consider joining cleanup effort The College Station City Council again will con- sider taking part in the Clean Community System program, a nationwide cleanup effort, when it meets in a 4 p.m. workshop today. The council tabled action on the program in May after hearing a presentation from Bill Nash, the national vice president for Keep America Beautiful Inc. Nash told council members the pro- gram could cut College Station litter by 65 percent in five years. The City of Bryan already has agreed to take part in the program, which has 270 member com- e munities in 37 states. Some council members have suggested a joint effort with Bryan in the program, 1 which is designed to reduce litter by changing the attitudes of residents. 1 Th e £aq t 3JyZf8J.. C, 108 Legal Notices hearing on thgtquestlon of rezoning tyre. following properly:. y A A 53.28 acre4rask- located on the west side of Texas Avenue adjacent to and south of the current College Station City Limits, from Agricultural Open Space District A -O to Commercial Industrial District C -2 and Apartment Low Density Dis- tract R -4. Request is in the name of Area Progress Corporation, Applicant. The said hearing will be held in the Council Room ofH College Station City 1101 South Texas Avenue at the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the Planning and Zoning July mission on Thursday, 22, 1982.1982. For additional information, please contact me. James M. Callaway Ass't. Director of Planning 07!07182 s ADVERTISING TO WHOM IT FOR BIDS MAY CONCERN Sealed bids will be received The College Station Plan - Caldwell Independent ning and Zoning Commis - by School lion will hold a public . 1982, fl at 6:00 the p..mm., Jully y 2 26, 6, hearing on the question of Caldwell Administration rezoning the following Building, 203 N. Gray, Cald- property: well, Texas 77836. Lot 28 of the Richards Library Furniture Subdivision at the southeast Copies of specifications and corner of Texas Avenue and other contractual Richards Street, from Single Family Residental District documents are file in the R 1 to Administrative - office of the Superintendent rintendent Professional District A P. • of schools, Bill Brown, and are open for public Request is in the name of inspection. Kevin G. SchaChterle D.C. Caldwell Independent The said hearing will be held School District reserves the In the. Council Room of the right to reject any or all bids College Station City and to waive any and all 1101 South Texas Avenue at formalities, and to accept the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the the bid that serves the best Planning and Zoning Com- interest of the school_ mission on Thursday, July TO W OMIT 22, 1982. MAY CONCERN James M. Callaway Ass't. Director of lanning The College Station Plan- 07/02/82 ning will Zoning a Commis- public - - -_ Ek 1�.)e,Ic�i�esda y/ J1 7 f 82 IL f -,s CS Council to consider changes in zonin g for modular homes By DAVID CRISP of city officials, who fear it will family residence restrictions. Staff Writer endanger strict fire and building City Attorney Lowell Denton Zoning ordinance changes to code provisions here. had cautioned commissioners not restrict modular home construc- The Texas Development Group, to recommend passage of the or- tion and revise parking re- which is developing the three -story dinance just because of concern quirements will be considered by modular condominium project at over controls for mobile and the College Station City Council Nagle and Cross streets, objected modular homes. The city is pursu- tonight. to the lumping of mobile and ing other avenues — one of which The modular home provision, modular homes into the same or- is a possible contested case hearing which would restrict modular con- dinance. They also said publicity before the Department of Labor struction to R -7 mobile home surrounding the ordinance change — to resolve those issues, he said. zones, was debated last week by may hurt sales at their project, the Planning and Zoning Commis- which is nearing completion. The parking space provision, sion. The commission went In a statement this week, ar- calling for a change in the number through four separate motions chitect James M. Sink said: "It is, of spaces for medical and dental before passing on a recommenda- and has been, our intent as ar- offices, has been recommended by tion to the council for approval. chitects and developers to comply Councilman Tony Jones after a The council will take up the fully with the building codes of the survey of 10 other Texas cities that matter in a 7 p.m. meeting at City City of College Station as well as have less restrictive requirements Hall. the State of Texas." than College Station. College Sta- Opposition to the ordinance has City building inspector Coy tion requires one parking space come from developers of the Nor- Perry confirmed that developers for each 100 square feet and for thgate condominium project, who are bringing the project into com- each two employees. fear they may be caught in the pliance with city codes, though In other business today, the crossfire of a jurisdictional they are not required to meet the council will consider two rezoning dispute between the city and the city's standards. requests: one for a low- density State of Texas over setting con- City Planner Al Mayo said the apartment zone on a six-acre tract struction and inspection standards ordinance is needed as an "interim near Southwest Parkway and for mobile and modular homes. measure" to give the city some Wellborn Road; and the second The Legislature last year pro- control over modular construc- for a general commercial zone on hibited local governments from tion. While Mayo said the or- a nine -acre tract at Southwest enforcing their own standards on dinance is not meant to cast an un- Parkway and Texas Avenue. Ap- modular and mobile homes, leav- favorable light on the Northgate proval of both requests has been ing the matter in the hands of the project, which would not be af- recommended unanimously by the Department of Labor and Stan- fected, it would require future Planning and Zoning Commis - dards. The change has run afoul modular homes to meet single- sion. C J Station joins clean up The City of College Station Wednesday officially award for conforming to national accounting and joined Bryan in an effort to rid the two cities of lit- reporting procedures could help the city in future ter through the national Clean Community System bond ratings. program. The council also signed proclamations backing City Manager North Bardell said the membership the General Telephone Co. employees crime watch fee, which is based on population, would be in the program and designating July 17 as Red Cross Day. neighborhood of $2,000 to $2,500. The national program, which is organized through the Keep America Beautiful organization, trains officials to run the non - profit organization in each community. The. Ie, Bryan joined the program in March, sending organizers Marvin Tate, Barbara Vance and public works director Jack Cornish to a training session in Thu rs a Houston. College Station council members agreed to work with Bryan in Station the program throughout the Bryan - College Statioio n area. l , National backers of the program say it will �`/ 8, (99 ft 4 recoup its costs in lowered sanitation expenses in member cities. They say that most litter is not toss- ed out of cars, but falls out of trucks or blows away from factories and garbage cans. In other business Wednesday, finance director 1 - ' A.E. "Van" VanDever was presented with a finan- cial reporting award from the Municipal Finance Officers Association. Mayor Gary Halter said the Calliham familiar ........ with site of center $ 5£ t By DAVID CRISP first four months of her Staff Writer 37 years, has been active Peggy Calliham, who in community affairs for over last week as years. She has taught director of the College school at A &M Con- Station Community solidated Junior High Center, has a particular School and also was a�; interest in the building: home economics teacher 4 n • she went to school there. in Snook. ° She attended A &M An A &M student now %.*.;;‘,, . Consolidated High completing a master's School about 20 years degree in public rela- Peggy Calliham ago when it was located tions, Calliham says she funds to pay for the at 1300 Jersey Street. takes a strong interest in A & M Consolidated Today, the Jersey working with the public choir trip to Vienna. Street building is a $1 and in improving the ci- "I'd like for this to be million community ty's public image. not just another College center and the high She has done summer Station city building," school is on the FM 2818 work at the Information she said. "I'd like for ilIF bypass. and Hospitality Center people to feel like it's In returning to the of the Brazos Valley and their building to enjoy." former school site, is an intern with KAMU- The center includes six Calliham will be respon- TV's ` `Fifteen meeting rooms and an sible for booking con- Magazine." She also has auditorium that seats up ventions, club meetings, been involved with the 200 people. The most art shows and other College Station Jaycee- spectacular feature is events. Ettes, the March of curved wooden ceiling Calliham, who has liv- Dimes and the Choir above a gallery that cur- ed in the Bryan - College Props, the parent rently houses the Station area since the organization raising municipal art collection. T he ELj/e Th kip T-1 g y .) r 108 Legal Notices Station Clt Limits, from Agricultural Open Space District A -O to Commercial Industrial District C -2 and Apartment Low Density Dis- trict R -4. Request is In the name of Area Progress Corporation, Applicant. The said hearing will be held ,-c-oz <c �_�� ez In the Council Room of the LEGpLNOTICE College Station City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue at The Clty of College Station bid(s) for: the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the Is accepting 8PT0 -HP Diesel City Council on Thursday, One ( n yower July 22, 1982. 1982. Tractor with BO" ton Compact For additional information, Two (2) please contact me. n__C James M. Callaway Pick -ups ��� ead — Two (2) Aes't. Director of Planning Chas e(1) 112 ton Long 07/09/82 TO WHOM 17 Wh B j8eRotary pMower 72 MAY CONCERN Inch MAY CONCERN TO WHOM IT The College Stationpp l Clty One (1) - Turf Tractor 45-50 The hearing on will the question of HP Diesel 150 CID College y One (1) - 314 ton Crew Cab Council hold tl public rezoning the following hearing on the question of property: until u 10:00 e.m., July 18, property: the following part of acre hl Harvey 1982, at which time the bids Lot property: pD will be opened in the ant e 28 vl of the Richards Hillsides Subdivision, from of the Purchasing AQetlons Subdivision at the southeast Agricultural Open District the City Hall. Sp at the A -O to General Commercial the obtained Richards s Street, Avenue agple District C-1. may of obtained Purchasing t te at Family Rea dental from Single The said hearing will be held Agent. All bids received atturnehatun m en will The R -1 to Adminlatrative- In the Council Room of the be P al Diatrlct A -P. at la 1101 College Station Cite Hall, of College Station Request G . c In the name of 1101 South e meeting of the Clty t to waive T id S e a ring will D.C. reserves the right all bids e The said hearing will be th e City Council on Thursday, o f e y d any and all bi ds In College In Station City the Council Room of the Jam James 22, 1982. said bid and t accept the ,�. the 7:00 P.M. 1101 Sev ue Hall, Ja a m it Callaway most h 1101 South m e Avenue the Asa't. D 07109182 Director of Planning offer considered the Cad. . meeting of the These b ur- Clty Council on Thursday, WORKERS' These MPENSATION chased with Revenue 1 Sher James M. Callaway INSURANCE PROPOSALS Ing funds. Asst. Director of Planning INVITED 07/09/82 _ The City of Bryan is now TO WHOM IT Inviting proposals on MAY ppCONCERN workers compensation in- Counc will hold ti a n P bllc be up in the office of Ban rezoning the gfollowing Washington, j es Blding, y0a0 SoTh property: y: 77805. Proposals will be t 53.28 acre side located Texas on accepted until August 25, the west aide of Te nd 1982, 4:00 p.m. Avenue adjacent C to and The Clty of Bryan reserves south of the current College! the right to accept or reject -..c....4.', any and all proposals. -owe__ 5*, 9, /'28 2. FRiclictk LJi / CS approves ordinance changes A fast - moving College Station the council approved it virtually The council approved a six -acre City Council approved two or- without discussion Thursday. City low- density apartment zone east dinance changes, two rezoning re- Planner Al Mayo said the or- of Southwest Parkway and quests and hired six new dinance will "buy some time" for Wellborn Road and a nine -acre firefighters in a meeting Thurs- the city as it grapples with state general commercial zone at day. legislation that exempts modular Southwest Parkway and Texas The council took just more than housing from local building and Avenue. There was no public op- 90 minutes to work its way fire code controls. position to either request. through a 14 -item agenda that in- An ordinance revising parking cluded an ordinance defining requirements for medical and den- Also approved was employment modular homes and limiting their tal clinics also was approved, br- of six additional firefighters with location to areas currently zoned inging the city more nearly into $122,000 from the general con - for mobile homes. line with requirements in other tingency fund. Fire Chief Douglas Planning and zoning commis- Texas cities. The new ordinance Landua said the new firefighters sioners debated the ordinance for requires a parking space for each complete staffing for the city fire more than an hour last week, but 150 square feet of a clinic. department. , - - - - - _ 7- Fe/o y ,..... E� CS, students vie f or signs , ..., ._ David Crisp /City Hall Report _All One drawback to a college m e a n o r and spend their the flood plain near the Pecan town, at least as far as city govern- sophomore year in county jail. Ridge subdivision. Officials hope ment is concerned, is that traffic Traffic engineer John Black ad- to use the value of the land as a signs have a way of disappearing, ded that the city began using a new match for state funds to develop only to turn up again in dormitory kind of bolt on traffic signs about the park, but there is another rooms at semester's end. a year ago that can be removed drawback: negotiations have drag - College Station City Engineer only with a special wrench. The g ed on for nearly a year, and Elrey Ash says it's worse at the bolt is expensive, but it has cut "we're still where we started," beginning of every school year sign thefts in half. parks board member Bill Hodge when Aggies cast around for But that won't always stop said. determined thieves. In one case * • suitable room decorations. Street The newest kid on the block in signs, yield signs, even stop signs where the same sign was removed are gone overnight, at an average repeatedly, the city finally welded Bryan's engineering department is cost to the city of more than $100 the sign to the pole, Ash said. But 29- year -old Robert Thomas, who it was removed again — with a graduated this year from Texas a sign. A &M. The city's number three It may seem like typical col- cutting torch. engineer and his wife Carolyn, a legiate hijinks, but the city isn't * • * registered atm, hail from Pam -_ laughing. Not only is it an expen- While concern over Bryan's Pa• sive diversion, but "stealing a beleaguered parks system con- "1 was hired to keep up with the sign could cause a death," Ash tinues to mount, city officials are current land development," said. looking at a couple of possible Thomas says. "There's so much So, the city throws the book at ways out. First, the city is trying to occurring right now that the city offenders when they're caught. locate more soccer fields at engineer is pretty well taxed." City Attorney Lowell Denton said various spots around the city, in- There's an indication of that in he goes for the maximum $206 cluding a field behind the Midwest where the city put Thomas' office: fine the city can assess. He's got- Video tower. The drawback is, the at a drafting table in the public ten half -a -dozen convictions so far city lacks parks standards to say works office at the Atkins Street this year. just where fields should be or how power plant. Accommodations More serious cases can go the to they should be built. are expected to improve when the county where offenders can be fin- Second, the city is hoping for a new public works service center ed $2,000 for a Class A misde- 100 -acre park land dedication in opens. I / 1/,/ / si.... -- e ' 6 1 4 I JI4A444141 1 i Deputy constables appointed p Y Brazos County Commissioners ap- positions. pointed two deputy constables for In other business, commissioners ap- Precinct 4 Monday in a routine proved the appointment of College meeting. Station Mayor Gary Halter to the Board of Directors of the Brazos Commissioners appointed Robert Valley Development Council. Halter Mason Johnson and Glenn G. Bur- will replace former College Station Ci- chard as replacements for deputies who ty Councilman Jim Dozier as the coun- have relinquished the non - salaried ty's representative on the board. s rh fi E% 1 ... 104 13 1 L. . 108 Legal Notices College Station. TX 17840 _ Said case will be heard by j the Board at their regular TO W HOM IT meeting in the Council MAY CONCERN: Room. College Station City The Zoning Board of Adjust - Hall. 1101 Texas Avenue on ment for the City of College Tuesday. July 20. 1982 at 7:00 Station will consider a requ- P.M. est for an interpretation of a The nature of the case is as decision by the Zoning follows: Official in the name of Variance to front setback Bonnie Couch at 415 Eisenhower in College 2704 Jer,nifer Circle Station. College Station, TX 77840 Further information is availa- Said case will be heard by ble at the office of the the Board at their regular Zoning Official of the City of meeting in the Council College Station, (713) 696- Room, College Station City 8868. Hall, 1101 Texas Avenue on Jane Kee Tuesday, July 20, 1982 at 7:00 Zoning Official 0 P.M. 2 The nature of the case is as TO WHOM IT follows: MAY CONCERN: The applicant is request - The Zoning Board of Adjust- ing an interpretation the of a ment for the City of College decision made by ects Station will consider an ing Official which re ?lects appeal in the name of that a beauty shoe Sherman Click be considered a home dba Click and Brown occupation in a residential Homes, Inc. neighborhood. 1020 Holt Further information is availa- College Station, TX 77840 ble at the office of the Said case will be heard by Zoning Official of the City of • the Board at their regular College Station, meeting in the Council 8868 ext. 247. Room, College Station Co Jane Kee Zoning Official City Hall, 1101 Texas Avenue on 07/14/82 Tuesday, July 20 1982 at 7:00 P.M. TO WHOM IT ' The nature of the case is as MAY CONCERN: follows: The Zoning Board of Adjust - Variance to rear setback ment for the City of College at 2800 Manassas in College Station. Station will consider an appeal in the name of: Further information is avails- W. T. Aycock ble at the office of the 3n3 University Drive East _ Zoning Official of the City of College Station, (713) 696- 8868. Jane Kee Zoning Official 07/14/82 (..., Tom- JJJ i4 *ma. • NOTICE TO BIDDERS The City of College Station is currently accepting bids for the repair and renovation of single family homes under the Community De- velopment Block Grant Pro- g r am . P l a n s a n d specifications may be ob- tained at the Planning De- partment, College Station City Hall, 1101 Texas Avenue or by calling Michael M. Stevens, Community De- velopment Director at 696- 8868 Ext. 238. Sealed proposals for the rehabilitation work will be accepted at the Planning Department until 10:00 A.M., July 30, 1982 at which time they will be opened and read aloud. The City of College Station reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive any formalities in bids re- ceived. For additional in- formation, please contact the Community Develop- ment Office at 696 -8868 Ext. 233. 07 -16- 82,07 -23 -82 FElatt-y ZTi/, /4 /98Z � the City of College Station s accepting bid(s) for: De- One (1) signed Swimming Pool Air Structure until 10:00 a.m., August 3, 1982, at which time the kids will be opened in the office of the Purchasing Agent at the City Hall. Specifications may be obtained at the office of the Purchasing Agent. All bids received after that time will be returned unopened. The City of College Station reserves the right to waive or reject any and all bids or any and all irregularities in said bid and to accept the offer considered most ad- vantageous to the City. These items may be pur- chased with Revenue Shar- ing funds. 82 -83 -2 07-18-82,07-25 109 Public Notices • Ecibi Su/A-daft 9f-dy /&/ a t 5(.0 • Vll 11l OGVrr ,ter Vs. LEGAL NOTICE ORDINANCE NO. 1374 AND ORDINANCE NO. 1375 WERE PASSED AND AP- PROVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS, ON THE 8th OF JULY, 1982 IN A REGULAR AND OPEN MEETING IN THE COUNCIL ROOM OF THE COLLEGE STATION CITY HALL. The captions of said Or- dinances, as signed by the Mayor and duly recorded in the official records of the City of College Station, read as follows: ORDINANCE NO. 1374 AN ORDINANCE AMEND- ING T 1E ZONE ORDINANCE NO. 862, DEFINING MOBILE HOMES; DEFINING MODU- LAR HOMES; REVISING THE DISTRICT R -7 MOBILE HOME PARK DISTRICT RE- GULATIONS TO PROVIDE • FOR MODULAR HOME SITES. and ORDINANCE NO. 1375 AN ORDINANCE REVISING THE ZONING ORDINANCE NO. 850, REVISING PARK- ING REQUIREMENTS FOR MEDICAL AND DENTAL CLINICS. The complete texts of the above -named Ordinances are on file at the Office of the City Secretary and may be obtained at the City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue, College Station, Texas. 07 -16- 82,07 -18 -82 -The, saf/e._ a y I 1 a /982-- • Session set Tuesday to develop CS Plan 2000 r • ecommendatlons By DAVID CRISP agree on final written recommen- natural trends to the south. Staff Writer dations. But the ' A final work session to develop Commissioners in public hear- a developed consultants area that acs show recommendations for changes to ings so far haven't suggested ma- commodate up to 160,000 people, College Station's Plan 2000 has jor revisions to the plan, which more than double the predicted been set by the Planning and Zon- was prepared by the Dallas -Fort population of 71,000 by 2000. ing Commission Tuesday. Worth consulting firms of Samuel Concerns about the industrial The 4 p.m. meeting at City Hall L. Wyse Associates and Wayne park also predominated in discus - will be open to the public, but it is W. Snyder Associates. not scheduled as a public hearing. The city staff, however, has inns by College Sta residents n the pl ngs The commission has held two recommended revising the plan to Some public esidents felt that plans for public hearings on the plan, and reflect expected growth of the city the park are too vague to be in- the City Council is expected to if the proposed industrial park eluded in the comprehensive plan; hold more before final adoption. south of the city fails to develop others questioned the viability of City Planner Al Mayo said it is fully by the year 2000. likely to be a lengthy work session the project. Consultants allowed for full Concerns also surfaced about bringing together members of the development of the 2,300 -acre the lack of a complete transporta- city staff, the planning commis- area in their plans at the direction tion plan, which consultants said sion and a Plan 2000 citizens ad- of city officials, who determined was not included in their charge visory committee in an effort to to encourage growth to follow for the study. • • . Ho �� yf e, 0 Q / 1 5� .TrAly /9) / • ..._ GS to reroute tra is on part of Holleman by Hope E. Paasch C.D. Williamson, supervising Williamson said. "Most people Battalion staff planning engineer for the Texas go down Southwest Parkway Traffic on Holleman Street State Department of Highways, already." between Winding Road and said traffic would be detoured The street will be widened, he Wellborn Road will be rerouted down side streets until the re- said, so the city must gain the this fall when construction on building is completed. ' necessary right -of -way before the section begins, a state high- "Since that section of Holle- construction can begin. The city way department engineer said man is in such Ii tH shape; there'S still needs right -of -way from one Monday. not trio nmch traffic on it now," more piece of property. "The city is in the process of condemning that property," he said. "Hopefully, we won't be delayed any loner. It's difficult to go into a low - income housing area and try to come up with 60 feet of right -of -way where only 30 or 40 feet had existed be- fore." • After the city purchases the right -of -way, a contract will be assigned, Williamson said, prob- ably sometime in August. Con- struction could begin as early as Sept. 1. Rebuilding is expected to take at least six to eight. months. However, delays might extend that figure, said Elrey Ash, dire- ctor of eapita1 improvements for College Station. Bad weather often delay's any type of con - struction. .Th g d 8a JZ7 y 2 4/9 &L Plan 2000 reviewed Transportation and parks remained sticky issues in a final review of College Station's Plan 2000 by the Planning and Zoning Commission Tuesday. The plan now goes to the City Council, which is expected to hold two more public hearings before final adoption in late September. Commissioner Roy Kelly advised a close look at proposed street improvements that could get city officials "shot out of the ballpark." Proposed Welch and Appomattox street projects already have drawn fire at public hearings from residents in those areas. But Allen Swoboda, part of a citizens committee that has worked on the plan for three years, warned • that voters in the future may turn down bond issues if the city doesn't act on improvements that already have been approved. Commissioners also suggested changes to show less commercial zoning around the Texas Avenue - East Bypass intersection and to show an actual plan for development 20 years from now in addition to a plan that anticipates full development of the pro- posed industrial park south of the city. e T h e JLi/y J-Ii 9 441$ O v) u a) v) co) .-, .0 0 ,..sd eu al .,), ic, 111 0 A 0 00.0 co +•' a GLl O A ' c. O �+ E . + 'cd "'' p a) ael � / O U 3 v b 0 °� cn co; cu W A a ° °i I. v A C V = x w • CZ 0 CIS C 0 of °> h A .O A A y °c yuO �� VI 0 O ,., .7 y ..0 0 I. �c 0 00 I. 0 0 •� ice. y L� OD U U .� ' U H . y (y Vi u p '- r • 00 CA U ° O O U y O y 0 1 Q 0 O > O /) a 3 W c . E n ca E as v IMO ••p (1) 0 rs0 , te a y• W> a >, • f to L. � U N 3 O � y w O 3 t) b p °� c w ,- 0 aU o , ,�, ow :° � v O 0 LPG«. 0�0 'y Q Ti 12:1 .4 k 0 ' � ° at z cw y 4 vv�c v °' 'ti ,,,4) a 0 w V �, c0 I. v ei 03 Cl) > ,t y o o a • C • ..4 � O 0,) • E. y 03 O v O y q .� C o ci t�l u ...., y�o.uI.a a�0q� �, MI=b�. ° oou ° ° VvaO �0 0 0 �U 11 x0 v u aa. a "� v,v 3 �� U 0 N --• 0 � 0 0 2 y w . 0 w 0 2 ^0 A «S =LT-1=>.z 0 ., w •^ �.N VI .0 O V O V q c� O n� o .0 E Y U cd y w �O t k O_ O C O R r U z y I. E y0 U y w- E 'g dm b N b. a� c a)0•. a EE „$° .- 2 i . - y o O'ti v),..0000=—. 0 y ..c . . ao " A .. a 4 ) o n o . O c ` a ' d 0'0 , .. U 0 ° ..3 , . . . . . k , . . • . � l N o v r °' a o • E c aw a O yy �- � ❑ m 4. -° 00o0 as v o U O «S p F, C ,0 O 0, F" 0 d O E z • � A -4--) [- v)C2 E .2 EQ 4 .rxQ ° ... oo 3 r■ol N ,. � �.. cu a 0 , c •� .- a0-- �'3 3 Y A o 0 q 0 0 V O 0= �E.,MI C . O E G .. a 0 v 4, ca O >, mt ,0 a) a.) y no O Avc A O «S A U `" N•: b a .5 0074 P" Q v, &I >, T CI u :: c4 c4 0 A oo) k 3 , 0� v, v O v, c4 5 V ""w N� yA :;[%� 5 O 0 ° O > W . '� y . ■n 3 Cd CO 'a a.+ w V a V a a� N " 0 0 O 0u.= as 0 Av) .. A ,n . N O F. U . U . O E ... . 0 U .a . U + O • 0 �^ CO Q04w30'� an0vo DO 0.9 V l ' C.) . ° 2 ()JD O 0. a t U co a) .0 p; .0) — cL - � > v, a. c - -. U 3 � °O ° E UpU Council to consider annexation A 52 -acre annexation and a rezoning request that about the city's pro -rata cost sharing program on was turned down by the Planning and Zoning Com- construction of oversized streets, water and sewer mission will come before the College Station City lines in the University Park subdivision. Council today. The council, which meets at 7 p.m. at City Hall, will vote on annexing unoccupied land just south of the present city limits and west of the Rock Prairie Road -Texas Avenue intersection. The council has held two public hearings on the annexation, which has been requested by Area Progress Corp. Corporation president Bill Fitch also has asked that the land be zoned with 17 acres of commercial land near Texas Avenue and 35 acres of low- density apartment zoning at the west end of the tract. The zoning was recommended by the planning and zon- ing commission on a 5 -2 vote, with two commis - sioners saying more study of the area, is needed. The council also will consider a rezoning request • for an administrative - professional district that com- O missioners unanimously agreed should be turned down. A similar request on the lot at Texas Avenue and Richards Street was rejected two years ago, at- tracting then as now opposition from nearby residents. Curley Green, speaking _ for a half -dozen Richards Street residents, told commissioners on July 1 that "we ought to be just left alone." The other three corners of the intersection all have single - family residences. The change has been requested by chiropractor Kevin Schachterle, who told commissioners it is "ridiculous" to think the lot ever will develop as a single - family residence. In other business today, the council will consider a contract to sell the Wellborn Water Supply Corp. up to 10 million gallons of water a month to relieve water supply problems. The contract already has been approved by corporation directors. The council also will hear from the city staff on questions raised by developer Ramiro Galindo d.c? 198 - ',ft. I ealee TAAAAzetal NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING The College Station Plan- ning & Zoning Commission will hold a public hearing on the question of granting a Conditional Use Permit for a daycare center for a maximum of 6 to 9 Children in the home located at 2014 Langford in College Station, Texas. The request for Use Permit is in the name of Andrea Mills. The hearing will be held in the Council Room of the College Station City Hall, 1101 South Texas Ave. at the 7:00 p.m. meeting of the Planning and Zoning Com- mission on Thursday, August 5, 1982. For additional information Office, contact (713) 696 -8868, Ext. 237. James M. Callaway Assistant Director of NUM, Planning l %4 ‘6111 . . 0 - 1 «S y o 0 0 3 .., 7 y '0 3 .b a u .- ° ° N �~ .. p Y C r. ^ �/ , c 0 ¢ v °. gip `4.... o $ ,:-., .� C >a, ca a 8 cd o u v � .1 = o ° a,bb o 3 E co ,_ C o uo�aaiai3o g av•�C3 aa, .� ` JO ,, "' .. ;. r 00 a o N CO ' O ^" co N' O • CC v °� i O �"'.. cd O 3 q . . C +-' �'" w > . '� x y . C ,° o .4 3 .� 0 ° Gy3 0 Q ""� °QA ° � v p o¢ a 0 co F ° v ° 3°'° ° a 3 u 0 0ae o O CC A > 0 � 0 0 0= o.., 0 ,) � �.5j. o o ,, o "¢ v0 � a, � . 1 a u = 0 o a, c� a.Z an _ 'v 2 > x a r c° co a Q 0 es w ., Con �aao g � C6 1ut 0 o � �C 7 ro L •« C p• C on Q :~ wc w C) 3 -se ,A g O v w a, O U y,, N ° a) 0) C •O v N 03 • •• ° -. 0x030 mo .. o "0 >••• a�oa �'1 c° .5 . ' � � � oa 0 i ° � Cg 3b.00 I A • Ton vi o -0 o 6 a V ? v a a c uy o o 0. o c W ts �.� a a , „ ... o . T r.. V e a > p' 0 � 0 5 ° 3 TO tu v ° 3 fl a � o o u o W N o fi r' • 0 C c C a 0 0o b0 o p v o a V. C. 6 .,, b � '- O v .� o a a, o U C .n ••■ u ' o N 17. t7 �oQ v �� a � ° °''� 0 C. 5 o o cF o o L. 8 E d o 3 > � ... cd a «+ a , w u u v .+ .+ v y C 3 `" C 0 w y ° 7 b C Lic O p u ,. 3 ° �bCva , �U�a >0 0w� G 0 U 3 C w C 0 0 u a y a, O v y all I.., r/1 6)00" a� °,0 �� 00N0. -. V 1 y 0 v' 'Y ~ c0 2 a v O 0 .0 a ›i T O C °� o a� w a, ti 0 a, . 5 0 C T cd a, C .- 1 E--. a.) .0 - • qu o c° '0 a u E� 0) a, a o Al �/� p oo � a v �, O � c: :SEC . 4, N °; .... O �'C a, v CI 0 O p T /1 3 > >, "0 y o c� u o ': ono a' 0 ° O_ a a, ov a,o� o �_ ba, as A~ v •.� 0..-- >:..' 'v, O 0 O T y .� a C La ,.= ,n 3 a, ° on U .--4 0� o � U >W o :° O ~ Ex u ti� �� c v 0 u a' ci) 0 ,1 a, u ob �, ° a , o o a? e o E o u v C UV �, 0 v O ° 0p• U �� ° �'c� x _._ 0 p v °' cc a ° °' E pq 61 �' v 0 ' w Q .0 cu O a, G-. i 0) . = a> a.) c 0 0 .0 2 3. a s Eu � 3 . 5 - aa: v v�v o O r4 D0 a, a,-0 a N. 3 a? a 0 .., „ u 3 y > 1:1:1 ,V a, v 5 p a 3 y S. .' .^ 0 a, a "a 3 U i. 0 ^ ' :� CI N C a, ,,, 0 -a, , T • 5 'O .5 0) .-> T a. 6' t d _ h 74 a, o '6'i U 3 6 o C ,, o O b a, p C C y v q C O N > .-, C O O V 1 4 7..0 .0 a A 0 w, �' as at v) .� 3 - '« oo 4. u cn a, v, y a ^� ❑ ; °�+ W w v, e y b ,_,, v •Y ca -Y 2c � s 3? o — .5 a, 0 �W aHw X °U � N � 3 U F= � � •[ . o o w U ° a, NOTICE TO BIDDERS The City of College Station Is currently accepting bids for the repair and renovation of single family homes under the Community De- velopment Block Grant Pro- g r a m . P l a n s a n d specifications may be ob- tained at the Planning De- partment, College Station City Hall, 1101 Texas Avenue or by calling Michael M. Stevens, Community De- velopment Director at 896 - 8888 Ext. 238. Sealed proposals for the rehabilitation work will be . accepted at the Planning Department until 10:00 A.M., July 30, 1982 at which time ,hey will be opened and read aloud. The City of College Station a reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive t y any formalities in bids re- d ceived. For additional in- Jr formation, please contact the Community Develop - �y ment Office at 898 -8868 Ext. 238. 07 -18- 82,07 -23 -82 TheEy/e fg fay 3: ‘23i 19601, FFLegal Notices • Structure until 10:00 a.m., August 3, 1982, at which time the bids will be opened in the office of the Purchasing Agent at the City Hall. Specifications may be obtained at the office of the Purchasing The City of College Station Agent. All bids received is accepting bid(s) for: after that time will be One (1) - Custom De- returned unopened. The signed $wimmina Pool Air City of College Station a reserves the right to waive i or reject any and all bids or any and all irregularities in said bid and to accept the offer considered most ad- vantageous to the City. These items may be pur- chased with Revenue Shar- ing funds. 82 -83 -2 07- 18 -82, 07 -25 -82 as, 198 "The E ) t )``A f4 * 108 Legal Notices prehensive plan for the City of College Station at 5:00 Nemo\ 1 ret Ro 10, the Cpllege Station City Hall, 1101 'Souttl Texas Avenue. - For additional irtfprcoation, _ __ please contact the City TO WHOM IT MAY Planning Office;, 1 696 - CONCERN: 8868, Ext. 242,. The College Station City Albert O. Mayo,: Director of Planning Council and Planning and 07 -26 -82 Zoning Commission will hold a joint public hearing to ti discuss the proposed com- uctions - 7 -- A 4s , 8 ale 1) 1 S O C O p y O _ CD A AI i O ) C ° o C 0 N a � o r � D a� n g - n n „ * :-:- 4 0” Wit^ .7 I a� n c C c 0 A ' , = O 0 ^ ° ° c 0 C c • ° A) a Sy f = cn :n • C O y O • y : O is N O S y O � A) , F 0 a °o 5 o y � ° , . . 5. w C ts k w 0o S _ ° � CC ty ' ° m _ 7 �. O 4' 00 ° = n. O ' C 0 C . t co S H • CD eD EL neD 7' ° y -, c° >r ..,,us c ° ' v ~ .. - A' nO ° rod. c = !may ' `D "'+ co .a ° . s o \./ cn 153 0 OA Cr o CD ^ ° o z °° ° v �• c (I Q AD c c n �7 [A' 0 0 = y - c oo p) •-•• a °. y ° , .O H 00 O A) • v ' . A) a . y }�+ T w rtS 17). u c g ^ y ..'n °• " L 'o 0. ° F . °. sU g is c '5• ^ l l v�l v rD H c - � < rD r F p 00 O �. O ai O a -, ` 1 p' S S - C • y cp -. .C. y C ^ c 4. pond • • • co — . ' :J• -1 ^ , ? A co < to rD to a. a ,� -•n 'a c r< to S S � co n, -•n 7C n Z . C cl y fp ..i7 < U C 0 0 a f a n ' `� C7 O ° y 7 c -1- L7 a d o tf v C C 1 y r : c l O _ t O CD !1 • "� • ° w - • = C CD N C CD CD O -• c � • C ° C S a' a) B< — 0 c c O fn ~ t7 n ° A) o . S c a. SZ Z a. n X rD c.. a . O y n n 0 * -n * = c 0 • . ". A) S 'b „ ° a. * ?•1y / ao wo y . ., o_ C" c). 0O row o A 0 C CD c. CDD ti 0 CD O �' c W c ey• �r • c S a n 5 A a OP n CD _ � C j5 O CD CD S O A) C, CM gZ c -, 0 C S Q7 W 0 y r. 0 . O c ' -. c ` < S ' CD i D 1 J 7C .. -I . c in' fn • O CT CD S 0 Fo ° : !� ° n A) a. CD c `o r . m ,-. O 3 a c < ...I &' c A3 St. CD MO n < c ooc'o -, n ° o t3S o F ° 0 0 ?: < o = ° m ., c is -+ co Oo c a . co 7r CD A) b >e n C p n c O fD CD N ,- 1 5' y n m CD '< .. '1 " S . CF . o VOO�� c N f p O a . ❑ c n CD ^. ° '+ c fn N c• ^ O ti a. / a f - y w „ G7 O A) 5 2 _3.' -,rDC .- 0o � '�, c < o ,� • , - e � e S rD S r ti .n ^ E- c n • . 0 F C " � '" , p� A' rD ro O. A) O 0 rD A) O • O O 3 2 . "•1 ° ' l "ft CD CD '•t CD 0 A) „ ° a in O C <. < A) 0 R. 014 r-, O . CD O '.7 t7 S O fn B C a. CD Q. 2 y c a. c C. 0. a. < CD CD ° a fn .- Pr t7 CA �' .--. O CD Z •" •∎ y y _ O CD a. !�• =...• r ` E. A) a. • C A) A' -n ° O -, n C " D ° • O O _ Caul o G N N CD fn � O 0 ,•< O ° O° O S C -, O A) N rD c a) CD F C 0 TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: The College Station City Council will hold a public hearing on the question of rezoning the following property: A 4.35 Acre tract, being a portion of Lot 35R, Block 16; Southwood Valley Section 3. Said tract being generally located on the southside of Brothers Blvd. and ap- proximately 1,000 feet west of the intersection of Brothers Blvd. and Texas Avenue. Applicant requests rezoning of the aforesaid 4.35 acre tract from Apart- ment Building District R -6 to Planned Unit Development District No. 2. The applica- tion is in the name of Bandera Construction Co., 1701 Southwest Parkway, Ste. 105, College Station, TX. The said hearing will be held In the Council Room of the College Station City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue at the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the City Concil on Thursday, August 12, 1982: ui -25- 82,07 -28 - 8 2 _ TO WHOM For additional information, IT MAY please contact me. WHOM RN: James M. Callaway The College Station City Assistant Director of Council will hold a public Planning hearing on the question of 07 -28 -82 rezoning the following TO WHOM IT MAY property: CONCERN: A .954 acre tract which is The College Station City part of Block 4. Harvey Council will hold a public Hillsides Subdivision, from hearing on the question of Agricultural Open Space rezoning the following District A -0 to General Com- property: mercial District C -1. The All Lots in all Blocks of application is in the name of Emerald Forest, Phase VII, Margaret Kathleen Jordan. from Agriculture -Open The said hearing will be held Space District A -0 to Single in the Council Room of the Family Residential District College Station City Hall, R -la. Application is in the 1101 South Texas Avenue at name of Haldec, Inc. the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the The said hearing will be held City Council on Thursday, in the Council Room of the August 12, 1982. College Station City Hall, 1 For additional information 1101 South Texas Avenue at please contact me. the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the James M. Callaway City Concil on Thursday, Assistant Director of August 12, 1982. Planning For additional information, 07 -28 -82 please contact me. James M. Callaway Assistant Director of Planning 07 -28 -82 TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: The College Station City Council will hold a public hearing on the question of rezoning the following property: Lots 1 -4 Block 1, Lots 1 -29 Block 2, Lots 1 -16 Block 3 and Lots 1 -5 Block 4, all in Emerald Forest Phase VI, from Agriculture -Open Space District A -0 to Single Family Residential District R -la. Application is in the name of Haldec, Inc. The said hearing will be held in the Council Room of the !, College Station City Hall, 1101 South Texas Avenue at the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the City Concil on Thursday, August 12, 1982. For additional information, please contact me. James M. Callaway Assistant Director of Planning 07 -28 -82 IAA Th /e WedNe0day, -Tuly 12, 1 982 Commission deadlocks on child care ro osal p p By DAVID CRISP generates unnecessary traffic and Staff Writer disturbs the neighborhood with noise. Backers and opponents of a day care "It's like a birthday party going on center permit packed College Station every day," said Kay Hesby of 1104 City Hall Thursday, but planning and Guadalupe. zoning commissioners sent them home Commissioner Mike Fleming, argu- without a decision when they deadlock- ing that the commission is charged with edonthepermitrequest. protecting the integrity of The commission did break another neighborhoods, moved to deny the per - deadlock by agreeing to deny a general mit. Commissioner Wesley Hall commercial zone for a one -acre tract in seconded, but Roy Kelly and Gerald the Harvey Hillsides area, a request Miller voted against it. they had tabled twice before. Appli- After a motion to approve died for cant Margaret Kathleen Jordan had lack of a second, Miller moved to table planned a nursery on the site. until more commissioners are present. The commissioners present split 2 -2 Jim Behling, David Hill and Murl on the motion to deny a conditional Bailey were absent Thursday. use permit for a day care center at 2014 Langford St., where applicant Andrea "I'd like to find out what happens if Mills already had been in operation for we don't table," Hall asked. nearly a year. "We'll sit here for a long time," said After receiving a complaint from a Kelly. The motion passed. neighbor, the city warned Mills in July that she couldn't continue to care for When the commission deadlocked more than three children at a time again on the one -acre rezoning request, without a city permit, a requirement Kelly added, "I wish I'd brought my she said she had not known about. lunch." He then broke the deadlock by Neighbors and other College Station supporting Miller's motion to deny the residents, many of them who had commercial zone. children in the center, appeared on Mills' behalf to ask that the business be Commissioners thus backed a staff allowed to continue. They praised her recommendation that no commercial work with children and said the zoning be approved along Texas 30 in business doesn't create a nuisance. the Harvey Hillsides area. At an earlier But opponents produced a petition meeting, they had overruled the staff with 54 signatures of Langford and and voted for a five acre commercial Guadalupe Drive residents who said zone next to the one acre tract. That the center violates deed restrictions, request still is before the City Council. �_ THE EAGLE, AuG 13T () /98; CS Plan 2000 hearings t The final round of public hearings on the City of College Station's Plan 2000 begins today with a joint meeting between the City Council and the Planning and Zoning Commission. The groups will meet at 5 p.m. in council chambers at City Hall. It will be the council's first hearing on the comprehensive plan and the third for planning and zoning commissioners, who held a final work session July 21. Earlier public hearings have been well attended by residents primarily concerned about the impact of recommended capital improvements on their neighborhoods and about the role of the city's pro- posed new industrial park two miles south of town. The city staff has asked that the final plan reflect proposed development both with and without the industrial park, which consultants say could ac- commodate a population of more than 160,000 peo- ple when it is fully developed. However, full development is not expected by the year 2000. Dallas -Fort Worth consultants Samuel L. Wyse Associates and Wayne W. Snyder Associates project a College Station population of about 71,000 by then. The city planning department has no more copies of the final draft of the plan for distribution to the public. However, two copies are available for review at the College Station Community Center at 1300 Jersey St. TILE £'% TE /1,t'io 198 H ' a. S c aE. / �, .4 >. ao c ra ao C -o � v4 �,. ro u u 0 � ,:---1.0. ca-o p v COCC � . • 60 0 . ° . 0 . 7 1 U. 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Cn 0 A= 3 'U 1.' 2 a no c cr _•y s V1 C o-2 o �g C A X^] v im, C• oil n O CA �' O -1 O c' A n A VI U o � C' ° � c 1A p " O d .~ ? r. C A vii; S ti v A A a '+ oo (D •p � A o n � -, .. ref M 'o 4 a p S ( \ /���] L ••" o o a C O a t co fD se rt, , S p 1 a3 r H O Arm ••= o (....4.. VI O co co X C C , ` < H C cp f9 co O A H Co ; N - a A = A 00 0 ii ' + ti -, . O D r i vi • — A • O O � • C 0 , c" H O p� S.. C p C A A A' "', o O ti N r • r+ G n �' H f co_ IV cr Z `< A p d . O O p 0 S -I Cl- v, . 0 2 . " O p: O a c A n A m O Go O W < C p H C S 7 C A 'o ff P• - °' co p (D a O -, -, , e ..A O ~ a"WSo ` to /�� A w A a C l V p n c_ a. p P a k po a o ID a = ?' a � ° 7 y , ?' 1 oc m _ro�o A� V1 O ' ��oy A Q ^ ..d 5n d A Cr C w C!C n C 5 : ( Cn O Cr Oo 'O 13 C CD O o , = A ( A) CD p - O' 7 , A f fl ' • a » - 11) . :.c • v = �� ta ai ° C a f C , — i 1 i .. y Page 2A Bryan- College Station Eagle, Thursday, August 1 i Committee to consider lease StageCenter plan Mayor Gary Halter and contributions Mark Busby, Wednesday appointed necessary for remodeling m e m b e r o councilmen Lynn it. StageCenter's board o? Nemec, Bob Runnels The council was recep- directors, said the and Larry Ringer to a tive to the proposal but theater group submittec committee to study leas- said it couldn't grant two proposals to the city ing the old City Hall final approval until Both plans call fo: building to StageCenter. financial details were conversion o f t h t At Wednesday's worked out. building into a 250 -sea workshop city council ' Halter said it would be theater and at least sonic meeting, representatives easier for StageCenter to new construction. Ong of the group asked coun- obtain a 10 -year lease if plan would cost $236,00( cil members to approve a the city had assurances and use more of the pre lease on the unused that other groups could sent structure, while th facility so that it can ob- also use the building dur- other plan would cos tain the grant funding ing slack periods. $280,000 and add mor new construction to th old building. Agenda Busby said that fur ding for whichever pla Thursday is approved would corn The College Station City Council will meet at 7 from state grants an p.m. in the council chambers at City Hall. private donations. r I: w„ u y h(1 0 0 .- o. 0 o 0 as 'FA c°'u .E c° a' — • r1 ° ° '0 vx.0 ai i� = p - - N ro c o > 0 o 3 a o � 0u � N xa, °ou O a Ts u., a l > et/ o ° O C —, a, � � o o . � U N 2 R t ca = E E E a _ c.0 ., " c (/) >,� o c 7s c c— 3 c o � co 0. �3 Y a ea c - ' ... ' E 0. Z t (ii E u co o- to O E T O = E C i. Y O u ° v 3 b0 u ( 1"; 'C y • ”Nal '4 0 =E� ° EE s o3c3 Es C/1 cs. uou���� G. -c 0 E .....4 o o u — N � „ a c c o w ; 0 >, • � v ° ' 4 a s u o.v aE0 co E 00 ac � E c> E o". °' [� o ° � ' C A NC a "j 0 — �' =U� a ;,C . 1 c1 L� y z c > ('�( O 8 . � �. O i w .y 't� :-' ' G c C , u , i w .0,, U Ty v a'� O 1' � a� • y `' c ° o �, W -� v ea U c oo a� 4 °� o t a, n C. (L) i ^o v > .. N°a O 1� Ct v c' c.5 E `� c o o E o ° v . E v . c E ,� 5 1n N a o"- g'P ° c ' .- a ( ooa, 0 M E > u u O O () c ., ° E C Z c' c t a 03 v y . E a -v O a) C Y c 'cd e� Lu • i. CZ > • a. "' u w C p y H u .3 . T !"Ci o '° "12 Gl u 'fl V c cd v y c v 3 v O °D O a) n O �� "' O ,...4 "'c a , o c� E � C 3 = 3 E °' • C/A .off E .E`�°' � . a1'Ea°, o � o� i L6 g C b w D o „ H 1 ,. x v�uc �voa; Qca,EZa�y c� � c o y c' o aJ 0 c u S. ,-a u s E u g c '5 2O o. E 2> Z. V > . 0 "oai 0 1) ,c `� 4,d •- 'fl E ✓ w. , c 4, C ' ..I cy CZ O = .� c .^ ; o 2∎ ti ct E C dD v ° -.4.-) 1 ,n 3 ° °.- = v V u'O ° E- cC «�. 'y = .Y›, > = c .15 V ai ti cG a)1 ° c cc1 C E c/1 r' c u i, p,, c c� c 'v u' C c •rl • ��ca v cnca � va.)ia) E0�' n o .c o 0.750„ ~ >,, c a E o ��,� o ° c c ..0 En �a o� 0 a y ' av' E aas a • c ° -1 = o �- � v a � . c _ c E a ,. c v. >, 3 c ,..uca y0`" eu tu=� CA O 0 - = oo c "� ° c ° C ) ° i c c c `��0 0) o. v Iii • .0 U 4 0 C N V. w 3 ti cal 3 .0 -0 5. E Is this an improvement? On August 5, there was another accident at the intersection of Jane Street and University Drive. As manager of the Sonic Drive -In on University, I have been watching this intersection with increasing concern. The Highway Department constructed an asphalt median to control the flow of traffic along this section of University Drive. I am not sure if it was such a good idea. Before the at- tempt at traffic control there was a continuous left turn lane along here. Although Texas Avenue and University was a dangerous intersection, Jane Street and University was not. Any person going to Republic Bank -A &M or my business, if not on the right side of the street, must use the intersection of Jane Street. When the left turn lane was out there, there was no room to maneuver; now all traffic is concentrated in one place. There have been three accidents in the last 10 months, where previously there were none. How does this median im- prove the safety of Texas Avenue, by running so far along University Drive? Is it really an improvement? John Walling College Station 1 THE E,9 F / 0/9y ilt(Cusi 131158-2 LEGAL NOTICE ORDINANCE NO. 1383 WAS PASSED AND APPROVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS ON THE - - -- 26TH DAY OF AUGUST, 1982 108 Legal Notices in a regular and open meeting in the Council ADVERTISEMENTS Room of the College Station FOR BIDS S Hall. by You are invited to bid on the S the Mayor aid Ord Hall. an, signed and duly re- e- following project: corded in the official re- BEE CREEK PARK cords of the City of College DEVELOPMENT Station, has the following Project No. 80- 8205 -PD6 caption: SCOPE OF WORK: Scope of ORDINANCE NO. 1383: AN work includes but is not ORDINANCE CLOSING necessarily limited to con- HEARING AND LEVYING struction of a building with ASSESSMENTS FOR A restrooms. storage and PART OF THE COST OF second story viewing area, IMPROVING PORTIONS OF picnic units, walkways, MACARTHUR:AND POPLAR flagpoles and signage. STREETS, IN THE CITY OF RECEIPT OF BIDS: Sealed , C O -L 6 E G E S T A T I O N , proposals will be accepted TEXAS; AND PROVIDING at the office of the Director FOR THE COLLECTION OF of Capital Improvements SUCH ASSESSMENTS AND until 2:00 P.M.. Tuesday. FOR THE ISSUANCE OF August 31. 1982 at which ASSIGNABLE C E R - time they will be opened and TIFICATES IN EVIDENCE read aloud. Bids must be THEREOF, AND DECLAR- marked with the project title ING AN EMERGENCY. on the envelope. The complete text of the INFORMATION AND BID- above -named Ordinance is DING DOCUMENTS: Plans. on file at the Office of the specifications and bid City Secretary and may be ' documents may be obtained obtained at the City Hall, by contacting Andrew Czim- 1101 South Texas Avenue, skey at the Parks and College Station, Texas Recreation Department of- 77840 lice, 1000 Eleanor Street, 09 -03- 82,09 -05 -82 College Station, (713)696- PUBLIC HEARING 4753. A 525 plan deposit, bid bond, and performance NOTICE FOR: bond are required. SOUTHWOOD • 08-15-82,08-16-82.08-17-82. PARK 08 -18- 82.08 -19- 82.08- 20 -82, DEVELOPMENT 08-21782 - The College Station Parks - - -and Recreation Department is currently planning the development of Southwood Park, located at the corner of Rio Grande and Rock Praire Road in College Station. All interested re- sidents are encouraged to attend a public meeting and voice their opinions con- cerning the development of this community park. the meeting will be at 7:00 P.M., September 14, in the City of College Station Council Chambers. TO WHOM IT CITY OF MAY COCETN COLLEGE STATION The City of College Station PARKS AND RECREATION will hold a public hearing DEPARTMENT concerning the intent of the Lone Star Gas Company to 60 implement a new schedule 09- 03,08- 30,088 -- 3311,0.0 9- 01,09 -02, of rates for natural gas 09- 03,09 -04 service to the residential and commercial consumers in the City of College Station The said hearing will be held at the regular meeting of the College Station City Council on Thursday. August 26, 62 at 7:00 P.M. in the Council Room of the City Hall, 1101 S. Texas Avenue, College Station. `or further information, con- tact Dian Jones. City Secre- tary, The' City of College Station. 08 -17- 82.08 -18 -82 Now I The City of College 108 lege Station Legal Notices is accepting bid(s) for: Poop Paint 9 to be Thomas Park used at TO WHOM NOTICE OF until 10!30 a. m., August 17, IT MAY CONCERN tls The College Station Plan- • PUBLIC HEARING 1982 at which time the b;The College Station Plan- will be opened in the office ning and Zoning Commis - • ning and Zoning Commis- ^ the Purchasing Agent at hearing will hold a public sion will hold a public City Hall. Specifications nearing On ,the question of hearing on the question of m ay be obtained at the rezoning 'the following granting a Conditional Use office of the Purchasing property: Permit for a new church Agent. All bids received Approximately 16.168 facility located on the East after that time will be acres on the south side of side of Highway 6 Bypass returned unopened. The Southwest Parkway ap- East approximately 3000 feet Ci ty of College Station - Proximately 600 feet east of south of Raintree Drive. reserves the right to waive Texas Avenue, from Single The request for Use Permit I or reject any and all bids Family Residential District is in the name of Aldersgate any and all irregularities 8-1 to Planned Commercial United Methodist Church. said bid and 10 accedes in District C- 3 a n d The hearing will be held in offer considered Pt the Administrative - Professional ad- vantageous most sty. the Council Room of the genus to the City. i District A -P. College Station City Hall, These items may The said hearing will be 1101 South Texas Avenue at chased with Revenue Shar- I held in the Council Room of ue the 7:00 p.m. meeting of the ing fu nds.8 -2,8 -983 -4 the College Station City Planning and Zoning Com- I - Hall, 1101 South Texas mission on Thursday, Avenue at the 7:00 P.M. August 19•1982. meeting of the Planning and For additional information Zoning Commission on, contact the City Planner's Thursday, August 19. 1982. Office, (713)696 -8868, ' For additional information, Extension 237. 108 -- - please contact me. James M. Callaway 108 Legal Notices James M. Callaway Assistant Director of Ass't Director Planning — of Planning 08 - 04 - 82 ADVERTISEMENTS 1 08 - 04 - 82 FOR BIDS You are invited to bid on the following project: COLLEGE STATION PUBLIC NOTICE COMMUNITY CENTER The City of College Station ' LANDSCAPE is accepting bid(s) for: Project No. 80- 8206 -HM ! SCOPE OF WORK- Scope of Two (2) Backhoes work Includes but is not One (1) Sewer Tapping necessarily limited to con - Machine struction of landscaping. Water Meters sign, and irrigation system (8) Police Vehicles Ystem 108 Legal Notices at the College Station Four (4) Vi Ton Pickup munity Center, 130 er, 1300 Jersey . One (1) Intermediate size RECEIPT OF BIDS. Sealed car proposals will be accepted One (1) 2 ton cab & at the office of the Director LEGAL NOTICE Chassis Truck of Capital IM- provements The College Station, Plan - One (1) Roll-off hoist until 2:00 P.M. Tuesday, ning and Zoning Commis - One (1) One -ton Truck September 14, 1982 at.which sion will hold a public Two (2) Rear Loading time the hearing on the question of Garbage Trucks read Must and rezoning the following Two (2) Three ton cab & marked with the project title property: Chassis trucks on the envelope. Tract No. 1: A 3.54 acre until 10:00 aim., August 16, INFORMATION AND tract in the Morgan Rector D BID- League from District C -1 I 1982, at which time the bids DING DOCUMENTS. Plans, will be opened in the offira specifications and bid Genera Commercial ane documents may be obtained District A -p Administrative of the Purchasing Agent at by contacting Andrew Czim- I j Professional to District A -P the City Hall. Specifications skey at the Parks and ' Ad a ctstrativ2 Professional; may be obtained at the Recreation Department Tr at act the M rg 1.42 acre A office of the Purchasing lice, 1000 Eleanor Col- tract in the Morgan Rector Agent. All bids received lege Station (713) 696 -4753. A G from District C-1 after that time will be , 525 plan deposit, bid bond, General Commercial to ner t ve returned unopened. The and performance bond are Pr sin Administrative City of College Station required: Professional; reserves the right to waive 08 -29- 82,08 -30- 82,08- 31 -82, Tract No. 3: A 1.92 acre or reject any and all bids or 09 -01- 82,09 -02- 82,09- 03 -82, tract in the Morgan Rector any and all irregularities In 09 -04 -82 League from District C -1 said bid and to accept the - - -- - -- General Commercial and offer considered most ad - District A -P Administrative vantageous to the City. Professional to District A -P District C -1 These items may be pur- Administrative Professional. chased with Revenue ]� Tract No. 4: A 1.62 acre Sharing funds. TVO' Legal Notices tract in the Morgan Rector 7/27, 8/3 83 -3 League from LEGAL NOTICE General Commercial and ORDINANCE NO. 1378 WAS I Pr nal Administrative PASSED AND APPROVED Professional to District al. BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF Administrative The Professional. THE CITY OF COLLEGE Tne above tracts are STATION, TEXAS ON THE section located North of the Avenue -- 22ND DAY OF JULY, 1982 In at of Texas Avenue LEGAL NOTICE i and are b 6 Bypass The City of College Station In regular C and open meeting t he A an area bounded ed H y Texas In thQ Council Room of th is accepting bid(s) for: Avenue, State Hwy. 6 Pool Paint to be used at College Station City Held Bounds, and the Southern Thomas Park Pool the Ordinance, an, signed re - E states y of v he Bernadine August 17, the Mayor and duly re - Estates Su until 10:00 a.m., Au corded In the e official re 1982, at which time the bids This action is initiated n g will be opened in the office Station, of the City of flowi the Planning and Zoning of the Purchasing Agent at Station, has the following Commission of the City of caption: the City Hall. Specifications ORDINANCE NO. 1328: AN College hearing The said hearing will be held may be obtained at the office of the Purchasing ORDINANCE EIV ANNEXING C the Council Room of the AND RECEIVING All bids received EIVING CERTAIN College htT Avy e T al THE that time will be HE CITY ADJOINING I TN THE t the : 0Lth Texas Avenue at HE CITY LIMITS OF THE returned unopened. The Planning 7:00 P.M. an meeting C the City of College Station AN INCORPORATING COLLEGE STATION mission and Zoning Co reserves the right to waive AND SAME T F OTHE August on Thursday, or reject any and all bids or CM AS PART L THE August i i 1982. any and all irregularities in CITY OF COLLEGE For additional information, STATION, TEXAS. please contact me. said bid and to accept the P The complete text of the offer considered most ad- James it Co f Planning vantageous to the City. above - named Ordinance is Asst Director of Planning on file the Office l the 09/04 182 These items may be pur chased with Revenue Shar o City Secretary etary anrrd may be ingfunds.8 -2,8 -983 -4 obtained at the City Hall, -- 1101 South Texas Avenue, College Station, Texas 77840. 07-29-82,08-01-82 Commission OKs day care center Everything was almost as it was the last time An- drea Mills went before the College Station Planning and Zoning Commission and unsuccessfully sought approval to operate a day care center out of her home. City Hall was packed. Citizens backing Mills praised her work with children. Citizens opposing her request argued that the business would create unnecessary traffic along Langford Street and cause excessive noise. The big difference between that meeting of the commission on Aug. 6 and Thursday night's meeting was the ending. At the end of the earlier meeting, a motion to deny her request for a conditional permit snagged on a 2 -2 tie vote. Three commission members were absent. But following Thursday night's meeting, in which Mills had to cut short her presentation to the com- mission because she was overcome with emotion, the commission approved her request by a 4 -3 vote. It still must be approved by the City Council. "I love children," Mills told the commission and an audience of about 50 citizens. She said she originally began babysitting to find a playmate for her young daughter. "I'm sorry the controversy has developed," she said before sitting down. "I love to babysit." The commission granted Mills a conditional use permit for the day care center with the understan- ding that a fence with a gap in it is repaired. Mills also agreed keep only six children in the facility, rather than nine as she had originally planned. 17/ ,CR /fA /9 1)61/ST X) q g- 0 art32 TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN The College Station City Council will hold a public hearing on the question of Cd rezoning thr following , property: `.G TRACT NO 1: A 3.54 acre ` Po ' tract in the Morgan Rector League from District C -1 i7 General Commercial and O District A -P Administrative Professional to District A -P rp .Administrative Professional; oo TRACT NO 2: A 1.42 acre 0 tract In the Morgan ,Rector C/3 General Commerclalto D s- \. p. tract A -P Administrative 5 ' Professional; = TRACT NO 3: A 1.92 acre tract In the Morgan Rector til League from District C-1 - General Commercial and District na l to Administrative Dstri District A- tt. Professional Distri A -P Adminsitrative Professional; TRACT TRACT NO 4: - A 1.62 acre 108 tract In the Morgan Rector Legal Notices League from District C -1 Q. General Commercial and on the south side of Southw- District A -P Adminstrative est Parkway approximately co Professional to District A -P 600 feet east of Texas H Adiminatrative Professional. Avenue, from Single Family O The above tracts are located Residential District R -1 to North of the Intersection of Planned Commercial District < Texas Avenue and State C -3 and Administrative .. Highway 6 Bypass xas In Aven e, Applicat cation in the name of ' ' bound by T ass, and Morris F. Hamilton, Jr. - � T" State Hwy. 6 Bypass, „,,,'-•" the Southern Boundary of The said hearing will be held w • the Bernadine Estates the a Council Station oCityo the • College • • Subdivision. g N ' This action Is Initiated by the 1101 South Texas Avenue at N Planning and Zoning Com- the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the `— mission of the _ City -of City Council on Thursday, - College Station. September9, 1982. c >1 ▪ ) College The said hearing will be held For additional information, . In the Council Room of the p Callaway contact College Station City Hal 1101 South Texas Avenue at Assistant Director of the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the Planning "S7 Ce 9, 19n2 Thursday, 0//8 25 -82 AS i For additional information, rp please contact me. td James M. Callaway n Ass't Director of Planning. 8 -25-82 r TO WHOM IT MAY r"� CONCERN r ' ' The College Station City hearing will ont uestion public rezoning the following property: Approximately 16.168 acres ff 11- e /we-8 r ,es 86) , mss+ as icie a c ` 5 (, ME" , • • i ,________ illilir___________ Thffic p lan angers businesses 1 1 1 1 By THOMAS TASCHINGER 10 cents if I'd known left turns congestion is a problem at the in- Staff Writer would be ended there," he said. tersection because of the short Dominik Drive businessmen, Jim Duckett of Whataburger distance on Texas between outraged at a city official's sugges- was even more final. Dominik and Jersey -Kyle, but tion that left turns off Texas "If the council does this, I they want the city to install a syn- Avenue onto Dominik be pro- won't be able to sell the place, I'll chronized traffic signal at the in- hibited, Wednesday reacted to the have to give it away. I'll just lock tersection. Ash said that would - plan as if the city had decided to the doors and leave it." cost $25,000 and impede traffic on bulldoze their property and seize Director of Capital Im- Texas. it. provements Elrey Ash has propos- "The most common complaint "I invested $480,000 several ed the ban. I have on my desk is about traffic years ago, and I lost $4,500 a week Ash said Wednesday that traffic on Texas Avenue," said City in sales when Dominik was under flow on Texas Avenue would be Manager North Bardell. "And construction," Mike Miller of improved 18 percent if left turns now you want me to slow it even Danver's Restaurant told College were ended at the intersection. He more ?" Station city councilmen at their based his position on traffic The council took no action on work session Wednesday. counts taken earlier in the month Dominik and Mayor Gary Halter when Dominik was closed briefly directed the city staff to further "I'm tired of being threatened because of street construction. study the impact of the proposal. with this every year," Miller said, In addition, he said, traffic ac- In other business, Dan Weber "it's intimidation." of Lone Star Gas presented the The president of a bank by the cidents have risen sharply at the council with a request for an 8.77 intersection asked the council to intersection in the past few years. rate hike. Weber said the increase there were five accidents 1979, balance its interest in public safety In would provide Lone Star with an with concern for the businesses at the site, in 1980 there were 12 additional $247,979 in revenue. which have invested large amounts and in 1981 there were 33. Formal action on Lone Star's of money there. Ash proposes extending a bar- request will be taken at Thurs- Ken Martin of Pepe's concur- rier on Texas between north- and day's regular 7 p.m. meeting. red. south -bound traffic to Harvey Weber asked the council to discuss "I invested $250,000 in the Road. the request with the convany place, but I wouldn't have spent The businessmen agree that before it hired a rate consultant. TYE F&( L E 1 HZIM'S OA'4 A-1A6UST (g-- lig)" Traffic an angers businesses plan � By THOMAS TASCHINGER 10 cents if I'd known left turns congestion is a problem at the in- Staff Writer would be ended there," he said. tersection because of the short Dominik Drive businessmen, Jim Duckett of Whataburger distance on Texas between outraged at a city official's sugges- was even more final. Dominik and Jersey -Kyle, but tion that left turns off Texas "If the council does this, I they want the city to install a syn- Avenue onto Dominik be pro- won't be able to sell the place, I'll chronized traffic signal at the in- hibited, Wednesday reacted to the have to give it away. I'll just lock tersection. Ash said that would plan as if the city had decided to the doors and leave it." cost $25,000 and impede traffic on bulldoze their property and seize Director of Capital Im- Texas. it. provements Elrey Ash has propos- "The most common complaint "I invested $480,000 several ed the ban. I have on my desk is about traffic years ago, and I lost $4,500 a week Ash said Wednesday that traffic on Texas Avenue," said City in sales when Dominik was under flow on Texas Avenue would be Manager North Bardell. "And construction," Mike Miller of improved 18 percent if left turns now you want me to slow it even Danver's Restaurant told College were ended at the intersection. He more ?" Station city councilmen at their based his position on traffic The council took no action on work session Wednesday. counts taken earlier in the month Dominik and Mayor Gary Halter when Dominik was closed briefly directed the city staff to further "I'm tired of being threatened because of street construction. study the impact of the proposal. with this every year," Miller said, In other business, Dan Weber In addition, he said, traffic ac- of Lone Star Gas presented the "it's intimidation." cidents have risen sharply at the The president of a bank by the council with a request for an 8.77 intersection asked the council to intersection in the past few years. rate hike. Weber said the increase balance its interest in public safety In 1979, there were five accidents would provide Lone Star with an with concern for the businesses at the site, in 1980 there were 12 additional $247,979 in revenue. which have invested large amounts and in 1981 there were 33. Formal action on Lone Star's of money there. Ash proposes extending a bar- request will be taken at Thurs- Ken Martin of Pepe's concur- rier on Texas between north- and day's regular 7 p.m. meeting. red. south -bound traffic to Harvey Weber asked the council to discuss "I invested $250,000 in the Road. the request with the company place, but I wouldn't have spent The businessmen agree that before it hired a rate consultant. the Ea yi 9 aayus/ -24) )q g ;- T -------- 1 N.,. CS suspends gas rate hike re uest 4 q By THOMAS TASCHINGER Munson extended. Staff Writer Crompton said only three persons refused to sign Acting just as their counterparts in Bryan did the petition and seven or eight persons could not be three days earlier, the College Station City Council contacted, so he said the signatories represent 97 voted Thursday to suspend a request from the Lone percent of the residents in the area. Star Gas Co. for an 8.77 percent rate hike for up to "There is an ambience in Rose Circle," Cromp- four months. ton said. "People walk there in the evenings and A meeting of the mayors and city managers from visit each other. There is social intercourse.... We both towns and representatives of Lone Star to don't want to change our lifestyle." discuss the request has also been scheduled for Several persons suggested blocking off roads in Wednesday afternoon. the area at various points, but City Manager North The gas company has requested an 11.38 percent Bardell said that could create problems for rate hike in Bryan, and the two cities are consider- emergency vehicles trying to reach a particular ing jointly hiring a rate consultant to study the re- place. quest. Mayor Gary Halter said the residents should keep If necessary, the rate consultant would go to in mind that the needs of a particular neighborhood Lone Star's headquarters in Dallas to examine data must be balanced against the needs of the city. backing up the request. In such cases, he said, the needs of the city almost In other business, the council heard considerable always prevail. p testimony from members of the audience on Plan Director of Planning Al Mayo said that after two 2000, the city's comprehensive plan for managing public hearings on the plan are held before both the growth into the next century. Planning and Zoning Commission and the City Most of the comments at the meeting were from Council, the council will make its recommendations residents of the Rose Circle area who do not want on the plan to the two consulting firms which Munson extended north across Lincoln in the prepared it. future, an option considered in the plan. The consulting firms will then revise the plan ac- The residents at the meeting said such a move cording to the council's recommendation and bring would turn a quiet residential street into a major it back before the council for formal adoption. thoroughfare and destroy the neighborhood. The council also scheduled a workshop meeting John Crompton of 1000 Rose Circle presented with the Zoning Board of Adjustments for 4 p.m. the council with a petition signed by 102 residents of Wednesday to discuss planning problems in the the Munson and Rose Circle area who do not want Northgate area. THE EAaL� FRl DAL' , AuGu3 D'7, 1982J 1 108 legal Notices 108 Legal Notices INVITATION TO BID est tor a variance in the Bryan Indep end tn ent name Of: School District is no vit BROACHOILCOMPANY Ing bids for the supply 01 the The 1700 Puryear Drive E. following items for • the College Station, TX 77840 1982 - school year: • Said case will be heard by 1. Lubricants the Board at their regular 2. Gasoline - meeting to the Council 3. Batteries Room, College Station City Bid forms and specifications Hall, 1101 Texas Avenue on can be obtained at the office Tuesday, August 17, 1982 at of Mr. C.W. Henry, Director 7:00 p.m. of Finance & Accounting The nature of the case is as Services, 100 West 25th follows: _ Street, .Bryan, Texas and Variance to front setback; ADVERTISEMENT FOR returned to that office no side setback: sign location, THE CONSTRUCTION OF later than 2:00 PM on August and amount of expansion, to ADDITIONS AND 11, 1982. the existing Shell station 1 ALTERATIONS TO The Bryan Independent located at northwest corner COLLEGE STATION School District reserves the of Nagle Street and J MUNICIPAL BUILDING right to accept or reject University Drive - COLLEGE STATION, any/all bids. Further information is avails- TEXAS 0731- 62.08 -Ot- 82,0 -02 -82 ble at the office of the NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS NOTICE OF INTENTION Zoning Official of the City of OF BUILDING CONSTRUC- TO INCORPORATE College Station, (713) 696 -' TION FOR THE CITY OF Notice is hereby given that 8868 ext.247. COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS OLYMPIC AUTOMOTIVE., Jane Kee Sealed proposals ad- whose princi al business Zoning Official dressed to the Honorable p 0 8 1 1 - 8 2 office is at 3510 East 29th - 1 - 8 __ Mayor and City Council of Street. Bryan, Brazos College Station, Texas will Count Texas 77801. in- be received at the Office of y tends, on or before August 1, 1982, to become in- North Bardell, City Manager, until 2:00 P.M. Monday, corporated without a change August 11, 1982 for furnish- of firm name. Ing all necessary materials, DATED this the 29th day of machinery, equipment, July, 1982. r ill superintendence and tabor James C. Brunson for constructing Additions William 0. Brunson and Alterations to the Col- 08-04- 82,08 - 11-82,08 -18 82 lege Station Municipal ! 25 -82 Building. NOTICE OF • Proposals shall be accom- INTENDED TRANSFER parried by a Cashiers' or Notice is hereby given that Certified check upon a on August 2, 1982, the entire National or State Bank in the assets of OLYMPIC amount of not less than five AUTOMOTIVE. whose ad- (5) percent of the total dress is 3510. East 29th maximum bid price, payable Street. Bryan, Brazos without recourse to the City County, Texas 77801. will be of College Station, Texas, transferred to OLYMPIC Owner, or a bid bond in the AUTOMOTIVE, INC., a same amount from a reliable Texas corporation whose Surety Company as a principal place of business guarantee that the Bidder is at 3510 East 29th Street, will enter into a contract and Bryan. Brazos County, execute performance bond Texas 77801. and which will within ten (10) days after become bound to pay the notice of award of contract debts of the said partner - to him. ship, and that the said' The Successful Bidder must corporation will be solvent furnish performance bond upon becoming so bound. I. upon the form provided in DATED: July 29. 1982 the amount iftia, U nt of one hundree James C . Brunson , f , percent of the contract price Transferor 7 from an approved Surety William O. Brunson, Company holding a permit Transferor from the State o Texas, to OLYMPIC AUTOMOTIVE, act as Surety, or other INC., Tranferee / Surety or Sureties accepta- BY: William 0. Brunson I ble to the Owner. 08 -04- 82,08 -11 -82 / The right Is reserved as the TO WHOM IT Interest of the Owner may MAY CONCERN require to reject any and all The College Station City b ids, and waive any Council will hold a public ' (`]J/1 /1 Plans iheS. hearing to discuss the Plans and Specifications proposed comprehensive and Bidding Documents plan for the City of College may be secured from the Station at 7:00 P.M. on Office of Emmett Trent and Thursday, August 26. 1982 at Associates, 1505 South Col- the regular meeting of the lege Avenue, P.O. Box 3637, City Council in the Council Bryan, Texas 77801, phone Rooms of the College Sta- no. 7 79 -0769. Two sets of tion City Hall, 1101 South plans and Specifications will Texas Avenue. be furnished each bidding For additional information, contractor without charge please contact the Cit/ upon deposit of one hun- Planning Office. (713)696 - dred dollars (=100.00) as a 8868. Ext. 238. guarantee as to safe return Albert 0. Mayo. Jr. of the plans and Director of Planning specifications within five 08 -11 -82 I days after receipt of bids. _l S i n c e p l a n s and TO WHOM IT _ specifications will be placed MAY CONCERN in various plan rooms The Zoning Board of Adjust - throughout the State, plans ment for the City of College 1 requested by sub- Station will consider a requ- contractors and material est for a variance in the dealers, or additional plans name of: • and specifications re- A.G. Searcy quested by bidding con- 106 Southland tractors may be obtained College Station. TX 77840 from the Architects upon Said case will be heard by payment of Fifty Dollars the Board at their regular ($50.00) per set, which is not meeting in the Council refundable. Room. College . Station City 07- 29 -82, 07 -31- 82,08 -07 -82 Hall, 1101 Texas' Avenue on Tuesday. August 17. 1982 at 7:00 p.m. The nature of the case is as follows: Variance to rear setback at residence at 106 Southland. Further information is availa- ble at the office of the Zoning Official of the City of College Station. (713) 696- 8868 ext. 247. Jane Kee Zoning Official 8 2 THE EA- d 1.4 ftt4 a 7198 ° 6 —' 1 TO WH IT .M AY CONCERN Th e Zoning Board of Adlust- ment tor the City of College Station will consider a requ- • O y 4 Eb b^e _ • : y 00 O A ms 4 > w p 5 . q 4... y v w U w w w O .O r a . 0 e ., a . O t1 pp c) V 1 it) ti N g G O y q C 0 .J ' b ' > — 5 a . • Es9 ,p p ,C v� O a `n • o 03 N O 4.) ,� w • ° p y 14 i0 o a V, E �7 N O N r.. ) E❑ ./) g ; c9 N a, � M 0 L '5 O v 'a '8 r A w° �^ ` p C a ar"i i, o. >, p `.. 'a yr `� J �`' > B O O O= rr QQ u C c� O O O V Oo y 2a `. y O y . ;10.4 .4 0EE r oc 3'0 --Z +.4 v 1-= U z • o ;Ua a cr i •Z bo E E u v)- a, y c E (11) u • `2 E t . , • o E cat 0 S 7 4 20 g ' z -- e E 3 "" u a.� Q o: 10 0.— ei.,.0,c . - c rn� ' l .o fl y Ma3 o a' o › , u +//ii) O n c1 U ca o �I H • E `a'a -5 6 a y OwQ O. 0 0 1 .,) q ` O . a 2 0 • : O n cv W 3E = m.- O 4 J y , ti.. R a, o a, a,,, 5 c6 — • • a, O w O cn o `, b0 E a 1 3) Ea U a u i oo �ov o o U O c 2 .0 O 'O p V Q 4) 03 .7 Y c71 4 'a c� O Et a (1) G .c c, a i T m ° G �l t , 1 '7 2 a .0 O v v a, co O ` v . . O p O .a O O C >, .a a, C73 A. U a G E ° a, o C a, o A § y ° D1)-5 n .iii ❑ a, y O. C o ❑ —.. p. c O v. N O r «f O `, y co p .... 0o `. - E vD 0 a� -4- cd cd °' ' O o E 0 g:� P4 3 ~ ' E a o2mP� o Oat a, a it Z a, 0 • ti ca t1, a a, U MO moo O U V 0 cn 0, p • 0 V ,,, E 0 TJ > u 0 9 > ) a 4 i V o a, ii c a 0.8 . e o F ; .2•� 0 0 0 O w >, 00 o a a.) uv ° 0 a°, O. F aY of)" . _ , --. 4 " ¢ a •a "� n co >, 2U A - V o f a, ,- v a, C �a�o 0o< ua — 5 EU n,0 �i�Ew 108 Legal Notices 108 Legal Notices 108 Legal Notices • PUBLIC HEARING tion of amending the Zoning NOTICE FOR: , ,u . Ordinance No. 850, revising Bert Wheeler et al for Robert SOUTHWOOD the District C -3 Planned Hoppe. PARK Commercial District Re- The said hearing will be held DEVELOPMENT gulations, Permitted Uses, in the Council Room of The The College Station-,Parks and providing for a College Station ,city Hall, and Recreation Department maximum lot size. 1101 South Texas Avenue at is currently planning the The said hearing will be held the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the development of Southwood in the Council Room of the Planning and Zoning Corn - Park, located at the corner College Station City Hall, mission on Thursday, Sep - of Rio Grande and Rock 1101 South Texas Avenue at tember 16, 1982. Praire Road in College the 7:00 P.M. meeting of the For additional information, Station. All interested re- Planning and Zoning Com- please contact me. sidents are encouraged to mission on Thursday, Sep- James M. Callaway As attend a public meeting and tember 16, 1982. st. Director of Planning voice their opinions con- For additional information, , 09 -01 -82 corning the development of please contact me. this community park. the Albert O. Mayo, Jr. meeting will be at 7:00 P.M., Director of Planning. I September 14, in the City of 09 -01 -82 College Station Council TO WHOM IT Chambers. MAY CONCERN CITY OF The College Station Plan - COLLEGE STATION ning and Zoning Commis - i sion will hold a public -- hearing on the question of 111 Le gal Notices rezoning the following property: An 8.876 acre tract located 04 ADVERTISEMENTS on the south side of Un- FOR BIDS You are invited to bid on the iversity Drive approximately 1,000 feet east of the inter- following project: section of Fedmart Drive COLLEGE STATION and University Drive, from COMMUNITY CENTER Single Family Residential LANDSCAPE District R -1 and Townhouse- Project No. 80- 8206 -HM Rowhouse District R -3 to T ' 1 � /)' y. Single Family Residential work includes cl WORK. Scope of 111'. /V/� fly work includes but is not District R -1, Townhouse- necessarily limited to con - Rowhouse District R -3 and struction of landscaping, General Commercial District sign, and irrigation system II �� ��/ of Application in the aame m the C Station sey. e of Jeesse se Henton, Garrett at the Center, Stat Jersey. J Engineering. RECEIPT OF BIDS. Sealed *or The said hearing will be held proposals will be accepted • I in the Council Room of the at the office of the Director S n College Station City Hall, of Capital Improvements /_1� � 1101 South Texas Avenue at until 2:00 P.M. Tuesday, the 7.00 P.M. meeting of the September 14, 1982 at which Planning and Zoning Com- time they will be opened and 1982- mission on Thursday, Sep- read aloud. Bids must be tember 16, 1982. marked with the project title For additional information, on the envelope. please contact me. INFORMATION AND BID - James M. Callaway DING DOCUMENTS. Plans, Asst. Director of Planning specifications and bid 09 -01 - documents may be obtained TO WHOM IT by contacting Andrew Czim- skey at the Parks and MAY CONCERN The College CONCERN N CER Plan- Recreation Department Of- ning and Zoning Commis- lice, 1000 Station El 71 6 6-4 Col - sion will hold a 5 5e plan p osit 6b b A hearing on the question public and plan deposi bid bond, rezoning the following and performance bond are property: following required. A 9.0 Acre tract located 08 -29- 82.08 -30- 82,08- 31 -82, approximately 450 feet west 004-8- 82,09 -02- 82,09- 03 -82, of the intersection 6f- 'Holle- 09 -04 -82 TO WHOM IT man Drive and Wellborn MAY CONCERN: Road (F.M. 2154), from The Planning and Zoning Heavy Industrial District M -2 Commission of the City of District to Apartments Medium De- College Station will hold Welty R -5. public hearing on the oues- Application is in the name of 108 Legal Notices PUBLIC HEggING voice their opinions con SO TICE FOR: the development of UT HWOOD this community park. the DEVELAppK meeting cerning will be at 7: P.M., The Colle MENT September 14, in the City.of 9ti Station Parks College Station Council and Recreation Department is currently Chambers. dev el opment planning the CITY OF of rRioo Gra at est co netl CO PAR S 08- 29,08- 30,08- 31.09- 01,09 -02, Praire nd einthe Rock RECREATION Station Road College DEPARTMENT sident aAel ' nter ested r e- 696 -4753 attend a oubl��ncouraged t o meeting and i 09- 03,09 -04 • Northgate subject of special joint J meeting By THOMAS TASCHINGER the university and roughly bounded by back, building separation and fire Staff Writer University Drive, Wellborn Road, Church resistance. The Northgate area, a part of College Avenue and Nagle Street. Station city planners have called their Violetta Burke, chairman of the Zoning "This has ," h is said, a and has at e least n y longest- standing unresolved problem, will Board of Adjustments, has asked the city subject of countless es said, s studies and has ite architectt the be the subject of a special joint meeting council to establish a plan for future use of and planning c ing cla g classes es at the uni nural Wednesday of three city governing units. the area. and City Council, the Planning and Zon- Director of Planning Al Mayo said most Mayo said city planners are reluctant to ' ing Commission and the Zoning Board of of Northgate's problems exist because it approve requests to change or add to ex Adjustment will meet at 4 p.m. in the coun- was built up years before many city or- fisting buildings there because that extends cil chambers at City Hall to discuss future dinances applied to the area. the life span of a non conforming area. plans for the area. As a result, Mayo said, virtually every He said in recent years a number of bars Northgate contains a variety of small structure in Northgate is in violation of and lounges have been started in Nor - businesses in old buildings with insufficient several current zoning regulations. Viola- thgate. Those kinds of businesses only parking. It is located immediately north of tions occur concerning insufficient set- worsen parking problems, he said. • YHE EA CL S P TE/u1 19oe . olden Bear plans Golf site are prelimrnary look a From page 1A He described the golf course as a "PGA hther course, it and said officials are still discussing O O O e woui private o pu Nicc klala c us -built courses ses in Houston and near Austin are private. By FRANK MAY been looking at the industrial park Goehring said Golden Bear representatives would Staff Writer property for several weeks. work on the layout of the course, and the master The Golden Bear is looking at Goehring said the agreement is plan of the park would have to be redesigned to ac College Station as another Texas verbal, and he declined to estimate commodate it. city where he can fatten his pot of a time period before a written Goehring called the golf course -hotel project an gold from building golf courses agreement could be completed. "anchor" for the park, which is to house high and resort hotels. "It's a complex issue," he said. technology industrial firms and residential The Jack Nicklaus -owned "It would have to be submitted to developments. Golden Bear, Inc., a Florida com- the (city) council...There's an The city has planned to build a golf course, land - pany named after its golfing awful lot of planning that has to fill, cemetery, sewer treatment plant and recrea- superstar owner, has an "agree- be done." tional areas at the park. ment in concept" with the College Gerry Pumphrey, vice president Goehring and Mayor Gary Halter said affects of Station Industrial Foundation on for legal services for Golden Bear, a golf course -hotel complex on the city's plans for purchasing land for a golf course said the firm has found "nothing the park are uncertain. .d hotel /conference center. wrong with the location" for a ment "This is an exciting project that would comple- the (Texas A &M) university, s the city and it The land has yet to be pin- golf course and hotel, but describ- ment the said of the university, the Bear pro pointed, but it is located in the ed the project as "very n College Station Industrial Park on preliminary." posal. He said the complex would be similar to Highway 6 south of the city limits. He said the company's chief of- Lakewa a golf course-resort pl and resident t l The city owns about 1,266 acres in ficial on the project was on vaca- the park and JAC Developers, tion. Pumphrey gave no details on development built by Golden Bear Inc. west of Inc. of College Station owns the the project. Austin. • 0 remaining 1,030 acres of it. Goehring said the proposed As to direct invol'e4l ntfiof. Nicklaus, Goehring Dennis Goehring, president of project calls for a 300 -unit hotel refused comment on whether h l a4 already viewed the industrial foundation, said the and conference center to ac- the property. ' . C,'�. Golden Bear firm, which has commodate small meetings of But he expects that Nicklauswinner of more ma- I developed golf courses in north about 40 business executives. jor golf championships than any other golfer in Houston and near Austin, has Turn to GOLF, page 4A history, eventually will come to College Station. "I think he'll come," Goehring said. I ..fL F 6tie:0 IQQd Q.V._ 4-• j Sc2--- Tower doors lock people out, not in By ROY BRAGG Joey Porter, College Station deputy fire marshal, Brazos Valley Editor said after the fire he had heard reports of locked ex- The fire escape doors in the Rudder Tower can- it doors. not be locked to prevent use of the stairwell fire Hodge says that can't be so. escape, the manager of the facility demonstrated "I haven't heard any complaints about it," he Wednesday. The doors aren't built that way. said. "We checked with tenants today and we "These doors are designed to prevent you from haven't found anybody who's had trouble. We're at getting in," said University Center Manager Steven a loss (to explain the reports) until we find a locked Hodge, "but there's just . no way to keep you from door." getting out." Hodge spent his first day on the job The fire escape doors on the restaurant level are Wednesday weathering an evacuation of Rudder equipped with door knobs on both sides, Hodge Tower caused by a morning grease fire. said. Other doors lining the fire escape stairwell To prove that the doors are designed for escape, have door handles that are locked to prevent en- Hodge demonstrated the locks on several of the trance into the building. But there are push -bar doors to the twin enclosed fire escapes that line the handles on the other sides, which face the office and sides of the 11 -story conference and office complex. meeting rooms of the tower. Those doors can't be In each instance, the doors couldn't be opened from locked. the stairwell, but each door opened from the inside Hodge said the only problems with locked doors of the building. occurred when firefighters tried to search the The fire, although contained to one grill, caused building for stragglers. They tried to use the heavy smoke damage throughout the 11th floor stairwells for easy access to the floors, but had to restaurant. Hodge said no damage estimate was use keys from Hodge and other officials to unlock available and the restaurant would be closed in- the doors. definitely. 1 70,7 .-- L. AiaL[J - ye /98_1_ %bp., 108 Legal Notices ADVERTISEMENT FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF ADDITIONS AND ALTERATIONS TO COLLEGE STATION MUNICIPAL BUILDING COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS OF BUILDING CONSTRUC- TION FOR THE CITY OF _ COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS 108 Sealed proposals ad- dressed to the Honorable 108 Legal Notices 1� Legal Notices 1 108 L Notices Mayor and City Council of ADVERTISEMENT FOR - -- — College Station, Texas will CONSTRUCTION OF A North Bardell, City Manager, r, (5) percent of the total be received at the Office of FIRE SPRINKLER SYSTEM until 2:00 P.M. Thursday, maximum bid price, payable North Bardell, City Manager, FOR THE EXISTING COL - August 19, 1982 for furnish -. without recourse to the City until 2:00 P.M., Wednesday, LEGE STATION COMMUN. rng all necessary materials, ' of College Station, Texas, August 11, 1982 for furnish - ITY CENTER COLLEGE machinery, equipment, p Owner, or a'bid bond in the ing all necessary materials, STATION, TEXAS superintendence and labor same amount from a relea- machinery, equipment, NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS for construction an auto- ble Surety Company as a superintendence and labor OF BUILDING TRACT UC- matic fire sprinkler system guarantee that the Bidder for constructing Additions TION FOR THE CITY OF for the existing College will enter into a contract and and Alterations to the Col- COLLEGE STATION,TEXAS Station Community Center execute performance bond lege Station Municipal S proposals ad- building. within ten (10) days after Building. S dressed to the Honorable Proposals shall be accom- notice of award of contract Proposals shall be accom- Mayor and City Council of panied by a cashiers' or to him. panied by a cashiers' or College Station, Texas will certified check upon - a The Successful Bidder must certified check upon a be received at the Office of National or State Bank in the furnish performance bond National or State Bank in the amount of not less than five upon the term provided in amount of !not less than five -- - the amount of one hundred (5) percent of the total - percent of the contract price maximum bid price, payable from an approved Surety without recourse to the City Company holding a permit of College Station, Texas. from the State of Texas, to Owner. or a bid bond in the act as Surety, or other i same amount from a reliable Surety or Sureties accepta- Surety Company as a LEGAL NOTICE ble to the Owner. guarantee that the Bidder The City of College Station The right is reseved as the will enter into a contract and is accepting bid(s) for: interest of the Owner may execute performance bond `One (1) ton pickup . require to reject any and all within ten (10) days after Two (2) Utility service � bids, and waive any notice of award of contract I bodies for 3 /. ton trucks formalities. to him. • One (1) full size automobile Plans, Specfications and The Successful Bidder must Approximately 8500 feet of I Bidding Documents may be furnish performance bond PVC pipe and approximately secured from the Office of ' upon the form provided in 1500 miscellaneous PVC Emmett Trent and As- the amount of one hundred • fittings sociates, 1505 South College percent of the contract price A Security System for the Avenue, Box 3637, Bryan, from an approved Surety Utility Office to ,be installed Texas 77801, phone no. 779- Company holding a permit in the new addition to the j 0769, deposit of twenty rom the State of Texas, to dollars y City Hall. (520.00) per set, act as Surety, or other F` until 10:00 a.m. which sum so deposited will Surety or $uFeties accepta- 15, 1982. at which time September the I be refunded provided the ble to the Ooir,l er. bids will be opened .in the provisions o f the The right is reserved as the office of the Purchasing Specifications regardin the interest of the Owner may I Agent at the City Hall. return on such Documents require to reject any and all Specifications may be bb- are complied with. Sum of bids, and waive any tained at the office of the twenty dollars ($20.00) per 1 formalities. Purchasing Agent. AIL bids set (nonrefundable) to mate- I Plans and Specifications 1 received after that time w i l l r i a 1 s u p p l i e r s and and Bidding Documents subcontractors. ! may be secured from the C College Station be returned unopened..The 08 -04- 82 ,08 -07- 82,08 -14 -82 ' Office of Emmett Trani and • reserves the right to waive - , t� nrn Associates, 1505 South Col- or reject any and all S or nd lege Avenue, P.O. Box 3637, any and all irregularities in Bryan, Texas 77801, phone said bid and to accept the no. 779 -0769. Two sets of plans and Specifications will be furnished each bidding contractor without charge upon deposit of one hun- dred dollars ($100.00) as a guarantee as to safe return of t h e p l a n s a n d specifications within five days after receipt of bids. S i n c e p l a n s a n d specifications will be placed in various plan rooms throughout the State, plans requested by sub- contractors and material dealers, or additional plans and specifications re- quested by bidding con- tractors may be obtained from the Architects upon payment of Fifty Dollars ($50.00) per set, which is not refundable. 07- 29 -82, 07 -31- 82,08 -07 -82 HF FLE .Q l rn._b — b 0 CS road crews work steadily While the Bryan street repair crews have been working double -time this summer, their counter- parts in College Station have not been letting cobwebs gather on their equipment. Public Works Director George Ford said his employees have completed three major jobs this summer •Redmond Drive from Rosemary Lane to Texas Avenue. •Armistead from Rosemary to Redmond. •Dominik Drive from Texas to 200 feet east of — Puryear Drive. City crews are now working on Puryear from Dominik to Harvey Road and when that job is com- pleted, they'll move over to Stallings Drive. Ford said he tries to complete all work within a specific area so that the equipment doesn't have to be moved great distances. ihr TH T/-) E EA &L N Y i �- � vthee (9e),. CS to be aske athleti c funds d T ment. plan. Jenkins claims that B Y In other business on 1,135 sq feet of her TASCHINGER Staff Writer Wednesday, the council At Thursday's regular land was taken without the city to Co S will discuss additional 7 p.m. meeting, the compensation by he c LA Council will be ask funding an d council will consider a because o f i m ed today to fund a joint of Plan 2000, the city's damage claim from provements to adjoining 1,4 athletic federation which comprehensive growth Alberta Jenkins. streets. would sponsor sports : L �, events similar to last , L April's Texas ;N,,, Triathalon. /r "% ' ' The request will be 6 � W Ne presented to the city council at Wednesday's 4 , ' &,04 QU p.m. workshop meeting /y by Lane Stephenson and ' Tom Weiss of Texas es . i �� A &M University. ' Stephenson, of the y , p, " Public Information Of fice, and Weiss, of the X c Intramural and tional Sports depart s ment, will ask the coup �� r y /�, Recrea cil for $7,500, the same s " %y amount they have re- > f quested from the City of ' _ > Bryan. ',% . ; • • At a special budget y meeting last week, the ' ti .:.., ...........: Bryan City Council ten ''' .:.....t.. : • ?? vely approved seen 64 • .& /. Brng its $7,500 share. ... , iii Each city will draw the j i i i money from the hotel- .I ' �' motel tax fund, w h i ch is €, designed m part to pro- y 0 . mote tourism. 11 Stephenson if the two cities provide a y .. $15,000 budget, the 9' h � university and the said Bry an College Station Chamber . $ ..,.... t 4 . ,..„... .......... , ............,...,...;,-- , of Commerce will pro vide administrative sup - port. , i "The athletic act as a federa clear r al tion will inghouse f scheduling �h ,. " a a ,• y' , Nom , , 3 , • , events, Stephenson x '^?Y' ` R< said. "It " could handle / /'i the next triathalon and also schedule events for %� . the individual triathalon y Eagle pho b David Einse sports of swimming, run- n ing and bicycling, Christma i September although it wouldn't be S Co Station, 1 limited to those." P C alliham, left, and Ashley Stallings, both of Stephenson said Weiss prepare a dem onstration float for the 1 982 Bry College Station ,„ ise the be able to super H o lid ay Para Calliham is chairman of the parade co mmittee. vise the federation on a .� • part-time basis, co or "Holiday Memor is the theme for this year parade, sponsore dinate advertising and by the Bryan- College Statio Cham of Commerce. The parade purchase timing equip will be held Nov. 21 at 3 p'91. Deadline fo r entr i Oct. 7. s 'u o v ° N .-.4:>;-<' ° c = ° c w T�/� -C 0 T ti 22 [ ° b V1 7 0 'b O u fV $ u C '-• 0 .� A. - 4) 0 N '. T RS �� N 6A H . 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