HomeMy WebLinkAbout05/28/2020 - Workshop Minutes - City CouncilWKSHP052820 Minutes Page 1
MINUTES OF THE CITY COUNCIL WORKSHOP
VIA TELECONFERENCE
CITY OF COLLEGE STATION
MAY 28, 2020
STATE OF TEXAS §
§
COUNTY OF BRAZOS §
Present:
Karl Mooney, Mayor
Council:
Bob Brick
John Crompton
Linda Harvell
John Nichols
Dennis Maloney
City Staff:
Jeff Capps, Interim City Manager
Jeff Kersten, Assistant City Manager
Carla Robinson, City Attorney
Tanya Smith, City Secretary
Ian Whittenton, Deputy City Secretary
1. Call to Order and Announce a Quorum is Present
With a quorum present, the Workshop of the College Station City Council was called to order by
Mayor Mooney at 4:08 p.m. on Thursday, May 28, 2020 in the Council Chambers of the City of
College Station City Hall, 1101 Texas Avenue, College Station, Texas 7784 0.
2. Executive Session
In accordance with the Texas Government Code §551.071-Consultation with Attorney, and
§551.074-Personnel, the College Station City Council convened into Executive Session at 4:08
p.m. on Thursday, May 28, 2020 in order to continue discussing matters pertaining to:
A. Consultation with Attorney to seek advice regarding pending or contemplated litigation; to wit:
Kathryn A. Stever-Harper as Executrix for the Estate of John Wesley Harper v. City of
College Station and Judy Meeks; No. 15,977-PC in the County Court No. 1, Brazos
County, Texas; and
McCrory Investments II, LLC d/b/a Southwest Stor Mor v. City of College Station; Cause
No. 17-000914-CV-361; In the 361st District Court, Brazos County, Texas
City of College Station v. Gerry Saum, Individually, and as Independent Executrix of the
Estate of Susan M. Wood, Deceased; Cause No. 17-002742-CV-361; In the 361st District
Court, Brazos County, Texas
Carrie McIver v. City of College Station; Cause No. 18-003271-CV-85; In the 85th District
Court, Brazos County, Texas
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Veronica Alejandra Ibarra v. The City of College Station; Cause No. 20000325CV361; in
the 361st District Court, Brazos County, Texas
B. Consultation with attorney to receive legal advice; to wit:
Legal advice regarding the FY20 funding agreements between the City and Experience
Bryan College Station.
Legal advice regarding special election runoff to elect City Councilmember Place 4.
Legal advice concerning municipal regulation of short term rentals.
C. Deliberation on the appointment, employment, evaluation, reassignment, duties, discipline, or
dismissal of a public officer; to wit:
Council Self-Evaluation
City Manager
City Secretary
Executive Session recessed at 6:37 p.m.
3. Reconvene from Executive Session and take action, if any.
MOTION: Upon a motion made by Councilmember Harvell and a second by Councilmember
Crompton, the City Council voted six (6) for and none (0) opposed, to authorize the City Manager
to prepare, sign and send on the City’s behalf, an advance written notice to Experience Bryan
College Station notifying EBCS of the City’s termination of its current funding agreements with
EBCS effective August 1, 2020, in compliance with the terms of said agreements. The motion
carried unanimously.
4. Presentation, possible action and discussion on items listed on the consent agenda.
Item 3.3 was pulled from Consent for clarification.
(3.3): Mary Ellen Leonard, Director of Finance, explained that the banking and service fees
associated with the acceptance of credit cards as a method of payment are charged to each
department that accepts Visa, MasterCard and Discover.
(3.4): Debbie Eller, Director of Community Services, gave a brief explanation of the tenant based
rental assistance guidelines to assist College Station residents with rental assistance payments for
College Station households affected by the disaster declarations due to COVID-19.
(3.6): Carol Cotter, Planning & Zoning Commission, stated that this is a Semi-Annual Report on
System-Wide Impact Fees for Water, Wastewater, and Roadway is required by law.
(3.9): Natalie Ruiz, Director of Economic Development, stated that staff had begun looking at
potential short-term leasing options for the existing police station building on Texas Avenue at the
same time the International Leadership of Texas School was looking for a temporary space for
their high school students, while a new building is being developed. The school currently owns
and operates the educational facility located near the intersection of Longmire Drive and Graham
Road that serves students from kindergarten through 8th grade. Starting this fall, the School will
have their first high school students entering the 9th grade. Their plans are to add a grade level
each year until they have all 9th, 10th, 11th, and 12th graders at one facility. Ideally, the permanent
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high school building will be ready for students in the fall of 2023. The initial lease term is three
years with the option for two, one-year extensions.
5. Workshop
5.1 Presentation, discussion, and possible action regarding the FY20 Proposed Bond
Issuance.
Mary Ellen Leonard, Director of Fiscal Services, presented the status of the proposed FY20 Bond
issuance and the proposed issuance parameters. Mrs. Leonard explained some options related to
changes in the FY20 Bond issuance based on recent economic events. The ordinances related to
the parameters for issuance of certificates of obligation, series 2020 are schedule to be brought to
Council for approval on June 11, 2020.
Staff has strategically evaluated the impact of the series 2020 Certificates on the City’s ability to
meet debt service requirements and the effect they may have on the ad valorem tax rate. The project
savings and rescheduling has resulted in a change in the parameters as originally budgeted. The
recommendation is to move forward with this issuance with the revised parameters that will be
presented. The impact on the tax rate and utility rates has been reviewed based on the most current
information and will continually be reviewed as part of budget preparation.
FY20 General Government Proposed Issuance
Paid for from debt side of the Ad Valorem Tax Rate
Staff would like to reduce the proposed offering from the budgeted $20,715,000 to
$2,210,000. Accomplished by:
1. Realigning anticipated needs for projects based on COVID 19, other factors and
utilization of project savings - $3.1 million
2. Eliminating issuing remaining tranche for City Hall as CMAR contract indicated it
will not be needed - $6.8 million
3. Adding no additional projects from the unfunded capital list - $4.2 million
4. Reassigning issued debt for Southeast Park to other projects - $4.4 million
FY20 Utility Funds Proposed Issuance
Paid for from Utility Fund Revenue
Staff would like to reduce the proposed offering from the budgeted $28,340,000 to
$21,075,000. Accomplished by:
1. Realigning anticipated needs for projects based on COVID 19 other factors and
utilization of project savings - $3.0 million
2. Reassigning issued debt for the purchase of water rights to the Rock Prairie
Elevated Storage tank - $4.3 million
FY20 Refunding Proposed Issuance
Evaluating refunding the 2010 GO and 2010 thru 2012 COs
Amount $19 - $41 million
Average life remaining is 5.5 years
Possible Net Present Value Savings $1.4 - $3.9 million
Possible percentage savings on refunded bonds - 7.5% - 11.4%
Refunding savings must >= 5% to proceed
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MOTION: Upon a motion made by Councilmember Nichols and a second by Councilmember
Crompton, the City Council voted six (6) for and none (0) opposed, to move forward with the
FY20 Proposed Bond Insurance as presented by staff. The motion carried unanimously.
5.2 Presentation, discussion, and possible action regarding the 2019 Incentive Compliance
Report by the Brazos Valley Economic Development Corporation.
Matt Prochaska and Chuck Martinez, BVEDC, stated that for 2019, six (6) projects under
agreement were monitored for performance compliance by the Brazos Valley Economic
Development Corporation on behalf of Brazos County, the City of Bryan, and the City of College
Station. The incentive agreements with Nutrabolt closed in 2019 with all parties, as such no further
monitoring is made.
2019 Compliance Report:
Advanta US
November 2016 announcement to establish global biotech R&D center in College Station.
January 2018 facility ribbon cutting ceremony.
$80,000 avg annual salary requirement: $95,257 (2019)
Axis Pipe & Tube
During first 3 years of Agreement (2013, 2014 and 2015), no payment to the City. For
every year thereafter, the payment is equivalent of 50% of the amount the City would have
collected in Ad Valorem tax that year.
2019 performance exceeds contracts’ benchmark valuation + salary formula
FUJIFILM Diosynth Biotechnologies Texas @ Bio corridor
BCAD 2017 valuation reflected partial facility and only real property –While the Company
reported $73,236,000 improvements (real + personal property), the Company opted not to
challenge BCAD 2017 valuation and consequently, 2017 incentives were foregone.
Since 2018, BCAD reflects the updated valuation of facility complex.
LSPI
NOV 2017 ribbon cutting (met DEC 2017 requirement)
$62.4M facility investment (met $25M requirement)
BVEDC cash incentives paid
ViaSat
JAN 19th 2017 groundbreaking
APR 10th 2018 ribbon cutting of $30M facility (exceeds $20M investment requirement)
Wayfair
1st incentive grant released with $1.98M investment
2nd incentive grant released in July 2018
3rd / final incentive grant released in January 2020
MOTION: Upon a motion made by Councilmember Harvell and a second by Councilmember
Brick, the City Council voted six (6) for and none (0) opposed, to receive the compliance report.
The motion carried unanimously.
6. Council Calendar
Council reviewed the calendar.
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7. Discussion, review, and possible action regarding the following meetings: Animal Shelter
Board, Arts Council of Brazos Valley, Architectural Advisory Committee, Audit Committee,
Bicycle, Pedestrian, and Greenways Advisory Board, Bio-Corridor Board of Adjustments,
Brazos County Health Dept., Brazos Valley Council of Governments, Brazos Valley
Economic Development Corporation, Bryan/College Station Chamber of Commerce, Budget
and Finance Committee, BVSWMA, BVWACS, Compensation and Benefits Committee,
Comprehensive Plan Evaluation Committee, Experience Bryan-College Station, Design
Review Board, Economic Development Committee, Gulf Coast Strategic Highway Coalition,
Historic Preservation Committee, Interfaith Dialogue Association, Intergovernmental
Committee, Joint Relief Funding Review Committee, Landmark Commission, Library
Board, Metropolitan Planning Organization, Operation Restart, Parks and Recreation
Board, Planning and Zoning Commission, Research Valley Technology Council, Regional
Transportation Committee for Council of Governments, Sister Cities Association, Spring
Creek Local Government Corporation, Transportation and Mobility Committee, TAMU
Student Senate, Texas Municipal League, Walk with the Mayor, YMCA, Zoning Board of
Adjustments, (Notice of Agendas posted on City Hall bulletin board).
Councilmember Nichols reported on the Transportation Committee.
8. Adjournment
There being no further business, Mayor Mooney adjourned the workshop of the College Station
City Council at 7:43 p.m. on Thursday, May 28, 2020.
________________________
Karl Mooney, Mayor
ATTEST:
_______________________
Tanya Smith, City Secretary