The Crockett City Council held an extended discussion on a proposed ordinance to require permits, impose fees, require insurance for events on city property and allow the city to revoke permits when public safety is threatened. Staff told council the ordinance responds to recent unpermitted gatherings—some that required ambulance and police responses and two that resulted in serious assaults or shootings in the past month.
City staff emphasized the need to identify an accountable host for events that spill into public streets, require plans for crowd control and parking, and ensure the city is not left with public‑safety and liability burdens. Staff said nonprofit and charitable events would typically have permit fees waived but that revenue‑generating events would be treated differently.
Council members and staff debated a residential curfew for block parties. Staff initially proposed aligning permitted event hours with park curfew (10:30 p.m.) or a compromise such as 11:30 p.m.; one council member proposed midnight for residential block parties while preserving separate rules for parks and larger venues. The police chief (referenced in the discussion) favored clarity and public‑safety thresholds. A motion to approve the ordinance amended to set midnight for residential block parties was moved and seconded but failed to carry in the roll call recorded in the meeting narrative.
Council directed staff to refine language, including separate treatment for residential block parties and park events; staff said the item could be brought back with revised hours and clearer definitions of residential vs. nonresidential events.