County officials used the special meeting to brief residents and each other on preparations for an anticipated winter storm and on road operations limitations.
The presiding official asked Fabian about road capacity; Fabian said the county has six full‑time employees on the special crew and about 52 total employees in the road department. Officials noted that salt is ineffective at frigid temperatures, that pretreating can be a waste under some forecasts, and that there are times when crews will concentrate on plowing rather than salting. The court also noted the county can purchase up to 500 tons of material from the state if needed.
Officials discussed recent equipment losses and repairs: a six‑wheel truck that was damaged will likely be out of service until February, and crews planned to start a bypass around a deteriorating bridge in Belfry to help mitigate flooding in that area. Road foremen and crews were described as operating routes, and officials emphasized safety for both crews and residents when conditions are severe.
Nate provided a weather update, saying National Weather Service details would be more reliable by Thursday and that models indicate drier snow north of the freeze line with colder temperatures on the backside. County officials said they would provide updates to the public as new information became available and encouraged residents to rely on local fire departments for assistance and to avoid calling 911 for non‑emergency needs if an alternative contact is provided.
The discussion was advisory and operational; no binding new emergency policies were adopted during the meeting.