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Council highlights sinking funds, equipment replacement and infrastructure needs as grants fill some gaps

January 28, 2026 | Green River City Council, Green River, Sweetwater County, Wyoming


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Council highlights sinking funds, equipment replacement and infrastructure needs as grants fill some gaps
Council staff outlined several capital and replacement priorities and described how the city has begun rotating replacements instead of deferring whole-system purchases. "So what we did is we implemented okay. We're gonna rotate these, you know, 6 or 8 at a time," Speaker 1 said about SCBA and equipment replacement planning.

Staff detailed recent sinking-fund and replacement spending: an irrigation control replacement phased at $50,000 per year for three years, a server-replacement schedule at $150,000 per year over three years, and rec-center roof work that still left remaining needs. Speaker 1 estimated a full SCBA replacement would cost roughly $650,000 and noted the city is pursuing grants to reduce that local burden.

On streets, staff cited a pavement-condition assessment showing annual needs previously estimated at about $3.2 million but said bigger projects could push cumulative needs into the tens of millions: "That's not even close. Probably, I would say it's probably closer to the 16 to 18,000,000 now if we wanted to do something with it," Speaker 1 said.

Public safety projects tied to industrial-siting revenue and county agreements were discussed: staff said a long-term county contract will direct revenue toward a new fire apparatus; other programs noted included mental-health pilots and license-plate-reader cameras funded through grants.

Why it matters: The council must weigh whether to continue conservative budgeting and incremental replacements, or re-prioritize if new revenues materialize. Several members urged continuing grant work and regional coordination to maximize limited local funds.

Next steps: staff will keep pursuing grant funding, continue equipment rotation programs, and present more detailed sinking-fund scenarios to the finance committee.

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