City Council recorded several formal actions during the June 3 meeting, including unanimous final passage of traffic and water‑project ordinances and adoption on first reading of several HUD appropriations and historic‑site zoning changes.
On final passage council approved the ordinance to install stop signs at three intersections (council file 16609 / official ordinance 30‑2026). Council also voted to authorize the city to incur lease/rental debt evidenced by guaranteed‑revenue bonds for public water‑distribution improvements in two separate measures recorded in the minutes (council files 16610 and 16611; official ordinances 31‑2026 and 32‑2026). The meeting transcript records those guaranteed‑revenue bond items with the bond descriptions read into the record and unanimous recorded votes to pass on final reading.
Recorded vote on final passage items: Members Brzzinski, Flores, Horton, Paul, Shaw, Troop and Titus voted yes on each final‑passage ordinance (recorded as "Yay 7, Nay 0").
Council also adopted multiple appropriations on first reading tied to HUD programs (Emergency Solutions and HOME allocations) and moved forward several historic‑designation zoning amendments (including the former Labor Temple and other sites) on first reading. These items will return for subsequent readings or administrative follow‑up as required by ordinance and budget process.
Below are the meeting actions recorded in the public minutes (as read into the record):
- Ordinance (council file 16609 / official ordinance 30‑2026) — install three stop signs; final passage recorded 7–0.
- Ordinance (council file 16610 / official ordinance 31‑2026) — guarantee agreement / revenue bond for water distribution projects (text read into record); final passage recorded 7–0.
- Ordinance (council file 16611 / official ordinance 32‑2026) — additional guaranteed‑revenue bond for water system projects (text read into record); final passage recorded 7–0.
- Multiple HUD appropriations (council files 16612–16614) — adopted on first reading, including Emergency Solutions and HOME program allocations; follow‑up readings and budget controls to occur.
- Multiple historic‑site zoning designations (council files 16615–16617) — adopted on first reading to designate several buildings as historic sites and amend zoning maps; follow‑up as required by ordinance procedure.
Councilors and the mayor indicated these items follow standard municipal financing and procurement rules and will be subject to the city’s administrative and legal review as the documents are finalized.