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Roswell council debate centers on water pipe replacements in ICIP vote after multiple failed swaps

June 12, 2026 | Roswell, Chaves County, New Mexico


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Roswell council debate centers on water pipe replacements in ICIP vote after multiple failed swaps
City staff presented the Infrastructure Capital Improvement Plan (ICIP) top-five priorities for FY20282032 and explained the state's timing and how projects are considered. The packet listed: 1) water transmission pipe replacement ($9.5M), 2) small pipe replacements ($2.5M), 3) large pipe replacement ($10M), 4) flood damage repairs ($15M), and 5) City Hall deferred maintenance (including an elevator replacement estimated at about $190,000). Management explained some items were chosen to be "shovel-ready" and that phased funding and applications to the Water Trust Board are a likely approach.

Council members vigorously debated whether asking the legislature for multi-million-dollar projects is realistic and whether smaller, locally achievable projects should replace large-ticket items on the top-five list. One motion to replace a $10M large-pipe item with a $600K property acquisition for Fire Station 1 parking was seconded and voted on; the motion failed 8-2. A later motion to replace the City Hall deferred maintenance item with a $300K South Washington reconstruction project initially passed 6-4, produced vote changes and procedural challenges leading to an evenly divided 5-5 tally in the clerk's check; after further parliamentary procedure the council returned to the original motion. The council discussed Water Trust Board application timing and the need for shovel-ready engineering to improve chances of obtaining state funding.

The council emphasized water infrastructure urgency and long-term deferred maintenance: council discussion referenced an estimated $161 million in water-pipe needs across the city and the complexity of buried utilities that complicate replacement. Staff noted prior water trust board applications and plans to reapply in January. After debate and procedural votes, council moved to adopt the ICIP submission as described in the packet and to continue legislative outreach.

What happens next: City staff will finalize the ICIP top-five submittal to the state (deadline referenced in meeting timing) and continue preparing shovel-ready engineering packages and Water Trust Board applications to improve funding prospects.

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