City Council · 9:00 AM · Council Chambers, City Hall
This meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, April 22, 2026 and has not occurred yet. The analysis below is a preview based on the published agenda.
Matters
All Zoning cases
Christian Chernock Townhouses at North Boulevard Terrace and Plymouth Road (Z-25-000069)
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Request draft ordinance to check re-notification triggers at North Boulevard
Context: The case was held under advisement April 8 and deferred again April 22 across three consecutive Council appearances since the 12-2 City Plan Commission recommendation — a pattern that strongly indicates active condition modification rather than a scheduling hold.
Recommended: Obtain the current draft ordinance from the Dallas City Attorney's office or City Secretary and compare its conditions against the February 5 City Plan Commission approval language — if the Council has materially modified setbacks, unit count, or use restrictions across three hearings, Texas Local Government Code §211.009 notice requirements may have been triggered and a final vote without re-notification would be a procedural defect.
Pull April 8 Council backup to find contested conditions at North Boulevard
Context: The Council deferred twice after the February 5 City Plan Commission 12-2 approval — held under advisement April 8, deferred again April 22 — meaning contested conditions are still being actively negotiated and your project assumptions may no longer match the current draft ordinance.
Recommended: Download the April 8 City Council meeting backup from the Dallas City Secretary's portal and identify what language in the draft ordinance triggered the 'Held Under Advisement' designation — that document will show whether the Council is contesting setbacks, unit count, or design standards your pro forma assumed were finalized at the February City Plan Commission vote.
Request attendance records to investigate the commission vote shift on North Boulevard townhouses
Context: Vote records show a 13-0 City Plan Commission approval in September 2025 followed by a 12-2 approval in February 2026 with Kocks and Coffman specifically named as dissenters, and the Council has since deferred the case three times — the unexplained drop in commission support combined with the Council non-action pattern across five total appearances is the anomaly the public record raises but does not resolve.
Recommended: File a Texas Public Information Act request for the September 4, 2025 City Plan Commission attendance sheet and any revised site plans or applicant submittals filed between September 2025 and February 2026 — determining whether Kocks and Coffman voted yes in September and then flipped, or were simply absent from the unanimous vote, is the key to two materially different stories about why the Council has refused to finalize this case across three appearances despite a positive commission recommendation.
Identify which Council district is blocking the North Boulevard townhouse vote
Context: This case has been deferred or held at Council on March 25, April 8, and April 22 following the February 5 City Plan Commission's 12-2 recommendation, a five-appearance trajectory that places the district Council member's assent — not the full Council — as the critical blocking variable.
Recommended: Determine which Dallas City Council district covers North Boulevard Terrace and Plymouth Road and request a meeting with that Council member's office before the next scheduled hearing — three consecutive deferrals on a case the City Plan Commission recommended 12-2 is a strong signal that the district member has not signaled support, and under Dallas Council protocol that office is the only path to scheduling a final vote.
Zoning Case at Freeway and Ferguson Road (Z-25-000184)
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Check re-notification rules after three Freeway-Ferguson deferrals
Context: Three Council deferrals — March 25, April 8, and April 22 — following the February 5 CPC approval mean the case is now 11+ weeks past the original Council date; Dallas procedures tie notice validity to specific scheduled hearing dates, not to the original application filing.
Recommended: Review Dallas Development Code Chapter 51A and Chapter 51 notification requirements to determine whether the cumulative delay between the February 5 City Plan Commission approval and any future Council adoption date has exceeded the threshold requiring new written notice to surrounding property owners — adoption without required re-notification is a procedural defect that adjacent landowners can use to challenge the ordinance within the statutory window.
Request audio from all three Freeway-Ferguson Council deferrals
Context: City Plan Commission approved Z-25-000184 unanimously 14-0 on February 5, yet City Council deferred on March 25, April 8, and again on April 22 — four total appearances — with no recorded reason at any session.
Recommended: Pull the audio recordings or draft minutes from the March 25, April 8, and April 22 City Council sessions and identify who moved each deferral and whether any objection was ever stated on the record — a case that cleared City Plan Commission 14-0 but has been held at Council three consecutive times without any recorded explanation is the anomaly, and the pattern across all four appearances is the story.
Find which council district is holding Freeway-Ferguson rezoning
Context: Three consecutive Council deferrals since the 14-0 City Plan Commission vote on February 5 indicate a single district-level hold; Dallas Council practice on zoning cases makes the affected district member the decisive gatekeeper, and that member has now moved or allowed deferral three times without stating a reason on the record.
Recommended: Identify which of Dallas's 14 council districts contains the Freeway and Ferguson Road site, confirm that member's office has been the source of each deferral motion, and request a direct meeting to learn what specific condition or commitment would allow the case to advance — three deferrals without any public record of objection means the negotiation is happening off-record, and your value to the applicant is getting into that conversation before a fourth deferral extends this into summer.
Blas Garza Mixed-Use Rezoning at S. Polk Street (Z-25-000177)
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Document both hearing gaps before S. Polk rezoning adoption today
Applies if: Representing a party that could be harmed by the rezoning
Why now: The published summary for Z-25-000177 states 'notices and speakers not visible in these pages' for at least one CPC hearing, and the case appeared at CPC twice (February 5 and March 5, both 14-0) before reaching today's Council agenda — two hearings with no visible notice data doubles the procedural exposure.
What to do: Request the certified notice mailing list and speaker registration records from both the February 5 and March 5 City Plan Commission hearings before City Council votes today — if notice was defective at either hearing, you have a procedural ground to challenge or delay adoption at the legislative stage, which is faster and cheaper than post-adoption litigation.
Act before: After City Council adopts the ordinance on April 22
Get full S. Polk mixed-use conditions before today's Council vote
Why now: The March 5 City Plan Commission summary for Z-25-000177 notes 'Item continues on next page; notices and speakers not visible in these pages,' and the Council is scheduled to vote April 22 — the truncated record is the only public documentation of what conditions, if any, were imposed.
What to do: Call Dallas Planning & Development today to obtain the complete draft ordinance before City Council votes — the published City Plan Commission summary explicitly states 'item continues on next page,' meaning any height limits, use restrictions, or site plan requirements attached to the Mixed Use approval may be absent from the record you have reviewed, and once the ordinance is adopted those conditions are binding.
Act before: After City Council adopts the ordinance on April 22
Investigate why S. Polk rezoning required two unanimous commission votes
Why now: Z-25-000177 logged 'Carried: 14 to 0' at both the February 5 and March 5 City Plan Commission hearings, but neither hearing's speaker records or notices appear in the published summary, leaving the procedural reason for the second hearing completely undocumented across three total appearances.
What to do: File a public records request for the full minutes and speaker logs from both the February 5 and March 5 City Plan Commission hearings — the published record shows two separate 14-0 votes with no speaker or notice data for either date and no explanation for why a single zoning case required two commission appearances before reaching Council.
Act before: After records request response (typically 10 business days)
Pull S. Polk rezoning from today's Council consent batch now
Applies if: Representing any party with an active interest in this specific case
Why now: The April 22 agenda lists 19 zoning cases with 17 carrying matching staff and City Plan Commission recommendations, making Z-25-000177 — which passed CPC 14-0 twice — a prime candidate for a single batch vote that forecloses any further floor discussion.
What to do: Contact the council office for the district covering S. Polk Street before today's meeting starts to request this case be individually called rather than grouped with the other zoning cases carrying matching staff and commission recommendations — once a batch vote is called, there is no floor opportunity to address the incomplete City Plan Commission record or present the applicant.
Act before: After City Council votes on April 22
Deed Restriction Termination at Fouraker Street (Z-25-000202)
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File vote-record objection before today's Fouraker deed restriction vote
Why now: The March 5 CPC result line for Z-25-000202 reads 'Carried: 12 to 0' but the same minutes name Forsyth and Kocks as voting against, making the actual vote 12-2 — this defect is now in the transmittal before City Council as of April 22, 2026.
What to do: Submit a written objection to the Dallas City Secretary before City Council votes today, identifying the March 5 City Plan Commission transmittal as factually defective — it states a 12-to-0 result while naming two dissenting commissioners. If Council adopts the termination ordinance without a corrected record on file, your client's strongest procedural challenge window closes and the statutory review period begins running immediately.
Act before: After City Council votes on April 22
Pull Fouraker Street deed restriction terms before tonight's Council vote
Why now: City Council is scheduled to act on Z-25-000202 on April 22 after the City Plan Commission carried the matter across two hearings (Feb 5 at 14-0 and March 5 at 12-2), and the effective date of the termination ordinance will control when development activity can lawfully begin.
What to do: Request deed restriction Z778-18 from Dallas city records today to document exactly which land use or building constraints will be lifted if Council approves the termination — with the ordinance potentially adopted tonight, knowing the restriction's full scope before it is drafted lets you identify any conditions attached to the CPC approval and begin permit preparation without waiting on the effective date.
Act before: After deed restriction termination ordinance takes effect
Ask whether two Fouraker deed restriction vote errors reached Council
Why now: Z-25-000202 has documented vote irregularities at both CPC appearances: Housewright recorded voting while noted as absent on February 5, and Forsyth and Kocks recorded as opposing but omitted from the result line on March 5 (stated 12-0, actual 12-2).
What to do: Request certified minutes from both CPC hearings and ask the city clerk whether either anomaly was disclosed in the staff transmittal to Council before today's vote — the February 5 record notes Housewright was out of the room but records him voting in favor, and the March 5 result line states '12 to 0' while naming Forsyth and Kocks in opposition. If Council voted on the defective transmittal, the adoption may be challengeable; if it voted on a corrected record, that correction is itself undocumented.
Act before: After records request response (typically 10 business days)
Convent Planned Development at W. Davis and Cockrell Hill (Z-25-000156)
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Verify protest petition status before W. Davis planned development vote
Why now: The Council vote is scheduled for April 22, 2026, and the matter's three-appearance history across two City Plan Commission hearings suggests organized neighborhood opposition that may have generated a qualifying protest petition.
What to do: Contact the Dallas City Secretary's office today to confirm whether a valid protest petition covering 20% or more of the adjacent area has been filed — if one exists, today's vote requires a three-fourths supermajority rather than a simple majority, and proceeding without meeting that threshold creates a procedural defect that could void the ordinance.
Act before: After Council vote on April 22
Investigate why W. Davis development needed two unanimous commission votes
Why now: This planned development received identical 13-0 carries at the City Plan Commission on both January 15 and March 26, 2026, with no public explanation for the second appearance — making it one of the few zoning cases on the April 22 Council agenda with an unresolved procedural anomaly.
What to do: Pull the January 15 and March 26 City Plan Commission agenda packets and compare staff reports — a unanimous 13-0 carry on January 15 should have advanced the case directly to Council, yet it returned for a second 13-0 vote on March 26 with no documented reason. Cross-reference the applicant and attorney of record against other West Davis corridor cases filed in the same cycle to test whether this is a coordinated filing.
Act before: After records request response (typically 10 business days)
Watch Council session today for W. Davis planned development deferral
Why now: Two other zoning items on today's agenda are already designated under advisement, and this case's three-hearing history suggests at least one council member may still have unresolved concerns that could surface during the session.
What to do: Monitor the April 22 Council session in real time for any motion to hold the West Davis planned development under advisement — if the item is pulled from consent or deferred, a brief window opens to negotiate final conditions directly with the sponsoring council member's office before the rescheduled vote.
Act before: After Council vote on April 22
Request W. Davis planned development use list before today's vote
Why now: No conditions or use list have been published publicly despite two City Plan Commission hearings and 13-0 votes on both January 15 and March 26, 2026, and the Council vote is scheduled for today.
What to do: Call Dallas Development Services today to obtain the proposed use list and site plan for the planned development at West Davis and Cockrell Hill — once the ordinance is adopted, the authorized uses become the legal standard for the site and can only be reversed through a future rezoning application requiring a new fee and multi-month process.
Act before: After Council vote on April 22
Analysis
Financial Highlights
Contracts & Procurement
Zoning
Development & Land Use
Planning
Historic Preservation
Transportation
Infrastructure & Facilities
Public Safety
Community Impact
Housing
Governance & Oversight
Personnel & Labor
Key Decisions
Insights by Role
Contractor
HighHigh significance — major decision, large financial impact, or broad community effectThe April 22 agenda is scheduled to authorize 17 procurement actions, including a $26.8M 10-year data center managed-services agreement via the TIPS cooperative and a $7.47M Love Field garage repair contract selected from nine bidders. Multiple split-vendor awards and cooperative purchasing agreements are also proposed across services ranging from janitorial and uniform rental to dive inspection and veterinary care.
Developer
HighHigh significance — major decision, large financial impact, or broad community effectThe April 22 agenda creates an imminent enforcement window for owners of properties at 2600 Singleton Boulevard and 7910 South Central Expressway: item #39 would direct up to $200,000 toward a consultant to calculate housing linkage fees under city code, with a required council vote on the determined amount within 30 days. Four PID renewal and creation actions also propose May 27 public hearings as the next key decision point for developers in those districts.
Journalist
HighHigh significance — major decision, large financial impact, or broad community effectThree story angles merit close attention on the April 22 agenda: a pending Interim City Attorney appointment with the appointee unnamed in the published agenda, a $26.8M 10-year data center contract authorized through a cooperative purchasing vehicle without a standalone city solicitation, and a five-member-sponsored enforcement action directing contingency funds to calculate housing linkage fees for two specific commercial properties.
Lobbyist
HighHigh significance — major decision, large financial impact, or broad community effectThe April 22 agenda opens four simultaneous PID engagement windows, each with May 27 public hearings as the next formal decision point, while also advancing the $13.5M Meadow Project Chapter 380 grant for council authorization. The pending Interim City Attorney appointment adds a near-term personnel transition that advocates with active regulatory matters before the office should track.
Resident
HighHigh significance — major decision, large financial impact, or broad community effectResidents near North Boulevard Terrace and Plymouth Road, South Polk Street at Nokomis Avenue, and East R.L. Thornton Freeway at Ferguson Road should be aware that three zoning cases are scheduled for council action on April 22 — two of which have been deferred multiple times. Three grant authorizations are also proposed for trail and park construction affecting the Cotton Belt corridor, Fair Park, and Simpson Stuart Road.
Charts & Data
76 items(71 procedural hidden)
AI-generated summaries. Click to expand for original text.
#2Amendment to an existing FY 2024 Homeland Security Grant Program resolution to add a new grant number for preparedness activities, extend the agreement term to November 2026, and reallocate $678,352.24 within the existing $5,842,198.40 budget at no new cost to the City.
#3Authorizes an Advance Funding Agreement with the Federal Highway Administration through TxDOT for a TASA Program project to construct the Cotton Belt Trail and Marni Kaner Trail, with total federal, state, and city funding of $6,410,386, of which the city's share is $63,400 from 2017 bond funds.
#4Authorizes an application for and acceptance of a Texas Parks and Wildlife Department grant of up to $3,000,000 for improvements to Community Park at Fair Park located at 1200 Second Avenue.
#5Authorizes the city to apply for and accept a Texas Parks and Wildlife Department grant of up to $5,000,000 for improvements to Judge Charles R. Rose Community Park at 3200 Simpson Stuart Road, including establishing appropriations and executing the required grant agreement.
#6Approves the official designation of the FIFA World Cup 2026 as a City of Dallas Special Event for the period of June 10 through July 19, 2026, at no cost to the city.
#7Authorizes a Chapter 380 economic development grant agreement with Meadow Sycamore, LP of up to $13.5 million to support The Meadow Project, a mixed-income, transit-oriented, and permanent supportive multi-family residential development at 8130 Meadow Road, funded from the 2024 General Obligation Bond Fund.
#8Authorization to hold a public hearing on May 27, 2026 and approve a boundary expansion of the Dallas Tourism Public Improvement District to include four additional qualifying hotels with 100 or more rooms, funded by hotel assessments with no direct cost to the city.
#9Authorization to schedule a May 27, 2026 public hearing on creating the Halperin Park Public Improvement District (HPPID) to fund supplemental public services via property assessments, along with approval of its 10-year service plan and a management contract with the Southern Gateway Public Green Foundation.
#10Authorization to schedule a public hearing on May 27, 2026 for the proposed ten-year renewal of the South Side Public Improvement District (2027–2036), including approval of a service plan and a management contract with South Side Quarter Development Corporation.
#11Authorizes a public hearing on May 27, 2026 for the proposed seven-year renewal of the Uptown Public Improvement District, including approval of the 2027–2033 Service Plan and a management contract with Uptown Dallas, Inc. as the district's managing entity.
#12Amends Dallas City Code chapters on food establishments and consumer affairs to establish new requirements for serving or distributing food on public or private property, with violations subject to penalties up to $500.
#13Authorization of a seven-year concession contract with CBC SSP America DAL, LLC to operate food and beverage services at Dallas Love Field Airport under the brand EL Camino Real Cantina, with estimated revenue of $2,072,740 for the Aviation Fund.
#14Seven-year food and beverage concession contract with Regali, Inc. (branded as FreeFlight Sweets) at Dallas Love Field Airport, with estimated revenue of $1,709,929 to the Aviation Fund.
#15Construction services contract with Restocon, LLC, the lowest of nine bidders, for water infiltration repair, expansion joint replacement, concrete crack repair, traffic coating, and moisture protection at Dallas Love Field Garages A & B, not to exceed $7,473,015.
#16Authorizes Supplemental Agreement No. 2 extending a concession contract with Concourse Communications Group, LLC for Wi-Fi Network Service and Distributed Antenna System at Dallas Love Field through October 15, 2026, and corrects a scrivener's error in the concessionaire's legal name. The minimum revenue guaranteed to the Aviation Fund is $337,500.
#17Ordinance amending Chapter 43 of the Dallas City Code (Streets and Sidewalks) to update cement standards, driveway radius requirements, right-of-way restoration obligations, steel plate permittee labeling rules, slurry seal limits, utility clearance requirements, and city cost recovery for provider-caused delays, with a penalty not to exceed $500.
#18Authorizes a professional engineering services contract with Kimley-Horn and Associates, Inc. for traffic engineering design services covering a roundabout, warranted traffic signals, street restriping, a pedestrian hybrid beacon, signal upgrades, and a corridor study, not to exceed $1,500,000 funded through 2017 and 2024 General Obligation Bond funds.
#19Authorizes a $1 million supplemental increase to the professional engineering services contract with Criado & Associates, LLC for engineering, subsurface utilities engineering, and survey services, raising the total from $2,642,569 to $3,642,569, in alignment with the Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center Plan.
#20The City authorized a seventh amendment to its use agreement with the Dallas Museum of Art to enable planning, design, construction, renovation, and related improvements to the DMA facility, at no cost to the City, in alignment with the Bond Implementation Program.
#21Authorization of a professional services contract with Kimley-Horn and Associates, Inc. for architectural, engineering, and construction administration services for a new vehicle maintenance facility at the Southeast Service Center, not to exceed $1,046,500, financed through the 2006 General Obligation Bond Fund.
#22Authorization of a design-build construction contract with G.P. Cooper Industries (dba Cooper General Contractors) for capital improvement upgrades at Fire Station No. 5, not to exceed $285,487, funded through the 2024 General Obligation Bond Fund.
#23Ordinance authorizing the abandonment and quitclaim of approximately 216 square feet of Pearl Expressway near Cesar Chavez Boulevard to the abutting property owners, generating $18,360 in General Fund revenue plus a $20 ordinance publication fee.
#24An ordinance granting Summit NCI JV 160, LLC a private license to install and maintain a projecting blade sign over approximately 10 square feet of aerial space above Lamar and Corbin Streets rights-of-way, generating $1,000 in annual revenue for the city.
#25Authorization to pay Dalworth Restoration, LLC a total of approximately $456,940.99 for emergency water mitigation, content removal, storage, and move-back services at city facilities following the January 2026 freeze, funded through the Capital Construction Fund and General Fund.
#26Authorization of a five-year cooperative purchasing agreement with DLT Solutions, LLC through Omnia Partners for licenses, training, maintenance, and support of a vendor-hosted short-term rental and hotel occupancy tax system for the City Controller's Office, not to exceed $731,073.
#27Authorizes Supplemental Agreement No. 25 to increase the existing maintenance and support service contract with Tritech Software System (a subsidiary of Central Square) for the City's Computer Aided Dispatch System, adding $227,390.41 to bring the cumulative contract total to $27,168,525.57, funded through the 9-1-1 System Operations Fund.
#28Authorizes a two-year cooperative purchasing agreement (with one one-year renewal option) with UniFirst Corporation for citywide uniform rental and cleaning services via the Sourcewell cooperative, at an estimated total cost of $2,216,697.60 spread across three city funds.
#29Authorizes a five-year master agreement for the purchase of water infrastructure components (clamps, couplings, sleeves, and adapters) for Dallas Water Utilities, split between two vendors for a combined total of $2,777,000.
#30Authorizes a one-year service contract with Gresham Smith for a multimodal connectivity and economic opportunity study for the Garland Road Next Generation Planning initiative, not to exceed $995,000, funded through federal EDI Community Project Funding.
#31Authorizes a three-year service price agreement with Advanced Diving Services, Inc. for dive services inspections and repairs for the Dallas Water Utilities Department, estimated at $518,820.
#32Authorizes a five-year service price agreement for canine and equine veterinary services for the Dallas Police Department with East Lake Veterinary Hospital PC ($420,750) and Lone Star Park Equine Hospital ($315,000), totaling $735,750 funded through the General Fund and Confiscated Monies-State Fund.
#33Authorization of a five-year service price agreement with three one-year renewal options for janitorial services for the Office of Arts and Culture, with ACT Event Services Inc selected as the most advantageous proposer out of twenty, for a total estimated value of $6,502,248.96.
#34Authorizes a no-cost extension of the service contract with POLIHIRE Strategy Corp for executive and professional search services for the Department of Human Resources through October 28, 2026.
#35Authorizes a one-year extension of the citywide multi-functional device and printer lease, maintenance, and managed services contract with Canon U.S.A., Inc. for the Department of Information and Technology Services, adding up to $2,023,938.48 and bringing the total contract value to $15,445,240.92.
#36Authorizes settlement of a lawsuit filed by Dania Espinoza against the City of Dallas and Ronald Lamar Johnson, with a payment not to exceed $40,000 from the Liability Reserve Fund.
#37The city is authorizing a settlement of up to $65,000 in the lawsuit filed by Tatanya Jones against the City of Dallas, to be funded by the Liability Reserve Fund.
#38The city council is considering appointments to various boards and commissions and reviewing the evaluation criteria and duties of board and commission members.
Mayor and City Council Office
#39The City Council is considering directing the City Manager to hire a consultant—funded by up to $200,000 from the General Fund Contingency Reserve—to calculate required housing fund contributions under Dallas City Code Section 51A-4.704 for properties at 2600 Singleton Boulevard and 7910 South Central Expressway, with a corresponding fund transfer and appropriation increase in Planning & Development.
#40Authorizes amendments to the Dallas Housing Resource Catalog to update program statements for the Dallas Housing Finance Corporation and Dallas Public Facility Corporation, clarify Housing Tax Credit Program criteria, remove the discontinued Title Clearing and Clouded Title Prevention Program, and make general formatting edits.
Attorney Briefings (Sec. 551.071 T.O.M.A.)
#41Closed session item for the city council to receive legal advice regarding the lawsuit Katrina Ahrens, S.A., and M.A. v. Dallas Police Association, et al.
Real Estate (Sec. 551.072 T.O.M.A.) and Attorney Briefings (Sec. 551.071 T.O.M.A.).
#42Closed session to deliberate the purchase, exchange, lease, or value of real property at 7800 N. Stemmons and to seek legal advice from the City Attorney regarding negotiations with a third party.
#43Closed session to deliberate the purchase, exchange, lease, or value of real property at 2929 S. Hampton, where open deliberation would harm the city's negotiating position, and to seek legal advice from the City Attorney.
Deliberation Regarding Security Devices or Security Audits and Cybersecurity Measures, Policies, or Contracts (Sec. 551.089 and Sec. 551.0761 T.O.M.A.).
#44Closed session to deliberate on security assessments, network security, critical infrastructure protection, and cybersecurity measures, policies, or contracts, as authorized under Texas Government Code Section 2059.055(b).
Personnel Matters (Sec. 551.074 T.O.M.A.)
#45Closed session to deliberate the appointment of an Interim City Attorney.
#46Authorization of a one-year renewal of the contract with Populus Technologies for Mobility Manager data analysis and consulting services supporting the shared dockless vehicle program, increasing the total contract value by $52,093.
#47Amendment to a prior resolution authorizing sale of city-owned property near North Stemmons Freeway and West Mockingbird Lane, adding a clause to reimburse the buyer up to $150,000 in due diligence costs if the City terminates the contract due to public purpose needs.
#48Amendment to a prior resolution authorizing sale of approximately 14.257 acres of city-owned land and buildings near South Hampton Road and Perryton Drive, adding a clause to reimburse the buyer up to $250,000 in due diligence costs if the City terminates the contract due to public purpose needs.
#49An ordinance renewing a revocable license for 7-Eleven, Inc. to maintain an existing blade sign over approximately 11 square feet of aerial space on Akard Street right-of-way near Patterson Street, generating $1,000 annually in General Fund revenue plus a $20 publication fee.
#50An ordinance granting a revocable license for 7-Eleven, Inc. to maintain two blade signs, two facade signs, and a canopy over approximately 72 square feet of aerial space on Field and Commerce Streets rights-of-way near Main Street, generating $4,000 annually and a $100 one-time fee in General Fund revenue.
#51Authorization of a ten-year cooperative purchasing agreement with Terralogic Solutions, Inc. through the TIPS cooperative for data center relocation, operating, and managed services for the Department of Information and Technology Services, not to exceed $26,774,610.57.
Mayor and City Council Office
#52Resolution appointing an as-yet-unnamed individual as Interim City Attorney effective April 30, 2026, to serve until the City Council selects and appoints a permanent City Attorney.
#Z1A public hearing on an application to create a new subdistrict for mixed commercial uses within Planned Development District No. 463 at the southwest corner of West Northwest Highway and North Central Expressway; both city staff and the CPC recommend approval subject to a development plan and amended conditions.
#Z2Public hearing on an application to terminate the D-1 Liquor Control Overlay on LC Light Commercial Subdistrict property (with deed restrictions Z978-258) within Planned Development District No. 193, the Oak Lawn Special Purpose District, on Lemmon Avenue between McKinney and Noble Avenues; both staff and CPC recommend approval.
#Z3Public hearing on an application to amend Planned Development District No. 372 on Lemmon Avenue East near McKinney Avenue and Oak Grove Avenue; both staff and CPC recommend approval subject to a landscape/development plan and conditions.
#Z4A public hearing on an application to amend Specific Use Permit No. 1571 to allow a monopole cellular tower on CR-zoned property at the northeast corner of East Kiest Boulevard and South Lancaster Road; both staff and the CPC recommend approval subject to amended conditions.
#Z5Public hearing on a zoning application to rezone property from R-7.5(A) Single Family District to MF-2(A) Multifamily District on the west line of Ledbetter Drive north of Tyrone Drive; both staff and CPC recommend approval.
#Z6Public hearing on a zoning application to establish a new Planned Development Subdistrict within PD No. 631 (West Davis Special Purpose District) at the southwest corner of West Davis Street and South Cockrell Hill Road; both staff and CPC recommend approval subject to conditions.
#Z7A public hearing on an application to create a new Planned Development Subdistrict within PD 631 (West Davis Special Purpose District) on the south side of West Davis Street west of Cockrell Hill Road; both staff and the City Plan Commission recommend approval subject to conditions.
#Z8A public hearing on the termination of Deed Restriction Z778-181 and acceptance of new deed restrictions volunteered by the applicant on property within PD 830 (Davis Street Special Purpose District) on the south line of Fouraker Street; both staff and the City Plan Commission recommend approval.
#Z9A public hearing on an application to amend Planned Development District No. 752 at the south corner of Edd Road and Garden Grove Drive; both staff and the City Plan Commission recommend approval subject to a development plan, traffic management plan, and conditions.
#Z10A public hearing on an application for a D-1 Liquor Control Overlay and a new Specific Use Permit for alcoholic beverage sales at a small general merchandise or food store (3,500 sq ft or less) at the northwest corner of West Clarendon Drive and South Rosemont Avenue; both staff and the City Plan Commission recommend approval.
#Z11Public hearing and ordinance to rezone property from Neighborhood Office District (with D-1 Liquor Control Overlay) and R-7.5(A) Residential District to MU-1 Mixed-Use District on the west line of Haverhill Lane and east line of North Prairie Creek Road, north of Elam Road. Both staff and the City Plan Commission recommend approval.
#Z12Public hearing and ordinance to amend Subdistrict 1l within Planned Development District No. 621 (Old Trinity and Design District Special Purpose District) at the south corner of Inspiration Drive and North Stemmons Freeway. Staff and CPC both recommend approval subject to conditions.
#Z13Public hearing on an amendment to Specific Use Permit No. 2519 allowing alcoholic beverage sales in conjunction with a restaurant (no drive-in/through service) on South Buckner Boulevard; staff and CPC both recommend approval for a five-year period subject to conditions.
#Z14Public hearing on an amendment to Specific Use Permit No. 2586 for hotel or motel use on property zoned CA-1(A) Central Area District on Main Street east of South Pearl Expressway; both staff and CPC recommend approval subject to conditions.
#Z15Public hearing on an application for a historic overlay designation for El Ranchito Restaurant at 610 West Jefferson Boulevard and two adjacent parcels, with staff, CPC, and LMC all recommending approval subject to preservation criteria with edits.
#Z16Public hearing on an ordinance to amend Planned Development Subdistrict No. 171 within the Oak Lawn Special Purpose District, bounded by Lemmon Avenue, Throckmorton Street, Bowser Avenue, and Reagan Street; both staff and CPC recommend approval of amended conditions.
#Z17Public hearing on an ordinance to rezone property from MF-2(A) Multifamily District to MU-1 Mixed Use District on South Polk Street at the terminus of Nokomis Avenue; staff recommends approval but CPC recommends denial without prejudice.
#Z18Public hearing for rezoning property from R-7.5(A) Single Family District to MF-2(A) Multifamily District with voluntary deed restrictions, located between North Boulevard Terrace and Plymouth Road; both staff and the CPC recommend approval.
#Z19Public hearing for an amendment to Specific Use Permit No. 2180 to allow an open-enrollment charter school on property zoned Regional Retail District at the northwest corner of East R.L. Thornton Freeway and Ferguson Road; both staff and the CPC recommend approval subject to a traffic management plan and conditions.
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