CITY COUNCIL · 6:00 PM · City Council Chamber
Matters
Site-specific scope
Case File 26-5721
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Verify exact buffer distance in adopted Fort Worth sex offender residency ordinance
Context: On February 10, Lauersdorf's standalone sub-motion to increase the buffer to 2,000 feet failed for lack of a second, but Beck's continuation motion 'with the amended language' passed 11-0; the February 24 adoption vote (9-0, with Beck absent) does not confirm on its face which version was enrolled as Ordinance No. 28335-02-2026.
Recommended: Pull the enrolled text of Ordinance No. 28335-02-2026 before advising any residential landlord, property manager, or housing operator on tenant screening compliance — the procedural record is ambiguous about whether the final text contains the original 1,500-foot buffer or Lauersdorf's 2,000-foot version. Advising on the wrong distance exposes clients to code violations the moment enforcement begins.
Request enrolled ordinance and Zoning Commission record on Fort Worth sex offender buffer reversal
Context: The Zoning Commission recommended denial of this city-wide amendment; Council reversed with an 11-0 vote on February 10 that embedded a separately-failed sub-motion's language; and the member who moved to continue with the amended language (Beck) was absent from the final 9-0 adoption vote on February 24.
Recommended: File a public records request for the enrolled Ordinance No. 28335-02-2026 and the Zoning Commission staff report — Lauersdorf's amendment to increase the buffer from 1,500 to 2,000 feet failed for lack of a second as a standalone motion on February 10, but Beck immediately re-packaged that same language into a continuation motion that passed 11-0, and the Commission had recommended denial of the underlying amendment entirely. If you wait, the procedural anomaly disappears into routine implementation with no public explanation.
Map your Fort Worth address against the newly expanded sex offender buffer zones
Context: Ordinance No. 28335-02-2026 was adopted 9-0 on February 24, 2026, and the February 10 council record shows the body's stated intent was to include Lauersdorf's 2,000-foot expanded buffer in the final text sent to adoption.
Recommended: Use Fort Worth's GIS portal to check whether your block falls within the buffer zone around schools, parks, and other places where children gather — if the enrolled ordinance contains the 2,000-foot buffer rather than the prior 1,500-foot standard, properties near multiple covered locations may fall within overlapping restricted zones, changing who can legally rent nearby. Check now while enforcement is just beginning and you can flag errors before they become disputes.
Industrial Zoning at Anglin Drive (ZC-25-184)
Continued to next hearing
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Verify notice validity for Anglin Drive industrial rezoning continuance
Context: The January 13 and February 10 continuances each recorded a named mover (Council Member Nettles), seconder, and vote count (10-0 and 11-0 respectively), but the March 10 entry records only 'consensus' with no formal motion — a departure from the case's own procedural record across all three appearances.
Recommended: Confirm with the Fort Worth City Clerk that the June 9 hearing has been properly re-noticed under Texas Local Government Code Chapter 211, because the March 10 continuance was recorded as 'consensus' with no named mover or vote count — a form that may not constitute valid council action and could expose a June 9 approval to a procedural challenge. If proper re-notice was not issued after that defective continuance, any vote taken on June 9 is vulnerable.
Pull Anglin Drive zoning case file before June vote
Context: All three appearances — January 13 (10-0), February 10 (11-0), and March 10 (consensus, no vote count) — passed with no recorded substantive discussion, leaving the original application unchanged on the public record while the case has now stretched five months.
Recommended: Download the ZC-25-184 case file from Fort Worth Development Services to check whether any amended site plans or staff conditions have been submitted since January — three deferrals with zero recorded public discussion suggests something is being resolved off the record, and June 9 could go to a final vote on the original application terms before you have a chance to respond. If nothing new has been filed, you still have time to submit amendments or request a further continuance.
Request records on Anglin Drive industrial rezoning's three-month delay
Context: Council Member Nettles personally moved the January 13 continuance (seconded by Crain, 10-0) and the February 10 continuance (seconded by Beck, 11-0), but the March 10 entry names no mover and records no vote, while extending the case 90 days rather than the previous 30-day pattern.
Recommended: File a public records request for the March 10 City Council minutes and any staff or applicant correspondence on this case between February 10 and March 10, to find out what changed: the case jumped from two 4-week continuances with formal unanimous votes to a 3-month delay recorded only as 'consensus' with no named official — a procedural and timeline shift that has no visible explanation in the public record.
Brief Council Member Nettles before Anglin Drive industrial zoning vote
Context: Nettles moved the January 13 continuance (seconded by Crain, 10-0) and the February 10 continuance (seconded by Beck, 11-0), making her the de facto shepherd of ZC-25-184's timeline across all three appearances.
Recommended: Request a meeting with Council Member Nettles in April or early May to position your client's interests before the June 9 vote — she is the only council member with a visible procedural stake in this case, having personally moved both formal continuances, and waiting until June narrows your access window to days before the vote.
5921 and 5933 South Freeway (File M&C 26-0078)
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Compare amended South Freeway ordinance language on soil cleanup obligations
Applies if: Applies if you represent the developer, a neighboring property owner, or any party with a stake in the scope of environmental cleanup obligations at this site.
Context: The Feb 10 amendment to M&C 26-0078, adopted 11-0, explicitly amended Ordinance No. 28315-02-2026 to 'clarify developer's continuing obligations include soil contamination investigation and response' — use of 'clarify' on a material cleanup term is a legal signal that the prior language was disputed between January 27 and February 10.
Recommended: Pull the original Ordinance No. 28315-02-2026 and the Feb 10 amendment and compare the soil contamination language side by side — the council used the word 'clarify' for a material obligation, which signals the original draft was ambiguous or silent on whether soil investigation duties survived the Municipal Setting Designation. If you represent any party who relied on the original text to argue those obligations were extinguished, the 'clarification' may have changed the enforceable scope without a formal substantive revision that would trigger a new challenge window.
Retain independent environmental inspector before South Freeway site grading begins
Context: Ordinance No. 28315-02-2026, amended Feb 10, 2026 and adopted 11-0, requires independent environmental testing before, during, and after construction; City staff has explicit ongoing authority to monitor developer compliance with all applicable laws including grading and stormwater protection at this site.
Recommended: Retain a third-party environmental inspector and formally introduce them to City staff and the Highland Hills Neighborhood Association before any ground disturbance at the site — the Feb 10 amendment requires testing before construction starts, not after a permit is in hand. Starting grading without the inspector already coordinated with City staff creates a compliance gap that City staff is now explicitly authorized to flag and escalate.
Request City Manager communications behind South Freeway environmental matter delay
Context: The January 27 Council minutes record the continuation as 'at City Manager request' with a 0-0 vote — a staff-initiated delay, not council-driven — while the Feb 10 approval added the buffer donation, third-party testing, Texas Commission on Environmental Quality roundtable, and two-year post-occupancy monitoring requirements that do not appear in the original item description.
Recommended: File a public records request for all City Manager communications about M&C 26-0078 between January 27 and February 10, 2026 — the item was pulled at City Manager request with a 0-0 vote on January 27, then returned two weeks later with five new community-protection conditions attached. The specific question to resolve: who proposed the 14-acre buffer zone donation requirement, and was it in the original M&C or extracted during that off-record two-week window?
Confirm Highland Hills Neighborhood Association is enrolled for mandated South Freeway construction updates
Context: M&C 26-0078, adopted 11-0 on February 10, 2026, requires City staff to provide updates to the Highland Hills Neighborhood Association throughout construction and for two years after the Certificate of Occupancy, but specifies no enrollment mechanism or deadline for the association to register before the project breaks ground.
Recommended: Contact the Highland Hills Neighborhood Association to verify that City staff has them on record as the designated recipients for construction testing results and status updates — the approval routes all mandated notifications through the association specifically, not directly to individual residents. If the association is not formally registered with the assigned City staff contact before construction begins, update notices during construction and the two years after Certificate of Occupancy issuance may not reach the neighborhood.
PD Amendment ZC-25-205
Continued to next hearing
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Check Re-Notice and Vote Rules Before June Planned Development Hearing
Context: The February 10 continuation is documented as 'Motion passed 11-0' with named movers Nettles and Beck; the March 10 continuation appears in the record only as 'consensus of the City Council' with no vote count — a procedural distinction that creates an exploitable gap.
Recommended: Pull Fort Worth's zoning ordinance re-notice provisions and confirm whether the 91-day gap between March 10 and June 9 triggers mandatory mailed-notice to neighboring property owners; also verify whether the March 10 continuation by 'consensus' — with no recorded vote — was procedurally sufficient, since either defect would expose the June 9 action to a challenge that could void the council's decision.
Request Records on Unrecorded March Planned Development Continuance
Context: The February 10 record states 'Motion passed 11-0' with named movers Nettles and Beck; the March 10 record states only 'consensus of the City Council' with no vote count and no stated reason for extending the delay from 28 days to 91 days.
Recommended: File a public records request for the March 10 staff report and any applicant correspondence tied to this planned development amendment, and ask the City Clerk whether Fort Worth rules require a recorded vote for zoning continuances — the shift from a documented 11-0 motion to an unrecorded 'consensus' is an anomaly that an affected party could use to challenge the June 9 hearing.
Schedule Meetings With Nettles and Beck Before June Planned Development Vote
Context: Nettles made the February 10 motion and Beck seconded it (passed 11-0), making them the documented sponsors of the two-step delay now culminating in the June 9, 2026 hearing.
Recommended: Contact Council Members Nettles and Beck — who sponsored the February 10 continuance motion — and confirm which council district the subject site falls in, since that district's representative controls floor time and amendment rights at the June 9 hearing; the roughly 60-day window before June 9 is the last structured access point before the council must act.
Zoning Case File 26-5764
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Map CD 8 industrial abatement compliance deadlines now
Context: Resolution No. 6256-02-2026, adopted 11-0 on February 10, 2026, locked in minimum investment commitments of $2.13M and $9.14M respectively, with Chapter 312 recapture exposure running through at least 2031.
Recommended: Request the executed abatement agreements from Fort Worth's Economic Development department to identify the annual certification schedule and investment milestone dates — under Texas Tax Code Chapter 312, a missed annual filing triggers recapture of all abated taxes even if the underlying capital investment is proceeding on schedule. The five-year compliance clock started February 10, 2026, and the first reporting deadline may fall within months.
Verify CD 8 industrial site eligibility for zone tax abatement
Context: The February 10, 2026 council approved two separate five-year industrial abatements in CD 8's Neighborhood Empowerment Zone Area Six by an 11-0 vote, establishing a clear approval pattern at investment levels as low as $2.13M.
Recommended: Confirm your parcel's Neighborhood Empowerment Zone designation with Fort Worth's Economic Development office — if you fall within Area Six, you can cite the two abatements just approved under Resolution No. 6256-02-2026 as direct precedent and initiate a Chapter 312 application while council's unanimous support is fresh and documented. Waiting risks a zone boundary revision or NEZ Area Six program renewal before your application is on file.
Name the CD 8 companies behind $11.3M tax abatement
Context: Two abatement agreements totaling $11.3M in foregone property tax revenue were adopted 11-0 on February 10, 2026, packaged inside a 79-item, $60.4M omnibus session with no documented individual floor discussion per the council record.
Recommended: File a public records request with the Fort Worth City Secretary for the full text of Resolution No. 6256-02-2026 to identify the two industrial companies that received five-year tax abatements in Neighborhood Empowerment Zone Area Six — beneficiary names almost certainly do not appear in the published agenda summary. Waiting more than a week risks slower response as the item deprioritizes in the queue.
Analysis
Financial Highlights
Contracts & Procurement
Zoning
Planning
Development & Land Use
Subdivisions
Transportation
Infrastructure & Facilities
Public Safety
Environment
Housing
Governance & Oversight
Community Impact
Insights by Role
Contractor
HighHigh significance — major decision, large financial impact, or broad community effectFourteen contracts and procurements were approved at this session, led by three WSM-series water and sewer construction awards and dual-vendor unit price task order contracts for transportation infrastructure. Contractors active in utility construction, roadway work, and facilities maintenance should review the renewal option schedules across several approved agreements.
Developer
HighHigh significance — major decision, large financial impact, or broad community effectNeighborhood Empowerment Zone Area Six in CD 8 produced two approved five-year industrial tax abatements this cycle, confirming it as an active incentive track. Competitive 9% HTC applicants in Districts 4 and 7 were denied 8-3 with the same three dissenters on both votes, and the 38.38-acre Anglin Circle data center campus (ZC-25-205) was continued to March 10 for the second time.
Journalist
HighHigh significance — major decision, large financial impact, or broad community effectThree patterns from this session warrant follow-up: Council Member Hall's post-approval recusal on ZC-25-204 triggered a procedurally unusual re-vote; the same three members (Peoples, Nettles, Beck) dissented on both HTC denials in Districts 4 and 7; and the sex offender ordinance produced a sequence in which a sub-motion that failed for lack of a second was nonetheless adopted wholesale in the next motion.
Lobbyist
HighHigh significance — major decision, large financial impact, or broad community effectThe ordering of a May 2, 2026 GO bond referendum and a concurrent charter amendment special election opens active advocacy windows on program composition and ballot language. The consistent 8-3 pattern on HTC denials in Districts 4 and 7 — Peoples, Nettles, and Beck dissenting on both — provides a clear map of council member positions relevant to affordable housing advocates.
Resident
HighHigh significance — major decision, large financial impact, or broad community effectResidents in CD 7, 8, 9, 10, and 11 should expect water and sewer construction disruptions from three WSM-series contracts, and CD 11 residents face asphalt resurfacing at multiple locations. CD 8 residents near 5921–5933 South Freeway should be aware that BAIR Holdings, LLC' Municipal Setting Designation was approved with binding environmental oversight conditions running through two years after the Certificate of Occupancy.
Charts & Data
79 items(32 procedural hidden)
(e.g., Approved, Denied, Held)
(e.g., Hearing Closed, Corrected, Referred)
AI-generated summaries. Click to expand for original text.
INVOCATION - Reverend Michael Bell, Greater St. Stephens Baptist Church
PLEDGES OF ALLEGIANCE TO THE UNITED STATES AND THE STATE OF TEXAS - (State of Texas Pledge: "Honor the Texas flag; I pledge allegiance to thee, Texas, one state under God, one and indivisible.")
#1A ceremonial oath ceremony presentation for the Fort Worth Sister Cities International Youth Ambassadors program, recognizing newly appointed youth ambassadors.
#2A Distinguished Service Recognition is being presented to the longest active member of the Fort Worth Police Department's CAPA (Citizens Awareness Program Association). This is a ceremonial honor for sustained community service.
#3A ceremonial recognition presentation honoring excellence in small business growth and financial empowerment, presented in partnership with the Fort Worth Black Chamber of Commerce.
#4Ceremonial recognition presented before the city council honoring the life and legacy of gospel artist Kirk Franklin.
#5Ceremonial presentation by Phyllis Jackson related to 'Lift Every Voice and Sing' before the city council.
#6Ceremonial presentation featuring the Fort Worth Black Law Enforcement Officers Association before the city council.
Items on the Consent Agenda require little or no deliberation by the City Council. Approval of the Consent Agenda authorizes the City Manager, or his designee, to implement each item in accordance wit
#AGeneral - Consent Items
#1The City Council adopts formal rules of procedure governing the operations of the Transportation Impact Fee Capital Improvements Advisory Committee. This is a procedural governance action establishing how the committee will conduct its business.
#2The City Council authorizes two separate unit price contracts — one with Van/Elli, Inc. and one with EAR Telecommunications LLC (dba EARTC) — each not to exceed $750,000, for task order construction services related to guardrails and end-of-road barricades at various city locations, each with three renewal options.
#3Adopts an appropriation ordinance increasing funding by $47,832.60 for the Master Transportation Plan Update and amends the Fiscal Years 2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program.
#4Authorizes unit price contracts with Lumin8 Transportation Technologies and EARTC for up to $4.5 million each for task order construction services for street lights and traffic signals, each with three renewal options.
#5Adopts an appropriation ordinance providing $300,000 for the US 287 and East Berry Street Governor's Community Achievement Award Project and amends the Fiscal Years 2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program under the 2022 Bond Program.
#6Authorizes the city to apply for and accept up to $250,000 in grant funding from pet-focused organizations including PetSmart Charities, plus up to $5,000 in accrued interest, to support animal welfare programs in FY2026.
#BPurchase of Equipment, Materials, and Services - Consent Items
#1Authorizes an amendment to the existing equipment rental agreement with Herc Rentals, Inc. through the Omnia Partners cooperative contract, adding one additional one-year renewal term at up to $1,033,542.00 annually for use across city departments.
#2Authorizes non-exclusive contracts with two vendors through the BuyBoard cooperative for commercial washers and dryers for the Fire Department, with a combined annual cap of $250,000 and two one-year renewal options at the same amount.
#3Authorizes non-exclusive agreements with two vendors for overhead crane inspections serving the Water Department and Property Management Department, with a combined annual cap of $420,000 for the initial term and four one-year renewal options at the same amount.
#EAward of Contract - Consent Items
#1Authorizes an economic development program agreement with Weir Minerals U.S. Inc. to provide a city grant of up to $185,000 to support the retention and expansion of the company's divisional headquarters in Fort Worth.
#2Amends the PY 2021–2022 Annual Action Plan to reallocate $400,000 in Community Development Block Grant funds away from the Habitat for Humanity Como Townhomes Project and redirect them to the Preserve-A-Home Program in the Como neighborhood.
#3The city would authorize a five-year tax abatement agreement with MA-BD, LLC for construction of a 14,450 sq ft office and warehouse building on E. Daggett Avenue, requiring a minimum investment of $2,127,062, within Neighborhood Empowerment Zone Area Six adjacent to the Historic Southside neighborhood.
#4Authorizes a five-year tax abatement agreement with K5 Holdings Group, LLC to incentivize at least $9,140,000 in rehabilitation and storage expansion of an industrial building at 2000 E. Richmond Avenue for manufacturing and warehouse use within a Neighborhood Empowerment Zone.
#5Authorizes a $4,089,561 contract with Texas Materials Group, Inc. for asphalt resurfacing at various locations under the 2026 Asphalt Resurfacing Contract 6 Project.
#6Authorizes two interlocal agreements for the Everman Parkway Safe Streets Project — one with Tarrant County for up to $1,000,000 in city design and construction cost reimbursements, and one with the City of Everman for $263,655 plus $450,000 in Transportation Development Credits — while adopting appropriation ordinances and amending the FY2026–2030 Capital Improvement Program.
#7Authorizes a $193,148.00 purchase agreement with Mustang Creek Mitigation Holdings, LLC to acquire environmental mitigation credits from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, required in connection with the Loving Avenue Channel and Culvert Improvements Project.
#8Authorizes a contract with Data Integrators, Inc. to provide integrated printing and mailing services for the Code Compliance Department at up to $400,000 annually, for an initial one-year term with up to four one-year renewal options at the same amount.
#9Authorizes a sole source contract with Peregrine Technologies, Inc. for Real-Time Crime Center law enforcement data integration software for the Police Department at $490,000 for the first year, with four one-year renewal options.
#10Adopts a $900,000 appropriation ordinance to fund the first renewal of the 2024 Miscellaneous Sanitary Sewer Manhole Repair Contract with BCAC Underground LLC, fulfilling part of the Water Department's contribution to the FY2026–2030 Capital Improvement Program.
#11Authorizes Amendment No. 1 adding $1,948,665 to an engineering agreement with Kimley-Horn and Associates for the Central City Water and Sanitary Sewer Relocations Project, while also adopting a debt-reimbursement resolution and appropriation ordinances to fund the project through the FY2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program.
#12Authorizes Amendment No. 1 to an engineering agreement with BDS Texas Corp. for $154,820.00 covering Sanitary Sewer Rehabilitation Contract 117, and adopts an appropriation ordinance to fund Water's share of the FY2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program.
#13Authorizes a new contract with Gra-Tex Utilities, Inc. for $8,949,903.00 for the Water and Sanitary Sewer Replacement Contract 2019 WSM-L Project Part-1, and adopts an appropriation ordinance to fund Water's share of the FY2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program.
#14Authorizes a new contract with Woody Contractors, Inc. for $8,227,654.00 for the Water and Sanitary Sewer Replacement Contract 2020 WSM-H Project, and adopts an appropriation ordinance to fund Water's share of the FY2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program.
#15Authorizes a new contract with Gra-Tex Utilities, Inc. for $14,595,928.00 for the Water and Sanitary Sewer Replacement Contract 2021 WSM-F Project, adopts appropriation ordinances for Water's share of the FY2026-2030 CIP, and amends the Transportation and Public Works Department's FY2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program.
#1Notice of legal claims filed against the city for alleged damages or injuries.
#1Approval of minutes from the January 6, 2026 City Council Work Session.
#2Approval of minutes from the January 6, 2026 Public Comment session.
#3Approval of minutes from the January 13, 2026 Special Called 2026 Bond Workshop.
#4Approval of the official minutes from the Fort Worth City Council meeting held on January 13, 2026. This is a routine procedural item.
#5Approval of minutes from the January 27, 2026 Work Session meeting.
#6Approval of the official minutes from the Fort Worth City Council meeting held on January 27, 2026.
#1Upcoming and Recent Events; Recognition of Citizens; Approval of Ceremonial Travel
Changes in Membership on Boards and Commissions
#1A board appointment for Council District 3. No further details on the appointee or board are provided in the item text.
#2A board appointment for Council District 10. No further details on the appointee or board are provided in the item text.
#1A resolution authorizing the city to initiate a rezoning process for two properties at 5329 and 5335 East 1st Street in Council District 11, in accordance with the Comprehensive Plan.
#2A resolution by the City Council consenting to the addition of approximately 50.10 acres of land to the Far North Fort Worth Municipal Utility District No. 1, which spans Tarrant and Wise Counties.
#1Ordinance amending Chapter 23 of the city code to add a new section establishing where certain registered sex offenders are permitted to reside within the city.
#2Ordinance calling a May 2, 2026 voter election on the issuance of ad valorem tax-supported general obligation bonds as part of the city's 2026 General Obligation Debt Program.
#3Ordinance calling a May 2, 2026 special election to submit proposed amendments to the Fort Worth City Charter to qualified voters for adoption or rejection.
#1A public hearing to adopt a resolution supporting BAIR Holdings, LLC's application to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality for a Municipal Setting Designation at 5921 and 5933 South Freeway, and to adopt an ordinance prohibiting potable use of the designated groundwater beneath the site.
#2Public hearing and ordinance designating Tax Abatement Reinvestment Zone No. 115 and authorizing a ten-year tax abatement agreement with Stellar Energy Americas Inc for development of a manufacturing facility at Blue Mound Road.
#1Zoning case requesting rezoning of approximately 42 acres on the 7200–7500 blocks of Anglin Drive from Agricultural to Light Industrial, with a recommendation for approval from the Zoning Commission.
#2Rezoning of a 1.18-acre property at 3168 Glen Garden Drive N. from Two-Family Residential and Neighborhood Commercial to Community Facilities, with a Conditional Use Permit for a lodging house of up to 7 rooms (2-year time limit) and development waivers for a structure within the supplemental setback and fencing in the front yard setback.
#3Rezoning of a 4.98-acre property at 9000 Trinity Boulevard from Light Industrial to Planned Development to allow all Light Industrial uses plus a waste transfer station, with development standards requiring enhanced front yard landscaping and full containment of debris.
#4Rezoning of a 0.645-acre property at 1020–1030 N. Sylvania Avenue from Neighborhood Commercial Restricted to Neighborhood Commercial, with a Conditional Use Permit for a potentially hazardous mobile food vendor operation.
#5Addition of a Conditional Use Permit within existing Community Facilities zoning for a semi-truck driving school with office at 4000–4016 E. Berry Street and 3208 Freddie Street (3.12 acres), with a 2-year time limit and development waivers permitting one truck on-premise during daylight hours and existing structures within setbacks.
#6Rezoning request for 0.82 acres at 7250 W. Vickery Boulevard from a Planned Development for General Commercial Restricted uses (including a contractors storage yard) to a Planned Development for Neighborhood Commercial uses with parking reduction and NASJRB overlay, excluding indoor amusement and liquor/package stores. Recommended for approval by the Zoning Commission.
#7Rezoning request for 0.32 acres at 504 NW 25th Street from a Planned Development for One-Family residential use (allowing up to four units on one lot) to 'E' Neighborhood Commercial. Recommended for approval by the Zoning Commission.
#8Conditional Use Permit request for 0.86 acres at 2517–2531 Hemphill Street to allow five mobile food vendors (potentially hazardous), 32 merchandise vendors, and outdoor amusement in 'E' Neighborhood Commercial zoning for a three-year time limit, with multiple development waivers for parking, signage, landscaping, and setbacks. Recommended for approval by the Zoning Commission for a three-year time limit.
#9Rezoning request for 36.92 acres at 541 and 693 Avondale Haslet Road from 'MU-1' Low Intensity Mixed-Use and 'UR' Urban Residential to 'A-5' One-Family Residential. Recommended for approval by the Zoning Commission.
#10A rezoning request for 6.10 acres at 14271 Old Denton Road in Council District 10, seeking to change the classification from "A-43" One-Family Residential to "I" Light Industrial; recommended for approval by the Zoning Commission.
#11A rezoning request for 0.40 acres at 2521 Race Street in Council District 11, seeking to change the classification from "D" High Density Multifamily to "E" Neighborhood Commercial; recommended for approval by the Zoning Commission.
#12Zoning case requesting a change at 2520 Hemphill Street (1.02 acres) from 'E' Neighborhood Commercial to a Planned Development that retains most 'E' uses but excludes convenience stores, gasoline sales, liquor stores, and automotive repair adjoining a residential boundary; includes a site plan. Recommended for approval by the Zoning Commission.
#13Zoning case requesting a change at 519 E. Butler Street / 600 block E. Ripy Street (7.197 acres) from 'A-5' One-Family Residential to a Planned Development for Community Facilities uses, with specific exclusions and development standards for parking, fencing, retaining walls, and signage; includes a site plan. Recommended for approval by the Zoning Commission.
#14A zoning case requesting rezoning of 38.38 acres at 4500 & 8212 Anglin Circle from Two-Family Residential and Agricultural to a Planned Development for Light Industrial uses, primarily a data center, with enhanced setbacks and height allowances; the Zoning Commission recommended approval with a site plan required rather than waived.
#BGeneral
#1The city council considers adopting nine resolutions of support for 2026 competitive (9%) Housing Tax Credit applications spanning seven council districts, approving fee waivers of up to $30,000 per development as funding commitments, and making required findings regarding public purpose, neighborhood revitalization in qualifying zones, and the one-mile three-year rule.
#DLand
#1Adoption of resolution authorizing condemnation by eminent domain to acquire 0.5018 acres in permanent easement and approximately 1.3336 acres for a temporary construction easement for infrastructure improvements in Council District 8.
#1A public comment session allowing members of the public to address the governing body.
The City Council may convene in Executive Session in the City Council Executive Session Room in order to conduct a closed meeting to discuss any item listed on this Agenda in accordance with Chapter 5
The location identified on this agenda is the location at which the presiding officer will be physically present and presiding over the meeting. Members of the City Council may be participating remote
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