CITY COUNCIL · 6:00 PM · City Council Chamber
Analysis incorporates data from the official meeting minutes, including vote outcomes, attendance, and public testimony.
Matters
Industrial Zoning at Anglin Drive (ZC-25-184)
Continued to next hearing
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Verify Anglin Drive industrial rezoning re-notice for June 9
Context: The January continuance was a formal 10-0 vote (Nettles/Crain) and February was 11-0 (Nettles/Beck); the March 10 record shows only 'consensus' with no named official — an unexplained procedural break that may not satisfy the statute's notice requirements.
Recommended: Confirm with the Fort Worth City Clerk that the June 9 hearing was properly re-noticed under Texas Local Government Code Chapter 211 before the vote occurs — the March 10 continuance was entered only as 'consensus' with no named mover, unlike the two prior continuances that had named movers and formal roll call votes. A defective re-notice could void a June 9 approval, but the window to raise a written objection closes once the council votes.
Pull Anglin Drive rezoning file for post-March amendments
Context: The January and February continuances were each four weeks apart; the March 10 deferral extended 13 weeks to June 9 with no recorded public discussion, a gap inconsistent with purely procedural scheduling.
Recommended: Download the current ZC-25-184 case file from Fort Worth Development Services and check whether new site plans, conditions, or a revised staff recommendation were filed after March 10 — the jump from four-week intervals to a 13-week extension signals a substantive off-record negotiation, and June 9 could go to a final vote on terms you have not reviewed. If amendments were filed, you still have time in May to evaluate them and request a further continuance or submit a response.
Request records linking three coordinated CD 8 industrial deferrals
Context: Key facts identify three large-acreage CD 8 cases totaling ~120 acres of proposed industrial and data center development that were all continued without final action on the same March 10 date, with no recorded public discussion on any of them.
Recommended: File a public records request for all three large-acreage CD 8 cases totaling approximately 120 acres of industrial and data center development that were continued simultaneously on March 10 — specifically requesting applicant names, legal representation, and any staff or applicant correspondence across all three cases — to determine whether they share common ownership, attorneys, or lobbying strategy and explain why they were deferred together with no public discussion. Request now so documents arrive before the June 9 hearing generates new filings that obscure the coordination.
Schedule meeting with Council Member Nettles on Anglin Drive before June 1
Context: Nettles moved the January 10-0 continuance (seconded by Crain) and the February 11-0 continuance (seconded by Beck); no named mover appears in the March 10 consensus record, placing the case's current status entirely outside the public record.
Recommended: Request a meeting with Council Member Nettles before June 1 to gauge where the June 9 vote stands — she personally moved both formal continuances and is the only council member with a named role in this case, making her the most likely broker of whatever produced the unexplained 13-week extension. The window to adjust your client's position before the vote is under three weeks and closing.
Read Anglin Drive industrial rezoning application before June 9 hearing
Context: Three consecutive continuances on January 13, February 10, and March 10 passed without any recorded public testimony or staff presentation on the substance of the Anglin Drive industrial rezoning application.
Recommended: Look up ZC-25-184 on Fort Worth's online zoning portal to read the current site plan and the specific industrial uses being requested, then submit written comments to the City Clerk before June 9 — all three council appearances were procedural deferrals with zero recorded public testimony on the merits, meaning no neighbor concerns, truck traffic impacts, or operating hours have ever been addressed in the public record. June 9 is likely the final opportunity to place your concerns on the record before a vote.
PD Amendment ZC-26-004
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Confirm redesign application meets new dual rezoning notice requirements
Context: Council adopted the new dual-notice requirements at the same session it denied ZC-26-004 11-0 on May 12, 2026, making them effective for any subsequent application on this corridor.
Recommended: The May 12 session updated rezoning notice procedures to require both web publication and a physical sign posting — any redesign application for this corridor must satisfy both requirements or risk a procedural challenge that could reset the entire timeline. Review the adopted text amendment before advising the client to refile.
Check if Small Lot Housing now permits corridor development without new rezoning
Applies if: Site or adjacent corridor parcels include one-family zoning districts
Context: Council denied ZC-26-004 11-0 and adopted the Small Lot Housing text amendment at the same May 12, 2026 session, creating an alternative path that did not exist the day before.
Recommended: Pull the citywide text amendment adopted at the same May 12 session that added Small Lot Housing as a permitted use in all one-family districts under Texas LGC Chapter 211 Subchapter D — if this corridor includes one-family zoned parcels, that path may allow development without a new PD application and bypasses the 2-year restriction triggered by the ZC-26-004 denial.
Request staff reports explaining the two-month delay then unanimous denial
Context: ZC-26-004 was continued March 10 (10-0 consensus, no roll call) and denied May 12 (11-0 formal vote) with Council Members Nettles and Peoples leading the motion — the gap between these two actions is unexplained in the available record.
Recommended: Pull the staff reports from both the March 10 continuation and the May 12 denial — the matter was held two months by 10-0 consensus with no stated reason in the minutes, then denied 11-0, and the public record does not explain what changed between those two votes. Compare the two reports for any shift in staff recommendation, opposition volume, or applicant design modifications.
Joe Passanisi Concrete Batch Plant at 3800 Deen Road (ZC-25-185)
Continued to next hearing
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Check Texas air permit status for Deen Road batch plant
Context: ZC-25-185 has been continued twice — March 10 and April 28 — with no public explanation and no operating conditions attached through either continuance on a heavy industrial concrete batch plant use.
Recommended: Pull Texas Commission on Environmental Quality records for any existing or pending air quality permit at 3800 Deen Road before June 9 — if a state permit is already in place it restricts what operating conditions Fort Worth can legally impose through zoning, and if none exists, any approval without written conditions leaves adjacent landowners without a regulatory remedy once state permitting begins.
Delay CD 8 industrial land decisions until June 9 vote
Context: Three District 8 cases totaling roughly 120 acres of proposed industrial and data center development — including ZC-25-185 — were all continued simultaneously on April 28 while 8 of 12 other zoning cases were approved that same day.
Recommended: Hold off on committing to District 8 industrial or data center sites until all three deferred cases are decided June 9 — if council approves none, it signals district-level resistance that should reprice any land under contract in this corridor.
File records request on two-continuance Deen Road concrete plant delay
Context: Two consecutive unanimous continuances — March 10 consensus and April 28 10-0 — have produced no public explanation for the delay, while all three District 8 cases totaling roughly 120 acres were held simultaneously as 8 of 12 other zoning cases were approved on the same April 28 agenda.
Recommended: File a Texas Public Information Act request for the staff report, applicant-submitted materials, and all applicant-city correspondence on this case, and cross-reference whether the two other District 8 industrial cases deferred April 28 share ownership, legal representation, or applicant networks with Joe Passanisi.
Meet District 8 council member before June 9 batch plant hearing
Context: The April 28 continuance motion was made by Mayor Pro Tem Flores — not the District 8 member — and Council Member Lauersdorf was off the dais, leaving the district representative's position on this case unrecorded through both continuances.
Recommended: Request a private meeting with the District 8 council member before June 9 to present preferred operating conditions — with three large-acreage industrial cases totaling roughly 120 acres all pending in the same district, the member is managing competing constituent pressures and may be open to written conditions in exchange for a yes vote.
Request written truck and dust restrictions at June 9 Deen Road hearing
Context: Two consecutive continuances — March 10 and April 28 — have produced no public commitment to site-specific operating restrictions on a concrete batch plant that generates continuous heavy-truck traffic and particulate dust at 3800 Deen Road.
Recommended: Appear at the June 9 Fort Worth City Council meeting and ask that truck delivery hours, haul routes, and dust suppression requirements be written into any zoning approval — once an ordinance passes without these conditions there is no mechanism to add them retroactively.
Lohaliva Commercial Zoning at Dan Danciger Road (ZC-25-212)
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Verify no protest petition clouds Dan Danciger commercial rezoning
Context: The March 10, 2026 vote was 10-0 with Mayor Parker absent; if a protest petition covered 20 percent or more of adjacent area, the statutory supermajority requirement applies and must be confirmed in the record before the approval is treated as unassailable.
Recommended: Confirm with Fort Worth's City Secretary whether any adjacent landowner filed a written protest before the March 10 hearing — if a qualifying protest was filed, Texas Local Government Code §211.006 required a three-fourths council vote, and you must verify the 10-member tally satisfies that threshold before advising your client to commit capital.
Pull adopted ordinance for Dan Danciger Road commercial rezoning
Context: ZC-25-212 was continued 9-0 on Feb 24, 2026, then approved 10-0 on Mar 10, 2026; the gap between those two votes is where conditions are typically negotiated and recorded in the adopting ordinance.
Recommended: Request the enrolled ordinance text from Fort Worth's City Secretary to identify any conditions attached to this approval before submitting site plans or executing construction contracts — a mid-process continuance from Feb 24 to Mar 10 frequently signals staff-negotiated conditions that restrict permitted uses or require on-site improvements beyond what the zoning map alone shows.
Explain Council Member Beck's role in Lohaliva Dan Danciger approval
Context: The Feb 24 continuance vote listed Beck as absent (Motion passed 9-0, Council Members Nettles and Beck were absent), yet Beck is named as the motion-maker for the 10-0 approval on March 10, 2026.
Recommended: Cross-reference Lohaliva's Texas Secretary of State entity registration against Council Member Beck's district boundaries and campaign finance records — Beck was absent when this case was continued Feb 24 but personally made the approval motion March 10, and the public record offers no explanation for that shift.
PD Amendment ZC-25-205
Continued to next hearing
Showing all 3 actions. Filter by: , , .
Verify Re-Notice Requirement for CD 8 Industrial Rezoning After 91-Day Gap
Context: ZC-25-205 was continued by consensus with no roll call on March 10, 2026, to June 9—91 days later—whereas the February 10 continuation used a formal recorded 11-0 motion moved by Council Member Nettles and seconded by Council Member Beck; the procedural shift is documented in the minutes.
Recommended: Pull Fort Worth's zoning code re-notice provisions and confirm whether the 91-day gap between the March 10 continuance and the June 9 hearing requires new mailed notice to adjacent property owners; also confirm whether the March 10 unrecorded 'consensus' continuation satisfies the same procedural standard as the formal 11-0 roll call motion used in February. Either defect gives an affected party standing to void the June 9 action.
Request Staff Reports on Three Coordinated CD 8 Industrial Rezoning Continuances
Context: March 10 minutes show all three ~120-acre CD 8 cases continued by 'consensus' with no roll call, while the February 10 continuation of ZC-25-205 alone used a formal recorded 11-0 motion moved by Nettles and seconded by Beck.
Recommended: File a public records request for the March 10 staff reports and applicant correspondence on all three Council District 8 cases totaling approximately 120 acres, and ask the Fort Worth City Clerk whether zoning continuances require a formal recorded vote. The shift from a formal 11-0 motion in February to an unrecorded consensus in March—applied simultaneously to three large industrial and data center cases with no individual findings—is a pattern with no public explanation.
Reach Council Members Nettles and Beck Before June 9 Industrial Rezoning Vote
Context: Nettles moved and Beck seconded the February 10 formal 11-0 continuance of ZC-25-205; the matter was then continued again on March 10 by consensus with no recorded sponsor or explanation, and the June 9 date is now set.
Recommended: Contact Council Members Nettles and Beck—who jointly moved and seconded the only formally recorded continuance on this matter—and schedule meetings before June 9 to gauge their current position and determine whether either will seek conditions or request a third continuance on the approximately 120-acre Council District 8 industrial and data center rezoning. This is the last structured access window before the council must act.
Analysis
Financial Highlights
Contracts & Procurement
Zoning
Development & Land Use
Transportation
Infrastructure & Facilities
Housing
Governance & Oversight
Community Impact
Personnel & Labor
Insights by Role
Contractor
HighHigh significance — major decision, large financial impact, or broad community effectThe March 10 meeting awarded seven new contracts and approved six change orders across water, sewer, stormwater, transportation, environmental services, and facilities. Three service contracts carry multi-year renewal options extending total commitments well beyond initial authorized amounts, and a new engineering agreement for US 287 utility relocations signals an anticipated future construction bid package.
Resident
HighHigh significance — major decision, large financial impact, or broad community effectThe Oncor Electric Delivery substation at 5621 Parker Henderson Road was approved 7-3 despite seven community speakers in opposition — the meeting's only split vote. Three large industrial and data center proposals in CD 8 were continued to May and June hearings, giving affected neighbors additional time to engage before final decisions on roughly 120 acres near Anglin Drive and Oak Grove Road.
Developer
MediumMedium significance — notable action worth trackingThree large CD 8 rezoning cases totaling approximately 120 acres — two Anglin corridor industrial and data center proposals and one Oak Grove Road light industrial case carrying a Zoning Commission denial recommendation — were continued without final action through June 2026. The council's amendment of the Oncor substation approval (ZC-26-002) to a use-restricted PD/I designation, narrower than the Zoning Commission's recommendation, illustrates how council may condition industrial PD entitlements when community opposition is significant.
Charts & Data
82 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 - Father Sergio Diaz, Iglesia San Miguel
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.")
#1The city presents a formal recognition to the Girl Scouts of Texas Oklahoma Plains, honoring the organization's contributions to the community.
#2The city presents a formal recognition to LULAC Council 4568, honoring the organization's service and contributions to the Fort Worth community.
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
#1Accepts a $124,103.00 voluntary contribution from the Tarrant Regional Water District for Public Improvement District No. 23 – Panther Island for FY2026, authorizes execution of a management agreement with TRWD for the district, and adopts an appropriation ordinance for the funds.
#2The city is ratifying its grant application and authorizing acceptance of up to $80,000 from the Texas Historical Commission to support a Historic Resources Survey, consisting of a $40,000 grant and a $40,000 local match, with an accompanying appropriation ordinance.
#3An appropriation ordinance increasing estimated receipts and appropriations in the Library Special Revenue Fund by $100,000 in order to return those funds to the Fort Worth Public Library Foundation.
#4Approval to reallocate $214,931 in American Rescue Plan Act State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds across three purposes: Neighborhood Wi-Fi ($105,319), Public Events Capital Projects ($84,876), and IT Services Infrastructure ($24,736), with adoption of an appropriation ordinance and amendment to the FY2026–2030 Capital Improvement Program.
#5Adoption of an appropriation ordinance increasing the Library Special Revenue Fund by $46,421.35 using donations received from the Fort Worth Public Library Foundation and the Virginia O'Donnell Trust to support library services.
#6Ordinance adopting the Project and Financing Plan for Tax Increment Reinvestment Zone Number Eighteen (Walsh Ranch TIF), establishing the framework for tax increment financing in the Walsh Ranch area.
#7Correction to a prior Mayor & Council Communication (26-0071) to properly award a contract for combined street paving, stormwater, and water and sanitary sewer improvements under the 2022 Bond Year 3 – Contract 13 Project to 2R Construction Services, LLC.
#8Appropriation ordinance adjusting stormwater commercial paper program funding to align with Tarrant Regional Water District reimbursable limits for Central City Drainage Improvements, while amending the FY2026–2030 Capital Improvement Program.
#9Authorization to execute a $1,129,570 developer funding agreement with D.R. Horton – Texas, Ltd. for design and construction of intersection improvements at Avondale Haslet Road and Wagley Robertson Road under the 2022 Bond Program, rescinding a prior authorization for the same work awarded to Beaten Path Development, LLC.
#10Authorization to execute an aircraft parking license with Gridiron Air LLC for use of two aircraft spaces at the Alliance Fort Worth Maintenance Facility at 2008 Eagle Parkway.
#11Adopts an ordinance reappointing nine municipal court judges, appointing one new judge, and designating a chief judge and deputy chief judge for a two-year term from April 1, 2026 through March 31, 2028, along with pay rate adjustments for the positions.
#BPurchase of Equipment, Materials, and Services - Consent Items
#1Authorizes a commission-based agreement with PMAM Corporation to provide false alarm management system services and software for the Development Services Department, with an initial one-year term and four optional one-year renewals.
#2Authorizes a contract with Hydromax USA, LLC for acoustic leak survey detection services for the Water Department, starting at up to $400,000 annually with four escalating one-year renewal options.
#3Authorization to execute a contract with C & H Outdoor Solutions LLC (dba Sno-Biz) for a brine machine, salt supply, and tanks at up to $550,000 annually, funded as a one-time purchase through the Community Development Block Grant – Disaster Recovery for the Transportation and Public Works Department.
#4Authorization to execute a contract with PRP Services, LLC (dba Municipal Mosquito) for mosquito control services at up to $150,000 annually for an initial year, with four one-year renewal options at the same rate, for the Environmental Services Department.
#CLand - Consent Items
#1The city is adopting an ordinance to vacate an alley between East Central Avenue and East Northside Drive so it can be replatted with adjoining property for commercial redevelopment, with the purchase fee value of the vacated land waived per city policy.
#2Authorization to acquire approximately 3.18 acres in drainage and utility easements from Fort Worth Everman/Risinger Development, LLC at 9400 Southwest Drive for the Everman Parkway (Rosedale Springs) Project, funded by the 2022 Bond Program, for a total cost of $474,650.
#3Authorization to acquire a permanent sanitary sewer easement (~0.124 acres) and a temporary construction easement (~0.158 acres) from 4621 Cowan Partners LLC at 9816 Loire Valley Trail for $125,800, plus up to $5,000 in estimated closing costs ($130,800 total), for the Mary's Creek Force Main Project.
#4Authorization to convey approximately 0.545 acres of city-owned land at the northwest corner of East Lancaster Avenue and Calhoun Street to the Texas A&M University System at no cost for the Texas A&M Campus Project, with a finding that the conveyance serves a legitimate public purpose related to higher education.
#5City Council authorizing the acquisition of approximately 0.426 acres in right-of-way easement from Boaz Holdings, LP at 6250 West Bailey Boswell Road for $344,712.50, plus closing costs of up to $3,200, totaling $347,912.50, for the Bailey Boswell West road project funded by the 2022 Bond Program.
#6City Council authorizing the direct sale of six tax-foreclosed properties in Council Districts 5 and 8 to the Fort Worth Housing Finance Corporation for a total purchase price of $38,427.80, pursuant to Texas Property Tax Code Section 34.05 and City Ordinance 13533.
#EAward of Contract - Consent Items
#1City Council authorizing an artwork commission contract with artist Susan Narduli for up to $191,896 covering fabrication, delivery, installation, and contingencies for artwork at Sendera Springs Library, funded through the 2022 Bond Program.
#2Authorization to accept a $4,800 grant from Texas Health Community Hope to support the Good for You Healthy Hub Program at Eugene McCray Community Center, with an accompanying appropriation ordinance.
#3Authorization of Change Order No. 1 adding $1,159,312.05 to Jackson Construction, Ltd.'s contract for the Water & Sanitary Sewer Replacement Contract 2020, WSM-K Project, with an appropriation ordinance supporting the city's FY2026–2030 Capital Improvement Program.
#4Authorization of a $649,605 engineering agreement with Kimley-Horn and Associates Inc. for water and sanitary sewer main relocations at US 287/Highway 81 at Bonds Ranch Road and Willow Springs Road, with a resolution of intent to reimburse from future debt proceeds and an appropriation ordinance for the FY2026–2030 Capital Improvement Program.
#5Adopts an appropriation ordinance of $1,536,100 to fund installation of switchgear and electrical feeder at the Eagle Mountain and Rolling Hills Water Treatment Plants as part of the FY2026–2030 Capital Improvement Program.
#6Authorizes Change Order No. 1 adding $387,650 and 45 calendar days to the construction contract with Vernara LLC for the 2025 Concrete Restoration Contract 4 Project, bringing the revised contract total to $2,537,300.
#7Authorizes Amendment No. 1 to an engineering agreement with Kimley-Horn and Associates, Inc. for the Southside II Water Main Alignment Study Project, increasing the contract by $635,393.00 to a revised total of $2,983,794.00.
#8Corrects a prior council communication to revise the contract award amount to $10,992,057.00 for Acadia Services, LLC for construction of the Silver Creek Lift Station, Force Main and Gravity Main, Part 3, and adopts appropriation ordinances for the Water department's Capital Improvement Program contribution.
#9Authorizes Change Order No. 2 to the construction contract with The Fain Group, LLC for an additional $640,368.77 and 80 calendar days to cover expanded scope — including tree planting, irrigation, and paving — for the Long Avenue ARPA Pedestrian Safety Improvements Project, bringing the revised contract total to $4,522,556.97.
#10Adopts an appropriation ordinance for $700,000 to cover increased project costs for the M-199 C-R Sanitary Sewer Parallel Interceptor Project, representing a portion of the Water Department's contribution to the FY 2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program.
#11Authorizes a $3,000,000 construction contract with Woody Contractors, Inc. for the 2025 Citywide Storm Drain Rehabilitation Open-Cut Project and adopts an appropriation ordinance as part of the FY2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program.
#12Authorizes a $7,594,571.50 construction contract with Circle C Construction Company and an $250,000 engineering amendment with Freese and Nichols, Inc. for the Lake Arlington Lift Station Force Main and Sanitary Sewer Mains Project Part 4, along with a future-debt reimbursement resolution and a Capital Improvement Program appropriation ordinance.
#13Authorizes Change Order No. 2 to a construction contract with S.J. Louis Construction of Texas for sanitary sewer relocation as part of the Fort Worth Central City Part 14 project, and adopts a resolution for future debt reimbursement and an appropriation ordinance for the capital improvement program.
#14Authorizes a construction contract with CLW Water Group, LLC and an engineering amendment with Freese and Nichols, Inc. for the Bonds Ranch Lift Station, Force Main, and Gravity Main Project, along with a future debt reimbursement resolution and capital improvement program appropriations.
#15Authorizes a community facilities agreement with CTMGT Alpha Ranch, LLC for oversizing sewer mains in North Fort Worth to support anticipated future growth, with city participation up to $6,654,518.07, along with a resolution expressing intent to reimburse expenditures from future debt proceeds and an appropriation ordinance affecting Water's capital improvement program contribution.
#16Authorizes a $1,300,000 contract with Tejas Commercial Construction, LLC for the 2025 Water Lead Service Replacement and Water Service Leak Repair project, with an appropriation ordinance to fund the work as part of Water's Fiscal Years 2026–2030 Capital Improvement Program.
#17Authorizes a $1,000,000 contract with Circle C Construction Company for 2025 sanitary sewer main replacements, with two optional renewals, and adopts an appropriation ordinance as part of the Water department's FY2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program.
#18Authorizes a $750,000 contract with Tejas Commercial Construction, LLC for 2025 small diameter water main extensions, replacements, and relocations, with two optional renewals, and adopts an appropriation ordinance as part of the Water department's FY2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program.
#19Authorization to apply for and accept a federal airport infrastructure grant up to $675,000 for runway reconstruction, taxiway rehabilitation, and lighting at Fort Worth Spinks Airport, with a $75,000 city match transfer for a total project value of $750,000.
#20New hangar and ground lease agreement with Jets Asia Pacific Services LLC for approximately 4,500 square feet of ground space and a 4,550 square foot hangar (Lease Site 22S) at Fort Worth Meacham International Airport.
#21Authorizes application for and acceptance of a federal Bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act airport grant of up to $675,000 for runway rehabilitation, taxiway construction, and instrument landing system improvements at Meacham International Airport, with a city match transfer of up to $75,000 for a total project of $750,000.
#22Authorizes application for and acceptance of a federal Bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act airport grant of up to $1,553,305 for pavement improvements, shoulder preservation, a pavement management report, and taxiway improvements at Perot Field Fort Worth Alliance Airport, with city land credits of up to $172,590 as match for a total of $1,725,895.
#23Authorization to execute a facility lease agreement with Wallport Transit Xpress (WTX), Inc. for approximately 43,560 square feet of parking lot space at the Alliance Fort Worth Maintenance Facility located at 2016 Eagle Parkway.
#24Authorization to execute Change Order No. 1 to the roofing contract with Trumble Construction LLC (dba RBT Roofing), adding $314,402 for additional roof repairs at the Will Rogers Memorial Center Visitor Welcome Center and Ticket Booths, bringing the total contract to $6,823,032.
#25Authorizes a $2,387,411.79 change order and 113 additional calendar days under the construction manager at risk agreement with Sundt Construction for the Cromwell Marine Creek Road project, along with a corresponding appropriation ordinance and Capital Improvement Program amendment.
#1Provides notice of claims filed against the city for alleged damages or injuries.
#1Upcoming and Recent Events; Recognition of Citizens; Approval of Ceremonial Travel
#1A resolution appointing city residents to five board positions (Places 8 through 12) on the Board of Trustees of the City of Fort Worth Employees' Retirement Fund.
#2A resolution accepting a preliminary service and assessment plan for Fort Worth Public Improvement District No. 22 (Veale Ranch), directing assessment rolls to be filed for public inspection, and calling a public hearing on April 14, 2026 to consider an ordinance levying assessments on properties within the district.
#1An ordinance amending Chapter 23 of the city code to add a new Article II establishing regulations for identifying and abating habitual nuisances on commercial properties.
#1Public hearing to approve $66,480 in adjustments and $1,852,296 in amendments to the FY 2026 Crime Control and Prevention District budget for specified initiatives and programs, with adoption of an appropriation ordinance.
#1Rezoning request for 42.06 acres at the 7200–7500 blocks (odd) of Anglin Drive from Agricultural ('AG') to Light Industrial ('I'), recommended for approval by the Zoning Commission and continued from a previous meeting.
#2Rezoning request for 38.38 acres at 4500 & 8212 Anglin Circle from Two-Family Residential and Agricultural to a Planned Development for Light Industrial uses including a data center, with increased setbacks, a maximum building height of 70 feet for the data center, and a site plan now required; recommended for approval as amended by the Zoning Commission.
#3Rezoning request for 0.97 acres at 6605 Dan Danciger Road from Community Facilities ('CF') to Neighborhood Commercial Restricted ('ER'), recommended for approval by the Zoning Commission and continued from a previous meeting.
#4Rezoning request for 8.47 acres at 5051 South Freeway from a mix of Neighborhood Commercial and Industrial designations to Light Industrial, recommended for approval by the Zoning Commission and continued from a previous meeting.
#5Rezoning request for 0.18 acres at 2104 R. W. Bivens Lane in Council District 5 from Urban Residential/Stop Six Overlay to One-Family/Stop Six Overlay, recommended for approval by the Zoning Commission.
#6Rezoning request for 0.30 acres at 5904 & 5908 Etsie Street in Council District 11 from Agricultural to General Commercial Restricted, recommended for denial by the Zoning Commission.
#7Zoning case seeking a Conditional Use Permit on 4.0 acres at 3800 Deen Road to operate a concrete batch plant within a Heavy Industrial district, with conditions including a five-year time limit and enhanced landscaping along Deen Road, recommended for approval as amended by the Zoning Commission.
#8Trotter Enterprises LLC seeks a Conditional Use Permit for retail sales and a Hydraulic Shop at 120 Riverside Drive and 3115 Chenault Street, with multiple development waivers for an existing non-conforming building, recommended for approval with a three-year time limit.
#9Oncor Electric Delivery Co LLC, represented by Kimley-Horn, seeks to rezone 5621 Parker Henderson Road and add a Conditional Use Permit for an Electrical Substation, converting a portion of the site from Two-Family Residential to Light Industrial, recommended for approval by the Zoning Commission.
#10A zoning case in Council District 8 requesting rezoning of 39.60 acres at 5810 Oak Grove Road from 'A-5' One-Family to 'AR' One-Family Restricted and 'PD/I' Planned Development for most light industrial uses, with a site plan waiver; the Zoning Commission recommended denial and the item was continued from a prior meeting.
#11Zoning request to rezone 0.16 acres at 2928 Burton Avenue (CD 8) from planned development for neighborhood commercial uses 'PD1342' to single-family residential 'A-5'; recommended for approval by the Zoning Commission.
#DLand
#1Resolution authorizing condemnation by eminent domain to acquire a permanent sanitary sewer easement (0.654 acres) and temporary construction easement (0.192 acres) from Canary Properties LP at 220 Redbird Lane for the M199C Parallel SS Interceptor Project.
#1A public comment period allowing members of the public to address the council or committee.
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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