Municue

CITY COUNCIL · 6:00 PM · City Council Chamber

Upcoming
The June 9 City Council agenda is scheduled to carry $371.5M in financial activity across 152 substantive items, headlined by a proposed $104M certificate-of-obligation notice for citywide street and infrastructure improvements and a $55M Texas Water Development Board water grant application for the Water Department. Transportation capital, water utility investment, and a citywide zoning text amendment implementing Chapter 218 of the Texas Local Government Code are the three structural themes that give this agenda its unusual density.
176 items9 mattersView on Legistar →
DocumentsAgenda

This meeting is scheduled for Tuesday, June 9, 2026 and has not occurred yet. The analysis below is a preview based on the published agenda.

Matters

Joe Passanisi Concrete Batch Plant at 3800 Deen Road (ZC-25-185)

3 hearings since Mar 2026·Last: Jun 9, 2026·Zoning·Corridor·Notable

Next → Continued to next hearing

Showing all 4 actions. Filter by: , , , .

Attorney
As of Jun 2026

Pull TCEQ air permit records for Deen Road batch plant

Context: ZC-25-185 has been continued three times since March 10 without any staff conditions entering the public record, leaving the state-level regulatory backstop question unresolved before the June 9 vote.

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.

Source: Item #3 ↓
Journalist
As of Jun 2026

Request records on three-hearing Deen Road concrete plant delay

Context: The March 10 continuation was recorded as council consensus with no formal vote, while April 28 drew a named motion by Mayor Pro Tem Flores seconded by Council Member Crain — a procedural shift not explained by anything in the public minutes across three hearings.

Recommended: File a Texas Public Information Act request for all staff reports and applicant-city correspondence on this case, then compare the two procedural mechanisms used — the March 10 consensus continuation with no roll call versus the April 28 formal 10-0 motion by named council members — to identify what changed between hearings and whether off-record negotiations drove the procedural escalation.

Source: Item #3 ↓
Lobbyist
As of Jun 2026

Meet District 8 council member before June 9 batch plant vote

Context: Mayor Pro Tem Flores and Council Member Crain formally motioned the April 28 continuation 10-0, suggesting district-level consensus on delay but not on outcome, with June 9 now the third and most pressured decision point.

Recommended: Request a private meeting with the District 8 council member before June 9 to present preferred operating conditions — three continuances with no denial signal active internal negotiation rather than outright opposition, and the member may be open to written conditions as a path to a yes vote.

Source: Item #3 ↓
Resident
As of Jun 2026

Request written truck and dust restrictions at June 9 batch plant hearing

Context: Three consecutive continuances (March 10, April 28, June 9) have produced zero written operating conditions in the record for a concrete batch plant — a heavy industrial use generating significant truck traffic and airborne particulates — at 3800 Deen Road.

Recommended: Appear at the June 9 Fort Worth City Council meeting and ask that truck delivery hours, approved haul routes, and dust suppression requirements be written into any zoning approval — after three hearings with no conditions attached to the public record, there is no mechanism to add operating restrictions retroactively once an ordinance passes.

Source: Item #3 ↓

Industrial Zoning at Anglin Drive (ZC-25-184)

4 hearings since Jan 2026·Last: Jun 9, 2026·Zoning·Site·Notable

Next → Continued to next hearing

Showing all 5 actions. Filter by: , , , , .

Attorney
As of Jun 2026

Verify Anglin Drive industrial rezoning re-notice before Tuesday vote

Context: The January 13 continuance passed 10-0 with Nettles moving and Crain seconding; the February 10 continuance passed 11-0 with Nettles moving and Beck seconding; the March 10 entry is recorded only as 'consensus' with no named mover — an unexplained procedural shift across all four appearances.

Recommended: Confirm with the Fort Worth City Clerk today or Monday that the June 9 hearing was properly re-noticed under Texas Local Government Code § 211.007 — 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 in four days.

Source: Item #1 ↓
Developer
As of Jun 2026

Pull Anglin Drive rezoning file for post-March amendments today

Context: ZC-25-184 was continued at four-week intervals from January 13 through March 10, then extended 13 weeks to June 9 with no public explanation — a gap that length in a zoning docket almost always reflects off-record negotiation on conditions or site plan revisions.

Recommended: Download the current ZC-25-184 case file from Fort Worth Development Services today and check whether new site plans, conditions, or a revised staff recommendation were filed after March 10 — the case moved in four-week intervals through three hearings, then sat 13 weeks with no public record of negotiation, and June 9 is four days away. Any conditions filed in that gap bind the project if council approves Tuesday; you still have time to request a further continuance at the meeting if the terms are unacceptable.

Source: Item #1 ↓
Journalist
As of Jun 2026

Request Anglin Drive correspondence during 13-week unexplained silence

Context: The March 10 continuance was the only one of four appearances entered without a named mover or roll call vote, yet it produced the longest gap — 13 weeks versus four weeks for each prior interval — with no public record of what changed.

Recommended: File a public records request today for all staff, applicant, and council correspondence on ZC-25-184 between March 10 and June 9, 2026 — four consecutive hearings produced zero public discussion of the merits, and the case then went 13 weeks between appearances with no public explanation. Request before Tuesday so the June 9 vote does not generate a new wave of filings that buries what drove the pause.

Source: Item #1 ↓
Lobbyist
As of Jun 2026

Reach Council Member Nettles on Anglin Drive before Monday closes

Context: Nettles moved the January 13 continuance (10-0, seconded by Crain) and the February 10 continuance (11-0, seconded by Beck); no other council member took a named role in any of the four appearances spanning five months.

Recommended: Contact Council Member Nettles' office today or Monday — she personally moved both formal continuances and is the only council member with a named role across all four hearings, making her the most likely broker of whatever produced the 13-week extension. June 9 is four days away, and any position adjustment your client needs must happen before the vote, not after.

Source: Item #1 ↓
Resident
As of Jun 2026

Submit written comments on Anglin Drive industrial rezoning before Tuesday

Context: Four consecutive council appearances from January 13 through June 9 produced no public testimony on the merits of ZC-25-184, meaning the entire five-month record consists only of procedural votes to defer.

Recommended: Email written comments on ZC-25-184 to the Fort Worth City Clerk before June 9 and plan to speak at Tuesday's council meeting — all four appearances since January were procedural deferrals with zero recorded public testimony on the specific industrial uses, truck traffic, operating hours, or noise impacts proposed for this site. If the council approves Tuesday, no neighbor concerns will exist anywhere in the official record.

Source: Item #1 ↓

PD Amendment ZC-25-205

3 hearings since Feb 2026·Last: Jun 9, 2026·PD Amendment·Site·Notable

Next → Continued to next hearing

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Attorney
As of Jun 2026

Challenge Procedural Defect in CD 8 Rezoning Before June 9

Context: The record shows two different continuation mechanisms applied to the same docket within 28 days: a formal 11-0 motion on February 10 (Nettles moving, Beck seconding) versus an unrecorded 10-0 consensus on March 10, with no named mover or seconder and no staff explanation for the procedural shift.

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 February 11-0 roll call. Either defect gives an affected party standing to void the June 9 action, and the window closes when the council votes.

Source: Item #2 ↓
Journalist
As of Jun 2026

Request Records on Procedural Shift in CD 8 Industrial Rezoning

Context: Council Member Nettles moved and Council Member Beck seconded a formal 11-0 continuance on February 10; the March 10 continuation was recorded only as 'consensus' with no named sponsors — a procedural change applied to the same docket 28 days later with no staff findings explaining why.

Recommended: File a public records request for the March 10 staff report and applicant correspondence on this docket, and ask the Fort Worth City Clerk whether a consensus continuation with no named mover or seconder carries the same legal weight as a roll call motion. The shift from a formal 11-0 vote in February to an unrecorded consensus in March — on a site-specific planned development amendment now entering its third scheduled hearing — has no public explanation in the record.

Source: Item #2 ↓
Lobbyist
As of Jun 2026

Contact Nettles and Beck Before June 9 CD 8 Rezoning Vote

Context: Council Member Nettles moved and Council Member Beck seconded the only formally recorded continuance in this matter's history (February 10, 11-0); the March 10 continuation produced an unrecorded consensus with no named sponsors, making it unclear who currently owns this docket on the council.

Recommended: Schedule calls or in-person meetings with Council Members Nettles and Beck before June 9 — they are the only named decision-makers in this docket's three-hearing record, and June 9 is the last scheduled access window before the council must act or defer this matter a third time. Determine whether either will seek conditions on adoption or support another continuance, since a third deferral with no scheduled date would leave the matter in indefinite limbo.

Source: Item #2 ↓

SUP ZC-26-017

2 hearings since Apr 2026·Last: Jun 9, 2026·SUP·Corridor·Notable

Next → Continued to next hearing

Showing all 3 actions. Filter by: , , .

Attorney
As of Jun 2026

Verify Dallas corridor special use permit is still active after open-ended deferral

Context: The June 9 continuation left the next date unspecified — this is the second deferral in a row, and the case status is recorded as 'Unknown — monitor for next procedural step,' with no explanation in the Council record.

Recommended: Confirm with the city clerk whether this application remains active and whether an open-ended continuation — no rescheduled date set — triggers Dallas City Code re-notification requirements or restarts the statutory review clock; an open-ended deferral is procedurally distinct from the April 28 continuation, which specified a June 9 date, and that distinction may affect the city's deadline obligations and the applicant's vested-rights posture.

Source: Item #6 ↓
Journalist
As of Jun 2026

Request Zoning Commission file for twice-deferred Dallas corridor permit

Context: Both continuations — April 28 (Council Members Hall and Crain, 9-0) and June 9 — produced no substantive record, while Council Members Lauersdorf and Nettles were off the dais during the first vote and have no recorded position on this matter.

Recommended: Pull the Zoning Commission record for this corridor special use permit and compare it against the other 6 zoning cases continued at the June 9 City Council meeting — 7 of 18 scheduled zoning cases were continued that day (39%), and this permit has been deferred twice with no publicly stated reason and no next hearing date. The Council record contains only procedural motions; if a Zoning Commission recommendation exists, it has not appeared in published minutes.

Source: Item #6 ↓
Lobbyist
As of Jun 2026

Reach Council Members Hall and Crain before next hearing date is set

Context: The April 28 motion passed 9-0 with Hall making the motion and Crain seconding; Lauersdorf and Nettles were off the dais and have no documented stance, yet may hold district votes needed for final passage.

Recommended: Council Members Hall and Crain are the only named movers on this corridor special use permit; contact both offices now while no next hearing date has been posted — this is the window between a continuation and next agenda publication (typically closed 72 hours before the meeting) when scheduling and informal positioning can still be influenced. Separately, confirm whether Lauersdorf or Nettles represent any district within the corridor, since both were absent at the April 28 vote and their positions on this permit are entirely unrecorded.

Source: Item #6 ↓

PD Amendment ZC-26-040

2 hearings since May 2026·Last: Jun 9, 2026·PD Amendment·Corridor·Notable

Next → Continued to next hearing

Showing all 3 actions. Filter by: , , .

Attorney
As of Jun 2026

Check for protest petition on Dallas corridor planned development

Context: ZC-26-040 was continued at two consecutive Council meetings — May 12 by Hall/Crain motion (11-0) to June 9, then continued again on June 9 with no stated reason and no reschedule date — a pattern consistent with an active protest filing or an unresolved deficiency in the application.

Recommended: Pull the ZC-26-040 zoning file from the City Secretary and confirm whether a formal protest petition has been filed by adjacent property owners — if 20% or more have protested under the Texas Zoning Enabling Act, the amendment requires a three-quarters Council supermajority to pass, which fundamentally changes your client's strategy and the applicant's path to adoption.

Source: Item #7 ↓
Journalist
As of Jun 2026

Probe why Dallas corridor rezoning went silent after two deferrals

Context: The June 9 agenda carried 152 substantive items and $371.5M in financial activity; ZC-26-040 received its second consecutive deferral with no stated reason in the public record, and 7 of 18 zoning cases were continued that session — an unusually high continuation rate that may be masking individual case issues worth separating out.

Recommended: Pull the June 9 City Council minutes and compare ZC-26-040's continuance against the six other zoning cases also deferred that day — determine whether all seven were silently bundled off a crowded agenda or whether ZC-26-040 drew separate floor discussion indicating a substantive dispute, an applicant problem, or a council-staff split.

Source: Item #7 ↓
Lobbyist
As of Jun 2026

Contact Council Members Hall and Crain about Dallas corridor rezoning reschedule

Context: CM Hall moved and CM Crain seconded the 11-0 vote on May 12 to continue ZC-26-040 to June 9; it was then continued again from the June 9 agenda with no reschedule date, making these two members the effective gatekeepers to any forward progress.

Recommended: Reach out to the offices of Council Member Hall and Council Member Crain — the sponsors of the May 12 continuance — to determine what conditions must be resolved before ZC-26-040 is rescheduled, since the matter currently has no confirmed return date after two consecutive deferrals and every week of delay is a week without a clear adoption timeline for your client.

Source: Item #7 ↓

Analysis

Financial Highlights

The June 9 agenda is scheduled to carry $371.5M in financial impact across 81 funded items.[#23][#27][#28][#41][#45][#46][#48][#7][#12][#14][#1]

Contracts & Procurement

Two RFPs are proposed for outright rejection, and the agenda includes ratification of multiple emergency contracts from earlier in the fiscal year.[#22][#23][#8][#10][#13][#14][#17][#1]

Zoning

Of 18 scheduled zoning cases, 7 are being continued to future meetings and one carries a Zoning Commission denial recommendation, with the remaining active cases recommended for approval.[#4][#5][#6][#7][#8][#9][#10][#11][#12][#13][#14][#15][#16][#17][#18][#3][#2][#1]

Planning

A citywide text amendment (ZC-26-057) is proposed to implement Chapter 218 of the Texas Local Government Code, establishing mixed-use residential and multifamily residential as permitted uses in all commercial districts and select form-based districts, and creating supplemental standards for building-to-residential conversions.[#17]

Subdivisions

Three joint boundary ordinances and one pre-annexation agreement would collectively adjust approximately 205 acres of Fort Worth's city limits and ETJ through agreements with Everman, Crowley, and Burleson.[#4][#5][#6][#3][#2]

Development & Land Use

Three ordinances are scheduled to vacate streets and alleys in CD 8, CD 9, and CD 11 for redevelopment, with all purchase fees waived per city policy.[#37][#6][#7][#8][#2]

Historic Preservation

A text amendment (ZC-26-058) is proposed to clarify that the Historic and Cultural Landmarks Commission is the exclusive body authorized to recommend historic designations and their removal to the City Council, with corresponding changes to the Zoning Commission's enumerated powers and duties.[#18]

Transportation

The June 9 agenda includes some of the largest individual transportation capital commitments in the current budget cycle: a notice of intent to issue up to $104 million in certificates of obligation for street and infrastructure improvements, construction contracts of $35.4 million for McCart Avenue and McPherson Boulevard and $22.3 million for Bonds Ranch Road widening, and ratification of a $25 million federal Safe Streets for All grant for the East Berry Street corridor.[#23][#27][#31][#40][#42][#44][#45][#46][#47][#48][#4][#14]

Infrastructure & Facilities

Water and sewer capital is the dominant non-transportation theme, anchored by a resolution requesting $55 million from the Texas Water Development Board's Water Supply and Infrastructure Grant and a $13.1 million construction contract for water and sanitary sewer replacement.[#19][#24][#36][#6][#7][#8][#9][#10][#11][#12][#13][#14][#16][#17][#3][#2][#1]

Public Safety

A public hearing on $9.7 million in Crime Control and Prevention District budget amendments is scheduled alongside a $2 million FEMA subaward for FIFA World Cup public safety operations.[#20][#21][#22][#23][#24][#25][#26][#27][#29][#9][#3][#1]

Environment

The PFAS treatment study with Brown and Caldwell is scheduled for a $677,860 engineering amendment, bringing the total contract to $10,541,377.[#33][#34][#38][#41][#43][#8][#18][#1]

Housing

Over $3 million in housing assistance is scheduled for consideration, led by a $2.18M weatherization grant from the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs for low-to-moderate income residents, $355K for Habitat for Humanity's Under One Roof repair program, and a $550K forgivable loan to Maren Grove, LLC LLC for apartments at 801 W. Shaw Street.[#32][#35][#37][#39][#41][#5][#11][#13][#17]

Governance & Oversight

Four boundary adjustment ordinances are proposed to transfer or release a combined total of over 117 acres from Fort Worth's jurisdiction or extraterritorial jurisdiction to River Oaks, Everman, Crowley, and Burleson, with a pre-annexation agreement covering approximately 88 additional acres in Tarrant County ETJ.[#4][#5][#6][#7][#8][#18][#3][#2][#1]

Community Impact

Two Texas Parks and Wildlife Local Park Grant public hearings are scheduled, proposing applications for up to $2M for Gulf Coast Bait Shack at Fort Worth Zoo and up to $1.5M for Glenwood Park, alongside a $338,050 summer camp literacy grant from the Rainwater Charitable Foundation and a $560K engineering agreement with Kimley-Horn for design of four park projects.[#20][#4][#6][#3][#2][#1]

Insights by Role

Contractor

HighHigh significance — major decision, large financial impact, or broad community effectThe June 9 consent agenda is scheduled to authorize or ratify approximately 48 contract actions, including two road construction contracts totaling over $57M, a $13.1M water and sewer replacement award, and a 10-year Will Rogers Memorial Center management agreement. Two RFP rejections — one for disaster recovery home repair services and one for a virtual courtroom platform — are proposed in the same cycle, creating two near-term re-solicitation opportunities.

Developer

HighHigh significance — major decision, large financial impact, or broad community effectA citywide zoning text amendment (ZC-26-057) implementing Chapter 218 of the Texas Local Government Code is scheduled for a council vote that, if adopted, would immediately permit multifamily and mixed-use residential by right in all Fort Worth commercial districts and seven form-based or overlay districts — removing the rezoning requirement for qualifying residential projects in covered zones. The 68.49-acre NW Loop 820 industrial rezoning (ZC-26-039) and two Anglin Drive cases continued to December 2026 are the largest individual zoning actions on this docket.

Journalist

HighHigh significance — major decision, large financial impact, or broad community effectThe proposed 10-year management transfer of the Will Rogers Memorial Center to Gendy Street Management Corp. — with $8.06M in estimated year-one city operating support, indefinite CPI escalation, and a $2.45M employee transition appropriation — is the largest governance commitment on the June 9 docket and comes with unanswered questions about vendor selection and long-term cost exposure. In the same meeting, one individual is proposed for simultaneous appointment to five city boards, and two RFPs from different departments are both proposed for rejection without stated cause.

Lobbyist

HighHigh significance — major decision, large financial impact, or broad community effectThe June 9 meeting opens two distinct and time-bounded advocacy windows: the Chapter 218 zoning text amendment (ZC-26-057) is scheduled for a council vote that would immediately unlock residential development by right in every Fort Worth commercial zone, and the $104M certificate-of-obligation notice (M&C 26-0453) triggers a statutory 30-day period during which registered voters may petition against bond issuance. Both actions reward engagement before and immediately after the meeting.

Resident

HighHigh significance — major decision, large financial impact, or broad community effectFour public hearings are on the June 9 agenda where residents can register to speak: the FY2026 Crime Control and Prevention District budget amendment ($9.7M), the Master Transportation Plan adoption, and Texas Parks and Wildlife grant applications for the Fort Worth Zoo Gulf Coast Bait Shack renovation ($2M) and Glenwood Park improvements ($1.5M). Residents in Council Districts 6 and 10 should be aware that major road construction contracts for McCart Avenue and Bonds Ranch Road are proposed for award at this meeting.

Charts & Data

152 items(24 procedural hidden)

The official vote outcome for each item
(e.g., Approved, Denied, Held)
The procedural action taken on the item
(e.g., Hearing Closed, Corrected, Referred)

AI-generated summaries. Click to expand for original text.

INVOCATION - Pastor Ben Weiss, Grace Community 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 special recognition presentation celebrating Opal Lee reaching 100 years of life.

#2A recognition presentation honoring the Lake Como Neighborhood Advisory Council for excellence in community leadership and three consecutive Neighborhood of the Year Awards.

#3Ceremonial presentation of a city recognition honoring Hip Pocket Theatre on its 50th anniversary.

#4Ceremonial presentation of a city recognition honoring the Osprey Bass 35th Annual Youth Fishing Festival.

#5A special recognition presentation honoring a milestone celebration for Shopify merchants.

#6A special recognition presentation honoring Dr. Gwendolyn Morrison.

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

#1Adopts an ordinance amending the Fort Worth city code to update the responsibilities and duties of the Library Advisory Board under Chapter 19, Article II, Section 19-22.

#2Adopts an appropriation ordinance of $434,889.00 to fund park improvements at Titus Paulsel and Smith-Wilemon Parks, and amends the Fiscal Years 2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program.

$435K

#3Authorizes acceptance of a $25,000 donation from the North Texas Community Foundation to fund peer site visits to leading parks and recreation agencies nationwide, with a corresponding budget amendment for FY2026.

$25K

#4Ratifies application for and acceptance of a $338,050 grant from the Rainwater Charitable Foundation to fund summer camp literacy initiative programming through the Parks and Recreation Department, with a corresponding appropriation ordinance.

$338K

#5Adopts an appropriation ordinance to recognize unbudgeted revenues and expenditures associated with credit card service fees and amends the Fiscal Year 2026 adopted budget by $255,420.86, authorizing all necessary inter-fund transfers.

$255K

#6Fort Worth is adopting a semi-annual progress report on the collection and expenditure of water and wastewater impact fees for the period July 1 through December 31, 2025, as required under its Capital Improvement Plan.

#7Authorizes a waiver of transportation impact fees up to $240,627.15 for the Tarrant Regional Water District development at 4652 Old Decatur Road, with a finding that the waiver serves a public purpose and that adequate controls are in place.

$241K

#8Ratification of emergency transition contracts for the operation, maintenance, and regulatory-compliant disposal of biosolids at city biosolids processing facilities.

#9Two appropriation ordinances totaling $1,403,349 — drawing from the Risk Financing Fund ($600,711) and a new Fire Apparatus Capital Project Fund ($802,638) — to fund the replacement of Fire Engine 8, with corresponding amendments to the FY2026 budget and FY2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program.

$601K

#10Authorization of a professional services agreement with Forvis Mazars, LLP for external financial audit services at up to $840,000 per year for a three-year initial term, with two one-year renewal options.

$840K

#11Authorizes cash defeasance of seven series of General Purpose bonds (2015A through 2023) to achieve debt service savings, accompanied by an appropriation ordinance and a FY2026 budget amendment.

#12Increases appropriations in the Water Prior Lien Debt Service Fund and Stormwater Debt Service Fund to cover additional current-year debt-related payments, amending the FY2026 adopted budget.

#13Authorizes distribution of $2,570,339.93 in available income from the Fort Worth Permanent Fund (a mineral revenue trust), appropriating amounts to the Gas Lease Endowment Funds for FY2025 and FY2026 and amending the FY2025 budget.

$2.6M

#14Adopts an ordinance directing public notice of intention to issue up to $104,000,000 in combination tax and revenue certificates of obligation to fund improvements to city streets, facilities, and infrastructure, with a reimbursement intent clause.

$104.0M

#15Authorizes non-exclusive service agreements with two vendors for airport hangar door repair, maintenance, and insulation services at a combined annual cost of up to $150,000, with four optional one-year renewals at the same amount.

$150K

#16Authorizes waiver of parking meter rental fees up to $20,000 for Sundance Square Management, LLC to support street closures during an approximately five-week FIFA World Cup event, with a finding that the waiver serves a public purpose.

$20K

#17Authorizes the rejection of all proposals received under RFP No. 26-0154 for supplemental disaster recovery home repair services for the Neighborhood Services Department.

#18Adopts an appropriation ordinance increasing the Vehicle and Equipment Replacement Fund by $2,900,862.11 from proceeds of interest earnings and asset/salvage sales to fund vehicle and equipment replacements across General Fund departments, also amending the FY 2026–2030 Capital Improvement Program.

$2.9M

#19Appropriation ordinance transferring $114,175.92 in residual funds to close the Central Library Purchase Project, with a corresponding amendment to the FY2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program.

$114K

#20Authorizes waiver of an estimated $336,979 in development-related fees for the MLK Replacement (HUB) and Aquatics Center and the Fire Station Community Center, with a finding that the waivers serve a public purpose.

$337K

#21Authorizes an amendment to a cooperative contract with McKesson Medical-Surgical Government Solutions, LLC, increasing annual spending authority by $1.9M to a new total of $2M per year for medical, surgical, and laboratory equipment, with an additional one-year renewal option.

$1.9M

#22The city proposes to reject all responses received to RFP No. 26-0134, which sought a virtual courtroom platform for the Municipal Court Department.

#23Appropriation ordinance allocating a cumulative $10,500,000 in additional funding for five high-priority transportation projects, amending the FY2026–2030 Capital Improvement Program.

$10.5M

#24Appropriation ordinance allocating $648,436 from the Stormwater Capital Projects Fund to finance the Storm Drain Pipe Rehab Programmable Project, amending the FY2026–2030 Capital Improvement Program.

$648K

#25Appropriation ordinances allocating $2,250,000 to fund municipal parking capital improvement projects, amending the FY2026 Adopted Budget and FY2026–2030 Capital Improvement Program.

$2.3M

#26Adopts appropriation ordinances to facilitate financial transactions in Community Facilities Agreement project funds for cleanup and close-out of completed CFA projects, and amends the FY 2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program.

#27Ratifies applications for a federal Safe Streets for All grant up to $25,000,000 from the U.S. DOT and a NCTCOG reimbursement agreement up to $2,129,000 for safety, technology, and operational improvements along the East Berry Street Corridor from I-35 to Miller Avenue.

$25.0M

#BPurchase of Equipment, Materials, and Services - Consent Items

#1Authorizes a sole-source agreement with CV Technology, Inc. — the original equipment manufacturer — for fire suppression systems, parts, and repair services for the Water Department at up to $300,000 annually for the first year, with four one-year renewal options at the same amount.

$300K

#2Authorizes a contract with Keystone Metal Buildings, LLC (an authorized retailer of Britespan Building Systems) for design, preparation, and installation of a salt and brine storage facility for up to $120,000, funded through the CDBG–Disaster Recovery program for the Transportation and Public Works Department.

$120K

#3Authorizes a contract with Dallas Automatic Gate, Inc. for maintenance and repair of automated gate systems across multiple city departments for up to $1,100,000 annually, with four one-year renewal options at the same annual amount.

$1.1M

#4Authorizes non-exclusive agreements with three vendors for grass seed, sod, and installation services for the Water Department for up to $205,000 annually, with four escalating one-year renewal options.

$205K

#5Authorizes non-exclusive agreements with multiple vendors (unnamed) for boarding and securing services for the Code Compliance Department for up to $200,000 annually, with four one-year renewal options at the same amount.

$200K

#6Authorizes a contract with EMS Management & Consultants, Inc. to provide emergency medical service billing and collection services for a one-year initial term with four one-year renewal options, managed through the Financial Management Services Department.

#7Authorizes non-exclusive agreements with Badger Meter, Inc. and Aqua-Metric Sales Company for water meters and appurtenances up to $5,559,562 for an initial one-year term, with four one-year renewal options at the same annual amount, for the Water Department.

$5.6M

#CLand - Consent Items

#1Adopts a joint ordinance and boundary agreement with the City of River Oaks to transfer 0.2007 acres at the intersection of Sam Calloway Road and River Oaks Boulevard from Fort Worth to River Oaks, and authorizes the Mayor to execute the agreement.

#2Authorizes a joint ordinance and boundary agreement with the City of Everman to release approximately 8.463 acres of land near County Road 1051 (Enon Avenue) from Fort Worth's city limits to Everman, adjusting the shared municipal boundary.

#3Authorizes a joint ordinance and boundary agreement with the City of Crowley to transfer 0.167 acres of land on FM 1187 east of East Main Street from Fort Worth's city limits to Crowley, and authorizes the Mayor to execute the agreement.

#4Authorizes a joint ordinance and boundary agreement with the City of Burleson to release approximately 108.75 acres known as the Animal Pancakes Roadway Tract from Fort Worth's extraterritorial jurisdiction (ETJ) to Burleson, at the intersection of Chisholm Trail Parkway, County Road 915, and FM 1902 in Johnson County.

#5Authorizes execution of a pre-annexation agreement with Beaten Path Development-Boat Club, LLC covering approximately 88.035 acres located within Fort Worth's extraterritorial jurisdiction in Tarrant County.

#6Adopts an ordinance vacating an alley between West Humbolt Street and Worth Street to be replatted with adjoining property for future development, waiving the purchase fee value of the vacated land per city policy.

#7Adopts an ordinance vacating a portion of McCurdy Street and an adjacent alley between East Richmond Avenue and East Arlington Avenue to be replatted into one lot, waiving the purchase fee value of the vacated land per city policy.

#8Adopts an ordinance vacating portions of Gross Street, Irion Street, and Wallace Street between Beach Street and the Trinity River to prepare the site for redevelopment, waiving the purchase fee value of the vacated land per city policy.

#9Authorizes acceptance of a donated 5.21-acre parcel at 1500 Liberty Street from the Housing Authority of Fort Worth (Fort Worth Housing Solutions), with up to $20,000 in closing costs authorized, as part of the 2022 Bond Program.

$20K

#10City authorizes acquisition of approximately 2.511 acres in permanent water easements and 1.642 acres in temporary construction easements from Westworth Redevelopment Authority at 6520 White Settlement Road for $655,634, plus up to $4,000 in closing costs, totaling $659,634, for the Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base Water and Sewer Main Replacement Project.

$656K

#11City authorizes acquisition of approximately 1.2696 acres in permanent water easements and 0.8162 acres in temporary construction easements from Paslay Ventures, Inc. at multiple addresses on East Rendon Crowley Road in Burleson for $241,762, plus up to $2,500 in closing costs totaling $244,262, for the Southside II Water Main Alignment City Transmission Main Project.

$242K

#12City authorizes acquisition of sanitary sewer easements and temporary construction easements from two property owners—Gramar Properties LLC and Grant and Marcee James—for a combined total of $533,600 in acquisition costs plus up to $10,000 in closing costs, for the Mary's Creek Force Main Project.

$237K

#EAward of Contract - Consent Items

#1Authorizes a two-year agreement with Constant Technologies for audio-visual equipment and related services for the Property Management and Information Technology Solutions Departments, with four one-year renewal options at up to $100,000 annually.

$2.3M

#2Authorizes a sole-source vendor agreement with NewsBank, Inc. for digital library services for an initial one-year term with annual renewal options, and ratifies previous agreement renewals.

$175K

#3Authorizes an agreement with Hyland Software, Inc. via cooperative contract for continued use of automated invoice management software and related services for the Information Technology Solutions Department, with four one-year renewal options and annual price escalators of 3–5% beginning in year two.

$150K

#4Authorizes a Tax Increment Funding Agreement with TIF District #4 (Southside/Medical District) and acceptance of $50,000 for non-routine improvements and operations at Fire Station Park, accompanied by an appropriation ordinance.

$50K

#5Authorizes a sixth amendment to the lease and management agreement with LVTRise, Inc. to provide $150,000 in operations and programming funding for Rise Community Center in FY2026.

$150K

#6Authorizes an engineering agreement with Kimley Horn and Associates for up to $560,000 for improvements at Chapel Hill, Cibolo Hill, Harriet Creek Ranch, and Kristi Jean Burbach parks, with an appropriation ordinance and amendment to the FY2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program.

$560K

#7Authorizes a $13,105,155.35 construction contract with Circle C Construction Company for the Water and Sanitary Sewer Replacement Contract 2021 WSM-E Project, with an appropriation ordinance for the FY2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program.

$13.1M

#8Authorizes a $1,000,000 construction contract with Circle C Construction Company for the Water Main Replacement Contract 2026 with two optional renewals, and adopts an appropriation ordinance for the FY2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program.

$1.0M

#9Authorizes Amendment No. 1 to an engineering agreement with MAS Consultants, LLC, increasing the contract by $136,790.00 for the Sanitary Sewer Rehabilitation Contract 100 Project, along with an appropriation ordinance for Water's FY2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program contribution.

$137K

#10Ratifies emergency contracts for January 2026 winter storm water main break and pavement repairs with Circle C Construction Company ($695,164.80) and Tejas Commercial Construction, LLC ($378,188.49), along with an appropriation ordinance for Water's FY2026-2030 CIP contribution.

$695K

#11Authorizes a $644,400.00 engineering agreement with Kimley-Horn and Associates, Inc. for the Oversized Water Meter Advanced Meter Infrastructure Replacement Project, adopts a resolution of intent to reimburse expenditures with future debt proceeds, and adopts an appropriation ordinance for Water's FY2026-2030 CIP contribution.

$644K

#12Adopts appropriation ordinances increasing estimated receipts and appropriations in the Water Impact Fee Fund ($25,556,327.00) and Sewer Impact Fee Fund ($17,772,802.00) to transfer funds to the Water and Sewer Operating Fund for debt payments on impact fee-eligible projects.

$25.6M

#13Authorizes a sole source agreement with Unison Solutions, Inc. (OEM for Interra Global) to provide hydrogen sulfide media removal equipment, replacement parts, and repair services for the Water Department at up to $350,000 per year, with four one-year renewal options.

$350K

#14Authorizes a sole source agreement with Hartwell Environmental Corporation to provide gas feed instrumentation equipment, replacement parts, and repair services for the Water Department at up to $500,000 per year, with four one-year renewal options.

$500K

#15Authorizes a $1,116,936 settlement payment and appropriation ordinance to fully resolve all claims in the lawsuit Paula Conaway v. City of Fort Worth, filed in the 236th District Court of Tarrant County.

$1.1M

#16Authorizes Change Order No. 2 adding $210,248.50 to the contract with Circle C Construction Company for the 36-Inch Eastside II water main replacement project, along with a capital improvement appropriation ordinance.

$210K

#17Authorizes Amendment No. 1 to an engineering agreement with Pape-Dawson Engineers, LLC for $155,641 for the Eastside Transmission Main in Beach Street Project, and adopts an appropriation ordinance for Water's FY2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program.

$156K

#18Authorizes Amendment No. 5 to an engineering agreement with Brown and Caldwell for $677,860, bringing the revised total to $10,541,377, for the Emerging Contaminants PFAS Treatment Study Project, with an accompanying appropriation ordinance for Water's FY2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program.

$678K

#19Authorizes a $1,000,000 contract with Circle C Construction Company for 2026 Sanitary Sewer Pipe Enlargement with two optional renewals, and adopts an appropriation ordinance for Water's FY2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program.

$1.0M

#20Authorizes an agreement with D-Fend Solutions AD Inc. for drone detection equipment, software, and training up to $600,000 for the Aviation Department at Fort Worth Meacham International Airport, with four one-year renewal options, and adopts appropriation ordinances for both the Municipal Airport Fund and Municipal Airport Capital Projects Fund.

$600K

#21Authorizes an amendment to a sole source contract with Locality Media, LLC (dba First Due) for fire and EMS software, increasing the annual spending authority by $150,000 to a new annual total of up to $250,000 for the Fire Department.

$150K

#22Authorizes an amendment to a contract with Reliable Dental Supply & Service Company for an oxygen booster system, increasing the annual spending authority by $150,000 to a new annual total of up to $250,000 for the Fire Department.

$150K

#23Authorizes a sole source agreement with Carey's Heating and Air Conditioning, Inc. to monitor, maintain, and repair the air ventilation system at the Police Department's weapons range for up to $150,000 annually, with four one-year renewal options at the same amount.

$150K

#24Authorizes an interlocal agreement with the Fort Worth Independent School District to expand participation in the High School Police Academy, accepts $15,000 in funds from FWISD to support the program, and amends the FY2026 adopted budget via appropriation ordinance.

$15K

#25Authorizes an interlocal agreement with the City of Arlington for detention services at a minimum annual cost of $200,000, with four automatic one-year renewal terms, supporting the Fort Worth Police Department.

$200K

#26Authorizes a FY2026 grant contract with My Health My Resources of Tarrant County for up to $114,750 to operate crime prevention programming for Fort Worth residents under the Crime Control and Prevention District's Emerging Partners Program.

$115K

#27Ratifies and accepts a federal grant subaward of up to $2,000,000 through NCTCOG and FEMA for FIFA World Cup public safety costs, authorizes an accompanying interlocal agreement with NCTCOG, and adopts an appropriation ordinance.

$2.0M

#28Authorizes Amendment No. 5 to the construction manager at risk contract with Hunt/Byrne/Smith joint venture for the Convention Center, adding up to $7,000,000 and bringing the total contract value to $109,175,386.

#29Amends an interlocal agreement with Bound Tree Medical, LLC to increase the initial two-year term by $2.9M to a new total of $3M for medical supplies, and authorizes two one-year renewal options at up to $3M annually for the Fire Department.

$2.9M

#30Amends and restates a lease agreement with Casa Manana, Inc. for the facility at 3101 West Lancaster Avenue, authorizing $135,000 for a chiller replacement and up to $993,473.21 for additional building improvements through FY2028, with an appropriation ordinance and Capital Improvement Program amendment.

$135K

#31Authorizes a contract with Capko Concrete Structures, LLC for up to $2M in task order construction services for Trinity Metro bus pad projects at various locations, with one renewal option for the same amount.

$2.0M

#32Ratifies a Fair Housing Assistance Program cooperative agreement with HUD to process housing discrimination cases in FY2025, accepting up to $30,600 in federal funds with indirect costs waived.

$31K

#33Authorizes Amendment No. 2 to an engineering services agreement with Halff Associates, Inc., increasing the contract by $1,000,000 for project development and design of the Linwood & West 7th Flood Mitigation Project, bringing the revised total contract value to $3,000,000.

$1.0M

#34Authorizes Amendment No. 2 to an engineering services agreement with Kimley-Horn and Associates, Inc., increasing the contract by $1,000,000 for project development and design of the McCart Berry Flood Mitigation Project, bringing the revised total contract value to $2,500,000.

$1.0M

#35Authorizes a $355,000 change in use of Capital Projects Funds for Neighborhood Services to fund the Under One Roof priority home repair program administered by Trinity Habitat for Humanity, and authorizes execution of a related contract.

$355K

#36Authorizes reallocation of drainage revenue bond proceeds and pay-as-you-go capital dollars among projects with no net increase to total budgets, and adopts appropriation ordinances amending the FY2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program.

#37Authorizes a $550,000 forgivable loan from Urban Development Action Grant miscellaneous revenue to Maren Grove, LLC to support the Maren Grove Apartments at 801 W. Shaw Street, accompanied by an appropriation ordinance.

$550K

#38Authorizes a $608,628 engineering agreement with IEA Inc. for the design phase of the Shackleford Street Channel Restoration Project.

$609K

#39Authorizes a five-year tax abatement agreement with Eloy Alberto Molina Jr. and Maria De Jesus Ruiz for construction of a single-family home (approx. 2,227 sq ft, minimum cost $268,355) at 3540 8th Ave in the Rosemont Neighborhood Empowerment Zone.

$268K

#40Authorizes a reimbursement agreement with Atmos Energy Corporation for up to $1,022,486.25 to relocate a gas pipeline to accommodate the WJ Boaz Road Widening Improvements Project, funded through the 2022 Bond Program.

$1.0M

#41Authorizes acceptance of up to $2,180,000 in additional grant funds from the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs for the 2023 DOE Bipartisan Infrastructure Law Weatherization Assistance Program, increases the Home Repair Program contract authority by $1,416,792, and waives $48,172.45 in indirect costs to help low-to-moderate income residents reduce home energy costs.

$2.2M

#42Authorizes a construction contract with The Fain Group, LLC for $883,893 for the 2018 Railroad Trinity Railway Express at North Beach Street Project, and approves Amendment No. 2 to an Advance Funding Agreement with TxDOT increasing the total project amount to $1,243,736, with the city's share at $224,004 plus potential cost overruns.

$884K

#43Authorizes an engineering agreement with Walter P. Moore and Associates, Inc. in the amount of $488,807 for design services for the NW 20th Street True Creek Bank Stabilization Project.

$489K

#44Authorizes a construction contract with XIT Paving and Construction, Inc. in the amount of $825,377 for the A. M. Pate Safe Routes to School Project, funded through the 2022 Bond Program.

$825K

#45Authorizes a construction contract with Mario Sinacola & Sons Excavating, Inc. for $35,426,440.53 to build the McCart Avenue and McPherson Boulevard Project in Council District 6.

$35.4M

#46Authorizes a $22,288,804.77 construction contract with McCarthy Building Companies for widening Bonds Ranch Road from Wagley Robertson Road to Hawks Landing Road, funded through the 2022 Bond Program.

$22.3M

#47Authorizes a task order construction services contract with Fort Worth Civil Constructors, LLC for bridge rail unit price projects at various locations, up to $700,000 with two renewal options at the same amount.

$700K

#48Rescinds Resolution No. 6235-01-2026 and adopts a new resolution authorizing an advance funding agreement with TxDOT totaling $9,790,622 for the Everman Parkway Safe Streets Project, including $465,000 in city participation and 1,860,000 in transportation development credits.

$9.8M

#1Notice of claims filed against the city for alleged damages or personal injuries. This is a routine legal/claims intake item.

#1Upcoming and Recent Events; Recognition of Citizens; Approval of Ceremonial Travel

Changes in Membership on Boards and Commissions

#1Appointment of an individual to a board or commission seat representing District 2.

#1Resolution requesting up to $55,000,000 from the Texas Water Development Board's Water Supply and Infrastructure Grant for the Water Department, authorizing the application and designating an authorized representative.

$55.0M

#2Resolution approving amendments to the bylaws of the Fort Worth Housing Finance Corporation and appointing Chris Jamieson to its Board of Directors.

#3Appoints Chris Jamieson to the Board of Directors of Tax Increment Reinvestment Zone Number Two (Texas Motor Speedway TIF) and designates him as Chairperson, while acknowledging the other current board members.

#4Appoints Chris Jamieson and Lauren Deen to the Board of Directors of Tax Increment Reinvestment Zone Number Nine (Trinity River Vision TIF), while acknowledging other current board members.

#5Appoints Chris Jamieson as a member of the boards of certain non-profit corporations that benefit the City of Fort Worth.

#6Authorizes the City Attorney to add Parker County as a defendant in existing litigation against the City of Willow Park, which seeks a court declaration that certain Willow Park annexations were unlawful and void ab initio.

#7A resolution appointing Chris Jamieson to the Board of Directors of FW Sports Authority, Inc., while also acknowledging the appointments of the board's other current members.

#1Resolution to hold a public hearing and apply for a Texas Parks & Wildlife Local Park Grant of up to $2,000,000 for proposed renovations of the Gulf Coast Bait Shack exhibit within Texas Wild at Fort Worth Zoo.

$2.0M

#2Resolution to hold a public hearing and apply for a Texas Parks & Wildlife Local Park Grant of up to $1,500,000 for proposed improvements at Glenwood Park.

$1.5M

#3Public hearing to approve $9,720,521.00 in amendments to the Fiscal Year 2026 Crime Control and Prevention District budget for specified initiatives and programs, with adoption of an appropriation ordinance and corresponding update to the city's adopted budget.

$9.7M

#4Public hearing to adopt an ordinance incorporating the Master Transportation Plan into the Comprehensive Plan, along with companion ordinances amending the City Code and Access Management Policy to align with the new plan.

#1A zoning case requesting a change from Agricultural to Light Industrial for 42.06 acres in the 7200–7500 blocks (odd numbers) of Anglin Drive; the item is continued to December 8, 2026 at the applicant's request.

#2A zoning case requesting a change from Two-Family Residential and Agricultural to Planned Development/Light Industrial for 38.38 acres on Anglin Circle, allowing uses including a data center with specific height and setback standards; continued to December 8, 2026 at the applicant's request.

ContinuedPending4 monthsPD Amendment ZC-25-205

#3A zoning case requesting a Conditional Use Permit for a Concrete Batch Plant on 4.0 acres at 3800 Deen Road, retaining the Heavy Industrial base zoning with a five-year time limit and enhanced landscaping conditions recommended by the Zoning Commission.

#4Zoning amendment request at 4826 Wichita Street to modify PD1354 by adding massage therapy and spa, indoor amusement, event center or rental hall, short-term home rental, feed store, and liquor or package store as permitted uses, with updated development standards for supplemental setback and bufferyard. The Zoning Commission has recommended denial.

ContinuedSUP ZC-26-009

#5Rezoning request at 3524 & 3528 Frazier Court from 'A-5' One-Family Residential to 'R1' Zero Lot Line/Cluster Residential; the Zoning Commission recommended approval as amended to the less intensive 'B' Two-Family Residential designation.

ContinuedSUP ZC-26-015

#6Zoning amendment request at 5332 Sycamore School Road to modify PD823A to add auto parts supply retail as a permitted use, recommended for approval by the Zoning Commission.

ContinuedSUP ZC-26-017

#7Zoning amendment request at 5773 W. Risinger Road to modify PD1236 to permit attached signage, recommended for approval by the Zoning Commission.

#8Zoning case to rezone 68.49 acres at 2801 NW Loop 820 from one-family residential and agricultural to a planned development for light industrial uses, with numerous excluded uses and enhanced setback and open space requirements.

#9Zoning case to amend the PD1432 planned development site plan at 15801 Championship Parkway to remove detached multifamily dwelling units from the approved development.

#10Zoning case to rezone 3.09 acres at 3812 E Loop 820 S. from low intensity mixed use to a planned development for neighborhood commercial drive-through restaurants and retail, with detailed development standards governing setbacks, parking placement, and building orientation.

#11Zoning case to rezone 2.63 acres at 1509–1521 Circle Park Boulevard and 1506–1520 Lincoln Avenue from community facilities to a planned development for urban residential uses, excluding single-family and several other residential types, with standards for setbacks and 93 parking spaces.

#12Request to add a Conditional Use Permit (CUP) for an automated carwash at 180 Altamesa Boulevard (1.79 acres) within 'FR' General Commercial Restricted and 'F' General Commercial zoning districts, with site plan included; recommended for approval by the Zoning Commission.

#13Request to rezone 5700 Lenore Street (0.23 acres) from 'ER' Neighborhood Commercial Restricted to 'B' Two-Family Residential; recommended for approval by the Zoning Commission.

#14Request by H-E-B, LP to rezone 5.10 acres at 648 E. Bonds Ranch Road from 'AG' Agricultural to 'I' Light Industrial; recommended for approval by the Zoning Commission.

#15Request to rezone 1.14 acres at the 1400 Block of Marion Avenue from 'A-5' One-Family Residential to 'I' Light Industrial; recommended for denial by the Zoning Commission.

#16Franklin Leddy Corporation and W Real Estate Holdings, LLC seek a Conditional Use Permit (CUP) to allow a structured parking garage without a time limit on a 0.54-acre site at 115 NW 25th Street and 2458 Ellis Avenue in the Stockyards Transition Neighborhood Mixed-Use-55 zoning district; recommended for approval by the Zoning Commission.

#17City-initiated text amendment to the Comprehensive Zoning Ordinance to add Mixed-Use Residential and Multifamily Residential (including building conversions) as permitted uses in commercial and certain form-based districts, establishing development standards consistent with Chapter 218 of the Texas Local Government Code across multiple districts and overlay zones; recommended for approval by the Zoning Commission.

#18City-initiated text amendment to clarify that the Historic and Cultural Landmarks Commission is the exclusive authority for recommending historic designations or removals to City Council, removing that role from the Zoning Commission's powers and duties; recommended for approval by the Zoning Commission.

#BGeneral

#1Approval of Reserve Officer Julie A. Swearingin's appointment by the Chief of Police to serve in a supplementary capacity for the Fort Worth Police Department.

#DLand

#1Resolution authorizing eminent domain condemnation to acquire 2,180 square feet of temporary construction easements from two private property owners on Ashland and Tremont Avenues for the El Campo & Ashland Storm Drain Relocation Project.

#2Resolution authorizing eminent domain condemnation to acquire approximately 178,456 square feet of permanent water main easements and 299,548 square feet of temporary construction easements from multiple property owners for the Northside III 54-Inch Water Transmission Main, Phase 4 Project.

#3Resolution authorizing eminent domain condemnation to acquire 944 square feet of permanent sanitary sewer easements from two property owners on Burton Avenue, funded under the 2022 Bond Program.

#FAward of Contract

#1Authorizes a 10-year qualified management agreement with Gendy Street Management Corp. to operate the Will Rogers Memorial Center beginning October 1, 2026, with an annual management fee of $120,000 and estimated first-year city funding of $8,060,304 for net operating expenses, plus a $2,450,000 appropriation for employee transition and pre-FY2027 transition costs.

$120K

#2Authorizes execution of an economic development program agreement with Seco Enterprises, LLC for the construction of a new mixed-use development generally located between North Main Street, North Commerce Street, and NE 4th Street.

#1Standing agenda item providing an opportunity for 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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