DRAFT
ONLY. Without council review or
approval.
REGULAR COUNCIL MEETING
August 14, 2012
CALL TO ORDER: Mayor Echanove called the
Council Meeting to order at 7:00 PM.
ROLL CALL: Council members present: Cecil Floyd; Tim Jones; Connie Newman; Bo
Ossinger; Norm Schorzman; Alison Webb. Absent:
Rick Wekenman is working harvest. His absence is excused. Also present: Public Works Superintendent
Dwayne Griffin; Police Chief Jerry Neumann; Clerk-Treasurer Joyce Beeson; Attorney
Stephen Bishop; & Deputy Clerk Ann Thompson. Public present: Heidi
Keen; Heather McGehee; Bev Pearce (7:30).
APPROVAL OF MINUTES: There was
request for clarification on the requested ordinance about living in RV’s. Councilmember Schorzman MOVED to adopt the minutes of the Regular Council Meeting of
July 24, 2012.
Councilmember Ossinger seconded
the motion and the motion carried unanimously.
PUBLIC WORKS REPORT: Supt.
Griffin submitted a written report.
POLICE REPORT: Chief Neumann submitted the
July 2012 activity log. The PD received
another chicken/rooster complaint.
Owners of said chickens have no conditional use permit. The city needs clear-cut rules/ordinances on
the keeping of chickens/roosters.
Garfield is getting a policy which states a maximum of 10 chickens and 0
roosters, and only with a conditional use permit approved by the Board of
Adjustment. Much discussion
ensued.
NEW BUSINESS:
Award bid for Brownfields
soil remediation: There was a conference call between council
and Michael Stringer of MFA at 7:20 pm to discuss the bids for excavation of
contaminated soil at the Brownfields site.
The site is an old fuel storage site with gasoline and diesel in the
ground. 13 contractors showed up for
the site walk-through. The city
received 6 bids for soil remediation. ½
the bids were actually below the engineer’s estimate of $450,000. One special piece to this clean-up makes it
unique; there are elevated levels of lead and there are chemicals used to treat
the lead so it’s appropriate for landfills.
The bidders had to provide three references proving they’ve done lead
abatement; ERRG, the low bidder, wasn’t able to provide any references that
they actually did treatment of this lead-contaminated soil. We asked them to submit more references, but
ERRG subcontracted the lead abatement out, so we didn’t feel they were
qualified based on that and the strict rules around public bidding; they didn’t
meet the criteria laid out. The next
low bidder is PSC. They were able to
demonstrate qualifications required for this project. To summarize, ERRG bid $420,273.00 but was not a “responsible”
bidder; the first lowest responsible bidder is PSC Burlington at
$436,867.68. Councilmember Newman MOVED that ERRG has not
submitted the lowest responsible bid.
Seconded by Councilmember Jones.
Motion carried unanimously.
Councilmember Jones MOVED
to accept PSC Burlington’s bid of $436,867.68 as the lowest responsible
bid. Councilmember Ossinger seconded
and the motion carried unanimously. MFA
will have a pre-construction meeting with PSC next week. We should see work beginning some time next
week. Dept. of Ecology and Dept. of Commerce
are both very proud of the work being done on this. Phone call ended at 7:37 pm.
The city will have a
representative from the Brownfields Committee come to a council meeting and
give us periodic updates.
COMMITTEE REPORTS/REQUESTS:
Parks, Cemetery, &
Buildings-Alison Webb. Chair: no report
Policy &
Administration-Bo Ossinger, Chair: Committee met to discuss writing an ordinance
regarding people residing permanently in RV’s outside of mobile home
parks. Currently, we have a policy but
it’s hard to enforce since there is no one specific code that clearly addresses
this. This is something that must be
dealt with from time to time and is currently an issue. The committee will continue to research
this.
They also discussed, setting
up a city park usage fee for special events and setting an updated fee for dig
and cover when extending water and sewer.
Streets & Sidewalks-Cecil
Floyd, Chair: Taylor Engineering hasn’t gotten back yet
with an estimate for the Cove Road grant project, so Cecil will contact them because
the grant deadline is soon. The
committee has not met yet to discuss the agreement with the Palouse Tavern for
their outdoor seating area.
Personnel & Pool-Tim
Jones, Chair: Everything running great at the pool.
Water & Sewer-Connie
Newman, Chair: Councilmember Newman submitted a written
report. The city has received comments
from DOH for the WSP, and is currently working with Taylor Engineering to
respond to all the questions and comments from the initial review. Taylor is estimating they will need until
Sept. 4th to communicate with the DOH to answer all the
comments. Taylor projects that the WSP
will be available for public review and council review and approval by mid
October. The second draft of the WSP is
due back to DOH by November 3rd.
The committee is waiting to
get a SEP draft from Atty. Bishop. Once
the draft is received we will present it to council for approval. Committee will put it in a narrative format
to hopefully speed Atty. Bishop along. His
workload isn’t allowing him the time right now to work on this.
Police, Fire, &
Safety-Rick Wekenman, Chair: no report
Finance, Property, &
Equipment-Norm Schorzman, Chair: no report
OPEN FORUM:
Heidi Keen – submitted a copy of the waiver which includes the City of Palouse having
no liability for the Barley Bar Relay.
It will be held in the vacant lot next to the PCC. There will be other groups using part of the
lot earlier in the day so they will be very flexible if there are any spacing conflicts;
they don’t need much room.
Bev Pearce – attended a meeting with WSU Athletic Director Bill Moos, Pullman Police
Dept, WSU Police, WSDOT, and the communities of Oakesdale, Rosalia, Garfield,
& Palouse. There are 5 WSU home
games coming up, a new stadium, and 35,000 attendees. They are trying to alleviate a major traffic problem so they want
to partner with these communities to encourage alternate routes. There are exciting opportunities for these
small communities. They are going to
work together to make brochures promoting these four communities, to be
distributed to ticket holders. Maybe
Palouse can be a “WSU Cougar” town for a day, get flags to hang, tee-shirts to
wear, etc. Possibly have
busses/drivers, to chauffer RV’ers if necessary. They are brainstorming ideas.
MAYOR’S REPORT:
The Ride Around Washington
Cycling club was wonderful; those kinds of group visits/stays are huge assets
to our community.
Mayor presented council with
a grant application to TIB Pavement Preservation for chip sealing, for $46,451
cost with $0 match required from the city.
Councilmember Schorzman MOVED
to authorize the mayor to sign the grant for pavement preservation work in
2013. Councilmember Newman seconded,
motion carried unanimously.
ALLOW PAYMENT OF BILLS: Councilmember
Schorzman MOVED that the
bills against the city be allowed.
Councilmember Jones seconded the motion carried unanimously.
ADJOURN: Councilmember Schorzman MOVED to adjourn.
Councilmember Webb seconded the motion and the motion carried
unanimously. The council meeting
adjourned at 8:19 PM.
The following checks are
approved for payment:
Payroll Paid, July 30, 2012. Ck. #4185-4208 & EFT $46,287.24
Claims Paid, August 15,
2012. Ck. #4209-4248 & EFT $56,837.73
APPROVED:
________________________________
ATTEST: ________________________________
Councilmember Schorzman MOVED to authorize the mayor to sign the grant for pavement preservation work in 2013
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