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CITY MATTERS

Mar 19, 202418 min
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Good money, good morning, good morning, and welcome, welcome, welcome. It is time now for our City Matters program with his honor the Mayor. How are you doing there, Mayor Dalell? I am good Tom, how are you well? We got a lot going on, you know, it's the first day is spring, and I take a look at what we're looking at here today. There's just a lot going on there is. It's

springtime. Things are blooming and the city is bustling. Yep. First of all, I heard our city clerk, our city CFO talk about this about our sales tax, and it's amazing how it can be down and up at the same time. Well, it depends on what you're comparing to the last ten years. It's excellent. We're comparing to last year. It's down a bit. But we do can. We budget very conservatively, and I think

at the time that's tough. You know, it's just like your house, you know why we think we're gonna have more, let's just spend it might not, so we always budget conservatively. The budget has exceeded well, our receipts have exceeded our budget plan, but that's beginning to kind of level off. We're still ahead and last year was a record year. But I think we're thirty three thousand dollars but on a twenty six million dollar budget. That's not as much as it sounds like. But we are ahead and we do

budget that way, so we're in good shape. But it's great to see that receipts use tax. We didn't know, had no idea. Oh yeah, it's a baseline year. Now we're about fourteen months into that, so we're beginning to have last year to compare to, and it's out performing what we had expected and so that's a good thing. But again that was down too, so things are leveling off, but we're still in good shape. Hey, you know, if you want to be a part of government,

or at least you know, get a peek behind the curtain. We've got tons of opportunities we do. There's more than twenty commissions, boards, authorities and committees that meet. They do streets and parks and golf course and line library and just the list goes on. Cemetery, community center, ambulance service. There's just a lot of things. And we've got citizens people, your

neighbors and friends just like mine. But take their time, they bring their knowledge and they give their wisdom to study those particular areas in their particular committee or authority, and then when something comes to the council, a lot of that has been done. There's a lot of great input and it helps make the best decisions. But we ask people volunteer. If you have an interest in something, volunteer. Maybe there's not an opening right now, but next

month, next year, and we keep those. You can apply for several different You go to Citybartlesville dot org. You can download that application, complete it, submit it, never leave your requiner. You can go by city Hall, go up on the second floor, talk to Elaine Bain's in the city Manager's office. She'll get you a form. Take the form you filled out, or answer questions on how to do the form. But look at those and be at You'll learn a lot, but you'll also give back to

our community. Okay, we talked about some openings, but we've got another opening too. This is kind of at the top. It's a fire chief we're looking for. We do. Chief Topping has been there for a long long time, over thirty years, and there comes that time that it's time to retire, and I don't particularly like that. It'd be a bunch nicer if he just stay there forever. But apparently he didn't agree, so he's

set to retire in June. So we started the process, as we've done in other departments, to look for the very best candidate we can find, and that will be both an internal and external. We've seen that happen both ways. Time. We've had outside people come in and do a great job. We've also had people that were already here, so they'll look at that. That's not a city council function, that's something that staff does city manager, but that is going forward so that we can keep our fire department the

best in the state. How we doing water wise? Water is looking a lot better in springtime. We kind of expect that, but as you recall a year ago, that wasn't the case. Heal A Lake is full and a bit over up in what they call the floodpool. Copan has not, but it's a whole lot better than it was. It's still below being quote unquote full, but it is coming up. We're getting some rains. I think the other thing that's worth mentioning is we have asked repeatedly for people to

conserve water, use water. That's what it's there for. But don't waste water. Just like all resources, take care of it, whether it's your money or the gas bill or the electric bill. The water is a crucial resource, and I can tell you that people are doing a great job. We're using just over four million gallons a day, about four four point one four point one five. But it tells me that everybody has paid attention, is doing their part, and if we all do a little bit, it

adds up. Now the lot of reuse planning, everybody's thinking, oh my gosh, we're reusing our dirty water, Oh my gosh. And it's come on, folks. No, and we've talked about this and we'll continue to but the water is not being reused. We do have the pump and the pipeline in place, but we have to have ODEQ permits. They're running a pilot project right now to run tests on various different processes to get the very best called affluent, but basically what goes back in the rivers already going in

the river. We're just going to look hopefully in the future, probably twenty twenty six before all this finishes up. Everything is slow, but we'll put it in the river in a different place is the only difference. But that is not happening, regardless of what local experts proclaim online Keyboard war Year. Well, it just creates confusion. I'm always tell people, if you have

a question, call a city council member. Therefrommers are posted, call the city called Terry LARTs and the water utilities director and get the information firsthand. But no, that is not true. Oh good, Hey, we've got sign signs everywhere. Sign but they're looking pretty cool. They do the New Week all them wayfinding signs. They're at the parks, they're downtown. They're different places to help people. Even if you've lived here a long time,

you might not go on that street or in that section. And then then they look really nice too, but particularly for folks coming from out of town, might be coming in for a sports tournament, soccer, baseball, basketball, whatever, which by the way, Oakue was doing great on basketball. Yeah they are. That's good news. But we're continuing to expand that. You'll see little little concrete things and like, what are those Those are going

to be another sign at some point in the future. They're going through the process of getting those little concrete bases poured and then they'll come in and start adding more signs. Ultimately, the ones I'm looking forward to is is you come into town on Highway seventy five north and south, there'll be a welcome to Bartlesville brand new sign. I think this thing is like seven or eight feet high and eleven feet wide. Really looks nice. Matches the ones that

are already there. So those are continuing to pop up like that. Now we've got our state of the Police depart Apartment event. Yeah. I can't think of another word that would fit. Yeah, now that's coming up. Get the date, March the twenty eighth week on Thursday. It's gonna be at the we call it the Center, the Community Center, and they'll just talk about the different things. I'm sorry, I've just emraced what i just said. The judge tells the jury disregard that. Ye disregard that to Oklahoma

Wesleyan University. I'm sorry. But it's on March twenty eighth, which is a Thursday, from six in the evening to about eight, and the police department will discuss, I'm sure, answer questions all the things that are going on there. There's a lot happening there that running an Assitizens Academy, Police Academy that's been full every time they've run it. Everyone I talk to that goes to those comes away with a better understanding and really a better appreciation of

our police department. Now we talked about these unpaid boards and commissions and texts like that. We've got real job to pay, real money. Well, we'll do. There's all of those. There are lots of jobs, over three hundred employees with the City of Bartlesville, and we need good people, dedicated folks. They're looking for a good career path. There's good benefits. There's lots of good opportunities within the city. And there's a posting city Bartlesville

dot org. It'll tell you everything from this department to that department, what particular jobs. Obviously, FI Archief we talked about that. Yeah, I'm not qualified for that job either. I can't run into a burning building like they do now. But it's a great thing if you have an interest in that, or you have a friend that's looking for employment, looking for a career recommended least considering City Bartlesville. Right, very good. Now, we've

got an election coming up, we do. It's on April the second. What do we got going on. Well, it's interesting. Tom started doing a little bit of history, give you a little background on this. The first city charter was adopted in nineteen ten. We're both a lot younger than yeah, a lot lot younger. It's been amended many times in that period of time, once at one hundred and fourteen years. Some of the most

recent was April of eighty three, again in April of eighty five. The current charter was adopted in January of eighty seven, So every two years there were changes happening. There was a break there for about eighteen years, but then it was amended in April of two thousand and five and then again in November of two thousand and ten. And so what we're looking at is having an election April the second. It's not yes or no, you know,

all in one. It's broken out into ten separate questions. So the ballot will have ten things listed. Now half of those are basically housekeeping. The original this charter, if you go back and read it says if this charter is approved, then this changes in that Well, the charter was approved, so that language is now obsolete and we would clean that out. There was also a section there because at the time they met at seven pm, that

says new councils shall be sworn in and seated at seven pm. That's not got to happen. Well, it could, but we're really confusing because we now meet at five point thirty, which has worked very well. So there's five of those that are that kind of housekeeping. The other five deal with particular issues that the council felt we're worth putting out to our citizens, friends and neighbors that live here, shop here, go to school or whatever,

recreate and ask them what they want to do. So some of the things would be council terms. Right now, we went from four years to two. Four is a long time. Two. I don't think I Tom could learn the radio business in two years, and I look in this room and there's so many buttons and switches and lights flashing that it takes a while. Same thing with government and city council. So we looked at three years. We also looked at and there's arguments for and against all these things, and

that's the discussion we want to have. But we looked at three years and then staggering those so that you don't have a situation. I think they was told in nineteen seventy six when they had an entirely new council, and that might be warranted. I'm not saying that's not the case, but the confusion and the learning curve that happens, then you don't get the best government. You don't get things going. I always tell people what you want is dull

government. The trash goes away, the water comes out when I turn it on, it goes away when I pushed the little silver handle. All of these things happen. It's just dull and boring, and it works and it's smooth, and that's what you'd like to have. Then we also looked at the recall. It's never actually happened, so it's still theoretical. But it turns out the recall was pretty loosely framed, I think, and there were

no limits. So I think, well, there might be a situation when it was necessary to recall someone, and that's perfectly fine, and in fact, should happen. I would assume that that was a pretty egregious situation, that something had been done that needed to be addressed. And back to the fire department. If the building's on fire, we need to address the fire today, not next week or next year, and if there is something of that magnitude, then we ought to have that action taken in a timely manner

and get it resolved and keep the city moving forward. So we looked at a recall that would be allowed for up to one hundred and eighty days now, whether you have a two year term as we currently do, or if it went to a three year term, in six months when something has come up that enough people would sign a petition to initiate a recall, and then to ask right now, you have to have so many voters in each ward, well, it's over one thousand, and for the city clerk to have

ten days to verify one thousand plus signatures, they'd have to stop everything else they're doing. So the idea was put forward on that one to allow up to thirty days for them to get that accomplished. Still timely, but a little more time to do the job they already do, plus to handle that. And then finally, this one's a little I think, probably not as

exciting, but it's important. The city council sets a budget, the city council approves significant changes to that budget, auditions or deletions, and the City Council will approve contracts. Well, it's mister Bailey. The city manager has mentioned this. If you want to buy ten gallons of paint, he has the authority in his department heads to do that. Doesn't something you'd wait till next month to approve. On the other hand, if he wants to hire

someone to put on that paint, then there's a contract. Well now it has come City Council and it's cumbersome, and the question is is it propered? Is it the most efficient? The council still has the oversight not being taken away. What we're doing is we're taking all the situations that the c manager has the authority to do up to limits and we're going to change this

one and say this one's included. So there's consistency, and it makes for a more efficient operation and should save money and save time, which time is money. But that one I think is perhaps the least understood. But it just essentially aligns all of our different methods that we expend city funds and makes them consistent. Well, very good, very good. So we're going to have early voting on this, and of course we vote on April second.

Yes, I tell people vote. Whether you vote absentee, whether you vote early go down to the election board, which is the fourth floor of city Hall, or whether you vote on Tuesday, election day, please vote to have light turnouts. Oh, that's back up. That reminded me. That

was the other change was to move the elections from November to April. Now that one has garnered a lot of discussion, and that's great that people are concerned and interested me attention exactly why because in November, as you will know, Tom, you can't get a radio spot here at the radio station.

They're all taken up. We have state, we have federal we have a president, senators, governors, and somebody running for city council, our state, our school board by the way, an unpaid position gets lost in that flood and allowed. Yeah, the phone calls, I love those, the mailings, all of the different things, the social media posts. How do you even get somebody running for ward one in city council? Get your message out? People even know who you are when you're lost in that sea of

information. So moving it to April is when we have school boards and all the local things, and that's done across the state. That's what we did up until two thousand. Well we did it in twenty eleven, so it was later that we changed over in twenty twelve, and that twelve years of experience has shown us that sometimes the voters aren't aware of who is running to

represent them at the city council. They're not aware of what their thoughts are on a particular issue that may be important to you, and we want to bring that and elevate that up. And we feel like moving to April, I realize there's high turnouts in November. The problem is if they're there to vote on president or the governor, which is very important, have they really focused on their local government. So those are the things we're going to ask,

but basically just vote. Tell the people need to tell the city what they want, because that's what we're going to do very good. We need to clean up a little bit. It's been kind of messy since that fall. It was very dry, which created a whole lot of leard debris in my art. But we did this back in the fall. We do this in the spring. People might scalp their yard. Everybody has different methods of taking care of their lawns. But on May I have to look and get

it right here, because I've already messed up once. May the sixth through May the tenth, on your regular trash day, put out your polycarts the way you always do. But if you have yard debris, you can put as many bags, any bag, clear bags, color bags, whatever. You can put limbs and sticks and twigs as many as there are at the curb, not on the carts, but near the carts, and they will

be picked up, probably by a separate truck at a different time. But the limit is that the yard debris, leaves and black grass clippings need to be bagged, do not need a sticker of any sort. The limbs and sticks and twigs need to be bundled, no more than four feet long, no more than fifty pounds, tied up in a bundle, so that the city workers can pick them up and load them and get rid of them for you. The important word for all of this is that little word free.

It's free, my favorite price. That's right. No stickers, no tags. There's a lot of work. Get I'm ready, But if you put them at the curb, they'll go away. Very good, very good, mayor thank you for being with you tonight. I was preppycure. It's a chance to visit. All right, folks, you've been listening to. You are a city Matters program right here on K one. I'll never forge

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