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CITY MATTERS

Oct 23, 202330 min
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Ah, good morning, good morning, good morning, and welcome, welcome, welcome. It's the time now for city matters. If it matters to you, it matters to the city. And boy, Bud, we got the people in here. We've got the assistant city manager, Tracy Rolls, in a cast of hundreds. How you doing there, Tracy, We're doing great, said I wanted to even the score today. You brought enough with us today that we're gonna cover everything city related at some point in what thirty

minutes. That's sounds right, You're right. So I'm not gonna say much at all because we've got a lot of people here that have a lot of important things to say. All right, So we're gonna start with lours Sanders, who wants to hire good people for our city and to keep this cast of misfits under control. So Laura, go right ahead. But hey, we've got lots of city jobs open. We've got something for everyone. That's what I like about working at the city is there's so much diversity in our

positions. So currently we have maintenance worker for parts and for water distribution, and we've got police dispatcher positions open. We're always hiring for police and fire, and then we have our sanitation collector position available as well. So the city has excellent benefits, we have competitive salaries, and so it's really the place to work. I know that I'm biased sometimes, but oh a little

bit, but that's okay. So if you're interested in a job with the city, you can go to Cityobartlesville dot org and we've got a full list of the positions that we're hiring for. You can also apply through there. You can also reach out to us through phone. It's nine to one eight three three eight four two two one. Very good. So the online process, lord, is it? Everything can be You can apply for everything online. Yes, So there's an application out there that you can use for all

of our positions for police and fire. There is a checklist out there and so there's a few extra forms that have to be filled out for those, but for the main application, it's all out there and available, and any questions they can just call call HR and you guys can call help them through the process. And you know, one of the things that I think that we don't talk enough about are our benefits that are provided through the city.

You know, I've had the opportunity to work at a few places, and by far, the city of bortles Wille offers the best benefit package that I've ever had offered. So if you guys are interested, please take a look at that website. It's a great place to work, very good people to work around, great team. So thank you for what you do in your team. So, Mike, you had a fly in not long ago, and I hear it's pretty successful. The weather cooperated and we didn't do anything

that would have been considered bad. So if you want to talk about the fly in and how that went and what's going on at the airport, Yeah, thanks Tracy. So the first annual Back to Bartlesville Regional fly in was September the twenty third, That Friday and Saturday. The weather did bite us a little bit. Friday morning, we had some showers. Attendance was low.

We had a lot of aircraft that were scheduled to fly into Bartlesville that canceled out due to the weather, not just in the area but around the area. A lot of these guys fly open cockpits, and if you have a weather threat, they just tend not to want to get their airplanes out. But yeah, it was well attended. By the public, thank you for coming out. We had about I think between the two days we had about twenty four hundred visitors to the fly in. Had a super turnout for

the first regional fly in. We were showcasing the locally based DC three or C forty seven and the military designation for that aircraft. Lines were long all day long to tour that aircraft and we had eight six from Sweetwater, Texas. The WASP the Woman's Air Force Service pilots. A lot of folks don't even know that that branch existed in the late nineteen forties. The women would

fly although they weren't allowed to fly combat missions. They would take these aircraft out and fly them from manufacturing to the respective bases in the United States before they shipped out. It was a really unique organization. Didn't get a lot of recognition till much later in the scheme of things. They didn't receive veteran status until nineteen seventy seven, and then at one point it was actually revoked

and then reinstated. So great that those folks got the recognition that they deserved. But we're very much looking forward to next year's event. If you'd like to become a volunteer or a sponsor. You can go to the website at bartlesvillefly in dot com. There's a couple of tabs in there, so just check out the website. We'd love to have you as a volunteer and or a sponsor. We'd like to give a huge shout out to Charles W.

Harris Foundation and Betsy Kersey who manages that foundation. Charlie chaired the National Biplane Association fly in for I think it was twenty three or twenty four years, and also the Tulsa Regional fly in. So he's passed on now, but his foundation lives on and still doing a lot of good community It's very good. What was the oldest plane there? Oh, my gosh. The oldest airplane there could have been probably a Steerman maybe there was nineteen thirties, nineteen

twenties. Wildcat itself is an eighty two year old aircraft. It's a nineteen forty one. Our platinum sponsors got a ride. For being a platinum sponsor, they got two tickets for a tour of Bartlesville on Friday afternoon in Wildcat. So the eighty six from Sweetwater was also selling rides. I heard it was a bang up deal. It was kind of on the pricey side. I thought, four hundred and fifty dollars, I think to fly on the aircraft for forty five minutes. But it wasn't just a level of europe wheels

up, shut up. It was a very interactive flight with the instructor or not instructor, but the them and flying the pic piloting command. He was out doing some lazy SSEs. Maybe some split ass is a little you know, risky for somebody that is sensitive to motion. You might have to have a six sac in the back of the airplane in an eighty year old point. Yeah wrong, But you have good turnout and we're very happy with the way way things went awesome. Thank you so much for not just that event,

but for what you guys do at the airport every day. A lot of times I think that the airport gets forgotten and the good that it brings to our community, and you and your staff do a tremendous job. So thank you guys for what you do every day. I would mention that just a little bit of Oklahoma aviation industry facts, the Oklahoma aviation aerospace industry produces just under forty four billion dollars in economic activity in the state. It's the

second largest economic engine in our state. The average salaries seventy three thousand, three hundred, making it one of the highest average salaries in the state. And we are the state has one hundred and eight public use airports and which puts about ninety six percent of our population within thirty minutes of a jet capable airport of five thousand feet or more. So it's a little bit of economic data on the aviation. Very good, well, thank you very much talking

about economic things, projects and other things. Chief engineer, mister Mike Seemers. I don't I'm doing great. I feel like this is a little bit of a dirty trick. There's more people here and there's still a lot of time left on the clock. I don't see. I'm got to figure out ten minutes for you. We're out the door right all the time. All right, that's not bad. That's not bad. Yeah, you're looking like, wait a minute, Okay, I'll do my best. We'll see.

Yeah. So we've all kinds of projects going on the just the twenty twenty three g O bond pass. You citizens. We appreciate you guys getting out and voting, and that did pass. So we've got a whole slew of other projects that will come on the line here in the next couple of years. Won't see that for some time now. Still, we I think this fall will issue the last Troncha bonds for the twenty twenty g O bond.

So I think the first Tronch was nine point five million somewhere in there, and this next will be about the six six point five million, I believe somewhere in that ballpark. So again, not quite half the project still left to issue on that. We've been trying to work on design and whatnot on the rest of the projects and getting some of those constructions. So as far as we do having our construction right now, We've got the Delaware project.

This is an asphalt rehab essentially from Fifth Street to Hillcrest. It also included Clearcreek Loop, which that portion has done that's over there at Tuxedo and Madison and Bison, small neighborhood over there. They got that work wrapped up first, and then they dove into Delaware and started working on that project, got everything milled up, build the assholet. They're working on patching right now.

Some concrete handicapped ramps. Anytime we do a street project anymore, the ADA requirements require that if there are sidewalks essentially the intersect the roadway, that they're not eighty A compliant, that we have to make those ADA ramp connections and whatnot. So we've got, gosh, we've got a pretty substantial amount of ramps including that project as well. One of the more interesting things about the project though, it's kind of a really just a kind of a cut and

drive project as far as an asphalt and millon overlay. Nothing too exciting about that other than if you live on that street being good condition, but there is that was a portion of that is where the old Innurban railroad used to to run, and so in the design side of that, we were aware that there was potential for some remnants of that track underneath the roadway. You

could see it reflecting through the asphalt. And so Steve roper are our newest project engineer, he incorporated into the plans that we would investigate that that we'd salvage anything that needed to be salvaged as part of that contract. And so when they got that milled off and exposed, sure enough, there were portions of rail, and I think talking to Debbi and East and the History Museum, she'd never actually seen the portions of there's portions that rail along a curve

there that had had double rail section essentially. I think it's probably designed in such a way to help the trolley stay on the tracks, probably going around the curve most likely, And so she hadn't seen anything like that, because again, we got remnants all over town with this has popped up, and

she's got some small pieces and whatnot. But so anyway, at that point when they expose that, we worked with the History Museum, worked with the contractor other city staff to really try to come up with a plan for doing something with this, just to try to preserve that. So a couple three foot sections are going to go to the History Museum. I think they'll make

an exhibit up there on the or fifth floors City Hall. We tried to salvage pieces of the timbers, but those were degraded to the point that really didn't gain much out of that. So uh but we uh, we got some of the spikes and some of the track that they'll get and they'll make

a little exhibit up there at the History museum. But then also we salvage I think around seventy five feet of total track, so and the bricks as well, So there's a bunch of the I guess they're the Buffalo Buffalo bricks that were built there, you know, manufactured there in the early nineteen hundreds as part of this, and so we salvaged all the brick, we salvaged the rails, and so at that point we'll come up with a plan probably a later date, uh, to do something in one of the parks as

far as essentially reconstructing a portion of this track is for people to see, So that's on the game plan right now. So that was interesting. Not something we typically see on our project Sometimes our our stuff is kind of bland up there in engineering. But uh, but this is this is interesting for

sure, and I'm glad that we were able to do that. So kind of kudos to Steve Roper for identifying that and getting involved with that, and also Debniese the History Museum, and we had Larry Curtis involved on the community development side, and uh, it's a good thing. So glad we could do that. One of the other exciting projects that that's happening right now is uh pickleball courts. So it's amazing how many people are excited about and interested

in pickleball. Played it for the first time myself about a month ago something like that, and it's no major injuries. There were a few of our staff that was involved in that and the directory HI might have blew a hammy out or something. So we had you two, the police chief and the IT director. That was that's quite the Quite the force I'm telling it was really an We're an athletic force out there. It was. It was impressive to see. Telling you what, man, guys on the circuit better get

ready. So no being serious though. So the pickleball courts, we do have a bid opening on that this afternoon at two o'clock. I think this is one of the first projects that I've ever had enough interest from the public that we've actually got a couple of the interested pickleball parties showing up for the bid opening. So I won't necessarily change anything or the outcome, but hopefully get some good bids on that. And so the idea behind this is adding

some pickleball courts there by the tennis courts at Sooner Park. We've got a base bit of six courts, we'd like to build eight, so we do have a bit alternate for two additional courts. There's also a bit alternate for lighting. I think our preference will be, if we can afford it is to do at least six lighted courts, and then if we can do eight

lighted courts, that'd be great. But I think the preferences have lighted courts over more courts potentially, so we're looking at that, and we've got some bit alternates also for some taller fence around a perimeter. I think we bid it out with six foot fence in the base edwin're looking at eight foot. There's a bit alternate on that as well, and then some shade structures on the east side of the project for spectators or people who are waiting to play.

I think there's enough pickleballers out there that will probably have some pretty good lines waiting to play. Being que there so be a good project. If you go to the City of Ardmore's website you can kind of see really the concept that we were going with there when we designed this. So they've got some new pickleball course of the day just recently completed and this will be fairly

similar as far as the layout, So that's an exciting project. And then really other than that, we have a whole slew of parks projects that are under design right now. We've got we're trying to freshen up our parking lots at the parks. You know, years ago when there was a need for a parking lot, we just put in a gravel parking lot and moved on and those that served their purpose. And but you know, with development standards and whatnot, it's you know, we require other people to pave their parking

lots and whatnot. We feel like we probably got to get on board with that as well. So we're looking at doing that work at various parks, at Johnstone Park, at Sooner Park, even Lyons Park which is over there off of Hensley in downtown, and so we're working on design on that right

now. We've got designed on eighth Street storm sewer projects from essentially Shawnee to the east, about three blocks to the east of Shawnee, So we're actually just got plans on that this morning, so we'll be reviewing those plans, get that out for construction soon hopefully. And then we've also got a project on Clearview that should open up quickly. It's a concrete panel rehab project.

They're around the mid high and it's essentially from Adams to Baylor. It also includes a section of Baylor Place. Again, we've opened bids on that about a month and a half ago, working with the contractor on getting a date to get that started under construction. And that's really about what we got going

on right now that you should see something happening soon. The rest of it, like I said, is in the works, and I know we've been getting lots of questions on our bridges on Tuxedo Bridge, we've had the barricades up for a while. We did not decide to make patches on that and spend money on that project because we do have that are designed to completely replace that bridge deck. We're getting close on that. The plans that actually have

been done for about a month and a half now. We're just waiting on the corp of Engineers to cut us loose on the environmental side of things to permise to do that work. And then we're also working on the Sunset Bridge plans. Those are essentially in the same holding pattern as far as plans are complete. That bridge deck will be replaced as well, and just waiting on the court to cut us loose on that. So I'm gonna blame that. I'm big brother. If we can get them off I Center, we'll you

get to go on those projects. Hey here, it's more the core of lawyers and it is the corp of engineers. I think Terry can probably attest to that. Yeah, just repeating Goship, there you go, there you go. Good. One thing clarification on the pickleball courts. Now will the existing tennis courts go away or it will it be additional? This will be additional, So the additional that the existing course will stay there. This will be built just to the noise of that adjacent to we'll be shared parking.

Uh. We're actually as part of that parking lot project I was talking about, we are looking at reworking the UH, the striping and the paving UH to add more parking there on that corridor really between Center Park, the tennis courts and the golf course. So so we'll try to get some more parking in there for everybody because I know it will get busy. But but yeah, that's going to go to the north of it. Existing tennis courts will

stay there. And uh, and again I think there's been I don't want to say conflict, that's not the right word, but uh, there's you know, tennis players want to play tennis pickleball court people want to play pickle ball, and I think they have striped the tennis courts for some pickleball or tape them up that way. And so hopefully this will alleviate some of that and open it up for everybody and we'll have any skirmishes out there in the

tennis court. Well, you know, pickleball's picked up quite a bit. We've last three years we've had the Pickleball Fall Classic right at the country Club and they have hundreds of people playing, and yeah, this has gotten really big. It has, yeah, coming together there just the right time. You have whole venues of chicken and pickle and things of that nature. You can have dinner, have a drink and play pickleball, drink afterward. Make

the pickalla too exciting, Always ways to make it exciting. Well, thank you, Michae. I really appreciate that update. So look at it. Look at this time, we are right on schedule, are we not? Unbelievable? So Terry's going to talk about the water, the Water Resource Committee, the free chlorine process, so he's got a lot to talk about,

I do. But before we jump in there, just a little fun fact about our pickleball exploits because that we did defeat a team from I think it was the Mayor of Bixby and consultant and uh and and we won that match, and I think we retired right after that. Yeah, we're on top. We retire on top. Always go down, always go out with the

belt, you know. Yeah, yeah, Well, I think we were checking with HR to see if that was a Workman's comp eligible type of item, because I think we were kind of feeling it no, So any answer, I guess it's still no. So I guess answers that SO had some lingering arm issues after that is what you say, the fight for the city's honor on your own time, right, So I kind of see that, but it is what it is. So anyway, so we'll talk a little

bit about water. So water supply just to give an update of where we're at with that. We did change the metrics on how we measure that, or at least how we report that earlier this month in that we look at

the overall water remaining as well as a weighted water supply. So the overall water remaining is just all the water that's potentially available at our four sources, so that's Hulia Lake, Copan Lake, Hudson Lake, and the Caney River, and then the weighted water supply actually waits those by the amount of water rights we have at each of those each of those places. And so as of this morning, our overall overall water remaining is fifty nine point four percent

and the weighted water supply is seventy six point five percent. So technically we're still in stage two, but we are right on the threshold of moving toward or moving into stage three. So stage two is when the overall water remaining is between sixteen seventy percent and the weighted water supply is below seventy five percent or below eighty five percent, and then stage three is between fifteen and sixty percent, and then the weighted water supply is at seventy five percent, so

we are really just at the threshold of moving to stage three. There is four caster rains this week, and you know Kevin Potter, right before he walked in guarantee the rain in the right spot. I usually know he has that kind of clout, you know, yeah, I kind of paraphrase what he said there just a little bit. But Okay, we'll see if that holds true. Because I've my ability to direct the rain where it needs to go. It's not very good so mine. So we'll hope that that that

rain materializes. And really all of Southeast Kansas is struggling. It's just not us. I know that Canny has some pretty restrictive things going on. The Town of Independence, I believe has some water restrictions that are enforced, and so it's really not just being felt by us in Northeast Oklahoma. Really Southeast Kansas is uh is really seeing all these uh all these things come to pass unfortunately. So we'll pray for rain and a good soaking rain and a good

hard rain to run off quite a bit and into the lakes. But we'll see what it what it gives, and that's going to probably dictate where we move in the next couple of weeks. So if we do move to stage three, the restrictions do change, where Stage two has outdoor watering on two days a week. So if you're an even numbered of property. That's Tuesdays

and Saturdays. Odd number properties are Weday, Wednesdays and Sundays. If we go to the stage three, that's one day a week and that's even numbers on Saturdays, odd number of properties on Sundays, So we will get the word out if that comes to pass. We haven't enacted as far as Council has not enacted the water rates emergency water rates for stage two because we have

kept below the threshold that we need to prevent that. So on stage two we have to keep below five point five million gallons of water use a day, and we've been averaging about five point four million gallons of water use per day. But if we go to stage three, that threshold reduces down to

four point seventy five million gallons per day. So we will likely have a recommendation to enact the water emergency water rights or water rates if we do move to stage three, just based on that threshold and historic use up to this point. But we'll see what the rains have in store for us and then we'll proceed accordingly through there. So that's all with the water as far as we're at currently and where we're hopeful that we get all the rains and the

draft is no longer, but on the free chlorine conversion. So back in early October, we did convert to a temporary conversion to free chlorine. So the disinfectant that we use for our water system is a quarmine, which is a chlorine ammonia combination. It has some benefits that we decided that was needed

back in two thousand and ten when that conversion took place. But that type of disinfectant requires a regular flushing of your water system, and due to the drought that we experienced last year or currently, we did not flush the system

as we needed to just to help preserve water and conserve that resource. And so we did notice some increased biological activity in the water system on the very southern edge of it, which is south of Rice Creek Road in seventy five, and so to help mitigate that, we went to this free chlorine conversion to kind of help take care of all those all the those little critters and get everything reset to back where it needs to be. So we're right on

the mid part of it. So we've been it's been going very well. We've had a few call in complaints as far as color and some taste issues with it, but I think for the most part has been pretty successful. We will run that free chlorine until November fifth, and then we'll convert back

to the chloramine disinfectant. So if you have any questions or you have some issues with your water quality as far as it smells, has a different smell, a different taste, or it has some discolouration, if you'll just call the Water Office at nine one eight three three eight four one zero four. Then we'll send somebody out to take a look and make sure everything is where

it needs to be. But it's not uncommon as we go through this process to see some of those items that come up with it, but for the

most part, we haven't really experienced that. So we're hopeful these last few weeks we'll continue that trend very good and so on the Water Resources Committee, they've been meeting fairly regularly here in the last few months, and so their last meeting was back in September, and they did recommend changes to the water ordinance, the water Supply of Water Shortage Ordinance that council did adopt at their

October the second or third meeting, and then we've been implementing those modified restrictions and water shortage ordinance items from that point forward. But we did have a special release of city Beat today regarding all the water supply and history and kind of things that have taken place and where we're looking for water supply in the future. So if you're not a subscriber to city Beat, we would encourage

you to do so. There's a lot of information that comes out on a weekly basis there from Kelly and Kelsey, but this particular issue is dedicated solely to water and a lot of great information that's contained within that. So if you have any questions regarding some of the history of what we've on while we've done it, and what we're looking to do, that's really your one stop

shop to get all that information in one document there. But it is accessible online, So if you just refuse to subscribe to city Beat, you can get that through the city's website at citybarsbell dot org and you'll have to drill in a few pages to find citabat and then you can view that issue online as well. But if again, if you're not a city Beat subscriber,

I would do so. It's just a wonderful resource for not just water and in engineering or construction, but all types of activities that's going on with the city of borders with there here we have one question this study on the aquifer over in the oceagea anything come of that or are we wait for the Resource committee to make a decision. Well, that was one of the items that they did advocate to investigate further for us There is a lot of unknowns with

that particular water source. So this is an aquifer in central Osah County is considered a major aquifer as far as through the USGS as far as how they designate that, but there's very little information available up in our area as far as how much water it can yield or produce and then the water quality that

would result from it. So really everybody that's on that aquifer is just a residential house or a very small usage, so they would typically use about two or three gallons per minute as far as a typical use, and for our application, we're looking to use anywhere between one hundred to two hundred gallons per minute, so quite an order of magnitude difference. And so there's a process that you can do to determine those types of to determine the yield and the

water quality. That those are expensive to do, so that would take probably one hundred thousand dollars for us to do that yield study, and so we were looking to partner or to get some sort of grant to help offset some of those costs. We did miss the deadline for a federal grant, which was mid October. We just couldn't put all that information together, But there will be another probably midyear next year that we'll target to hit and see exactly

what we potentially have through there with that water source. So that was one of the items that the Water Resources Committee recommended to further investigate. We're also going to look at the reallocation of the flood control to water supply at both Hula and Copia Lake. So this takes a portion of that area that's normally used for a reserved for storage of flood to raise that normal water pool, the normal water surface of that lake to hold for water supply. So those

projects we'll partner with the Core of Engineers to investigate. But I think that we'll have a meeting probably either likely in early November that will provide some updates on when that information can be can gathered up all right. I want to thank you all for being here with us today. Dignity, compassion, excellence, stuff you your home. Crematory Bartlesville, No what stock An Bartlesville he twenty seven eq. Bartlesville,

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