HomeMy WebLinkAboutMIN JAN 13 1987 REGULAR SESSION
CITY COUNCIL - CITY OF BEAUMONT
HELD JANUARY 13, 1987 - 1:15 P.M.
BE IT REMEMBERED that the City Council of the City of Beaumont, Texas, met in
regular session this the 13th day of January, 1987, with the following
present:
HONORABLE: Maurice Meyers Mayor
Bob Lee, Jr. Councilman At Large
Andrew P. Cokinos Councilman At Large
Nell Pruitt Weisbach Councilman, Ward I
Mike Brumley Councilman, Ward II
Audwin Samuel Councilman, Ward III
David W. Moore Councilman, Ward IV
Albert E. Haines City Manager
Lane Nichols City Attorney
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The Invocation was given by Bishop Marshall Hayes, Church of Jesus Christ of
the Latter Day Saints.
The Pledge of Allegiance was led by Mayor Pro Tem Moore.
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Mrs. Thelma Smith, 995 Legion, presented a "Spindletop 50th Anniversary"
necktie, purchased by a member of her family in 1951 as part of that
celebration of Beaumont's history, to the Mayor for the City's use during it's
Sesquicentennial celebrations during 1987. Mayor Meyers responded that Al
Pollans, Chairman of the Sesquicentennial, he and members of City Council
would each wear the necktie during the year's celebration and hoped to return
the necktie to her in good condition at the end of the year.
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MAYOR MEYERS:
Next I'd like to ask JoAnn Polk, representing the Beaumont Symphony as it's
president, to come forward. I believe she had some comments that she wanted
to make today.
MRS. JOANN POLK:
I'm JoAnn Polk, president of the Beaumont Symphony Society. We are here today
for a very special reason and I am going to ask John French to come forward.
You all know John French. He's operations manager for IBM but he is our
president-elect for the Beaumont Symphony Society.
-8- January 13, 1986
MR. JOHN FRENCH:
I'm John French, 4450 Thomas Court, Beaumont. I feel it's my pleasure, Mayor
Meyers and City Councilmen, to extend an invitation to you and to the
department heads of the City government to be our guests at the January 22nd
concert of the Beaumont Symphony Orchestra. It is our belief that the City
Council and the department heads are doing an outstanding job in providing the
leadership of this community and also for the continued support of the Arts in
our community and for that we would like to invite you to be our guests at
that particular performance. In addition to that, if you have an opportunity
either at 9:00 a.m. or 11 :00 a.m. on the 22nd we will be conducting two
separate youth concerts. These concerts will allow 4,000 students in the
local school districts to come and hear some quality music and I think it will
be a wonderful experience for you to see the contribution the Symphony is
making to the education in this community. So, please, be our guests and if
you would, let the secretary in the City Manager's Office know if you are able
to attend and we will make sure you get the tickets. Thank you.
MAYOR MEYERS:
Thank you very much, John, JoAnn, both of you and to the entire Symphony, we
deeply appreciate your expression towards Council and the comments you made
both in your letter and what've you've said today, John, and I think Council
does have a very deep appreciation for the strength the Arts play in the
viability of communities - not now, but always, but I think perhaps more so
now than ever as we work to try and improve our economy. How a community
addresses the Arts and appreciates and assists the Arts I think is a great
reflection on the community itself and I know that we will all certainly try
and be there as well as at the youth programs because to indoctrinate the
young people to that level of art at that time in their lives is most
important. We thank you for that and we thank you for your expression today.
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One proclamation was issued: "Jaycees Week in Beaumont" - January 11-18,
1987. The proclamation was received by Mrs. Tiffany Barnett, president of the
Beaumont Jaycees.
Mayor Meyers asked Mrs. Barnett and as many members as possible of the Jaycees
to participate in the First Economic Summit to be held February 17th in the
Beaumont Civic Center. Mrs. Barnett agreed and also asked that a member of
the Jaycees be allowed to join the Sesquicentennial Commission.
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Mr. [tic Warchol, Chairman of the Convention and Visitors Bureau Committee, and
Mrs. Bonnie Cokinos, Chairman of Hospitality, presented plaques of
appreciation to Mrs_. Jan Allred for the Beta Sigma Phi Convention held
recently with 611 delegates equating to 1 ,800 hotel room nights, $183,000
actual dollars spent in Beaumont with a rollover amount of $916,000 for the
community and Mr. Bill Clark for_ the Texas Pest Control Convention, held
December 2-5, 1986, with 325 delegates equating to 975 hotel room nights,
$97,500 actual dollars spent with a rollover amount of $437,000.
-9- January 13, 1987
The following Consent Agenda items were considered:
Approval of the Minutes of the regular City Council session held January 6,
1987;
Resolution 87-4 reappointing Shirley Bartos and Roberto Flores to the Clean
Community Commission, with terms to expire September 30, 1989; Robert Pollard
and Ed Moore to the Parks and Recreation Advisory Committee, with terms to
June 30, 1989; Naaman Woodland to the Library Commission, with term to expire
October 31, 1989; Michael Ryals to the Transit Advisory Committee, with term
to expire June 30, 1989; Milton Bell, Chairman, Ron Lanier, Preston Shaw and
Whitfield Outlaw to the Zoning Board of Adjustment, with terms to expire
September 30, 1989 and appointing Charles Thompson and Bettye R. Smith
(Alternate) to the Zoning Board of Adjustment with terms to expire September
30, 1989 and Frank Rojas, Sr. , to Sesquicentennial Commission, with term to
expire December 31 , 1987;
Resolution 87-5 granting a license to encroach with Dr. & Mrs. Thomas F. Pugh
for a swimming pool extending five (5') feet into a ten-foot-wide utility
easement in the rear of their residence on the northeast corner of Sheridan
Lane and Sheridan Place and described as Lot 9, Sheridan Park Addition, for a
one-time license fee of $500.00; and
Resolution 87-6 authorizing the conveyance of an easement out of Parcel 78 to
the Kansas City Southern Railway Company across property purchased for the
Martin Luther Ring, Jr. , Parkway Spur 380 Project (Parcel 78, 18,722 square
feet out of the David Brown League, Abstact 5, purchased from Miriam Burns and
Ronald D. Harvey at States's appraised value of $14,142.00) and transfer of
the property to the State subject to the easement.
The Consent Agenda was approved on a motion made by Councilman Samuel and
seconded by Councilman Moore.
Question: Ayes: All Nayes: 'done
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No one wished to address City Council on Agenda Items B through D.
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Resolution 87-7 reappointing John Paul Davis as Chief Magistrate and Wendell
Radford as Alternate Magistrate for two year terms at the Municipal Court with
terms beginning January 13, 1987 and ending January 13, 1989 was approved on a
motion made by Councilman Cokinos and seconded by Councilman Moore.
Question: Ayes: All Nayes: None
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-10- January 13, 1987
Resolution 87-8 accepting the work performed by Merrill Construction Company
under the Carroll Street Park Drainage and Landscape Plan and authorizing
final payment to' the contractor in the amount of $40,293.83 (Change Order No.
1 at $900.00 added removal of old concrete and chain link fencing, clearing of
trees and installation of a new chain link fence. Change Order No. 2 deducted
$160.00 for 80 square feet of unacceptable sidewalk, reducing final cost of
the work to $53,144.00 - funded through the Community Development Block Grant)
was approved on a motion made by Councilman Weisbach and seconded by
Councilman Lee.
Question: Ayes: All Nayes: None
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Resolution 87-9 authorizing the Public Works Department engineering staff to
negotiate professional services contracts with consulting engineers for three
projects of the Comprehensive Plan: Mark Whiteley & Associates for the
Cartwright-Terrell Street Box (estimated at $3,035,400 for a system of
underground boxes and storm sewers to relieve the loaded drainage structures
serving 1 ,288 acres of the Cartwright-Terrell drainage area extending from
Interstate 10 to Avenue A); Bob Shaw Consulting Engineers for the High School
Ditch - 9th Street Relief Project (estimated at $1,653,800 including new storm
sewer system and other improvements to serve 600 acres between Interstate 10
and First Street and extending from Ashley Avenue to the Southern Pacific
tracks) and Garrod and Dartez for the Fannin Street Box (estimated at
$1,407,000 for improvements including new underground box along Fannin from
Interstate 10 to Fourth Street and a storm sewer on Sixth Street north to
Crockett to relieve flooding in a 490-acre area drained by the Fannin Street
Box System) was approved on a motion made by Councilman Brumley and seconded
by Councilman Cokinos.
Question: Ayes: All Nayes: None
Councilman Samuel questioned whether the Minority Business Enterprise policy
would be addressed with these contracts. Mr. Tom Warner, Director of Public
Works, responded that Council had just approved negotiations to establish
contract prices for these contracts and that during these negotiations, the
MBE policy will be considered.
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Resolution 87-10 approving the allocation of $26,290 in historic museum grants
budgeted from the Hotel-Motel Transient Room Occupancy Tax Fund to five (5)
local historic museums: $7,630 for operations and maintenance of the Babe
Didrikson Zaharias Museum; $10,000 for continuation of the Beaumont Heritage
Society tours; $7,630 to pay docent guides to explain and interpret exhibits
for the Spindletop Museum and Gladys City Boom Town and $1 ,030 improving
display cases and hardware for the Fire Museum of Texas, was considered:
After a lengthy discussion concerning $4,000 of the $26,290 being directed to
the Fire Museum of Texas, City Manager Haines told Council that he had
recommended the original amounts for the *Museums as the same amounts received
by these Museums last year because their budgets had been prepared to include
these anticipated amounts. He further said that in preparation for the City's
1987-88 budget, these groups would be asked to submit applications for funding
which would become part of the budget planning.
-11- January 13, 1987
Councilman Cokinos made a motion to reduce the Babe Didrikson Zaharias Museum,
Beaumont Heritage Society and the Spindletop Museum and Gladys City Boom Town
each by $750 to be added to monies for the Fire Museum - Babe Didrikson
Zaharias Museum to receive $6,880; Beaumont Heritage Society, $9,250;
Spindletop Museum and Gladys City Boom Town, $6,880 and the Fire Museum of
Texas to receive $3,280; motion died for lack of a second.
Resolution 87-10 accepting the City Manager's recommendation for the
allocation of the $26,290 was approved on a motion made by Councilman Moore
and seconded by Councilman Weisbach.
Question: Ayes: Mayor Meyers Nayes: Councilman Cokinos
Councilman Lee
Councilman Weisbach
Councilman Brumley
Councilman Samuel
Councilman Moore
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Councilman Samuel announced that the next City Council Town Meeting will be
held at 7:00 p.m. , February 3, 1987, in the Douglas Memorial CME Church, 1370
Ewing Street, and urged all to attend.
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Councilman Moore reported the poor condition, huge potholes, on E. Virginia
from 4th Street and the railroad tracks and also that he has been told the
buses traveling on S. 8th Street near the Mental Health Mental Retardation
facility are causing rolls in the pavement and that area needs attention also.
Councilman Lee reported that on Thursday evening, the 16th Region of the Texas
Municipal League will host its annual meeting in Beaumont, with Mr. Bob
Bolin, Mayor of Fort Worth, who is also the president of the Texas Municipal
League, here to visit with City officials.
Councilman Samuel reminded all of the Ground Breaking Ceremonies for the
Martin Luther King, Jr. , Parkway (Spur 380) project to be held Sunday, January
18th at 3:00 p.m. at the intersection M. L. King Parkway and Threadneedle. A
reception for viewing the Model of the completed project will be held at the
Montagne Center at Lamar University.
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Mr. Henry Dannenbaum, 1557 Wall, presented Councilman Weisbach with a box of
chocolates. In addition, he again spoke about the need for halfway houses to
be certified.
Mr. Lindsey Walker, 2537 Calder, addressed Council to suggest that the
Beaumont Art Museum release their 99--year lease on the 'Delaware Street
property, but retain the right to use the property for Kaleidescope
activities, display of sculpture or museum-type uses in order to allow
volunteers right-of-entry onto the premises to clean the litter and debris
left by Hurricane Bonnie and to use the property as a passive park.
-12- January 13, 1987
There being no further business, the meeting was recessed before continuing
with the City Council Workshop Session.
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I, Rosemarie Chiappetta, Secretary in the City Clerk's Office, certify that
the above is a true copy of the Minutes of the regular City Council session
held January 13, 1987.
Rosemarie Chiappetta
Secretar -
-13- January 13, 1987
EXCERPT FROM REGULAR u� Y COUNCIL
SESSION HELD JANUARY 13, 1987
CITY MANAGER HAINES:
The next item is a resolution approving the allocation of grants to historic
museums from the amount of $26,290. Those funds were budgeted for the purpose
from the Hotel-Motel Transient Occupancy Tax Fund. This resolution would
authorize dispursement of grant funds to local historic museums as follows:
to the Babe Didrikson Zaharias Museum, $7,630; Beaumont Heritage Society,
$10,000; Spindle tap Museum and Gladys City Boom Town, $7,630. Those three
amounts are the same as they were in the previous year and then finally to the
Fire Museum of Texas, $1,030. I might make, a brief comment that in the
future, we will be requesting museums to file applications as part of the
City's regular budget process so that the allocation decisions could be made
during the budget period by Council. We recommend approval of the resolution.
MAYOR MEYERS:
Are there any questions of Council?
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
Yes, I've got a question. Mr. City Manager, Beaumont has the rare distinction
of being the home of the Fire Museum of Texas and this is an invaluable
tourist attraction to the City of Beaumont. It's the only one of its kind in
the State of Texas. I've seen many school children, many visitors go through
the Fire Museum and it's very an outstanding Fire Museum. It's my
understanding that more than 6,000 tourists and children go through this Fire
Museum here in Beaumont and furthermore, there will be a tv show on the Eyes
of Texas on KPRC in Houston honoring the Fire Museum of Texas. My question is
why was this allocation reduced from $4,000 to $1,030?
CITY MANAGER:
Thank you, Councilman. That's I think an appropriate question. As you will
recall there had been a previous submittal to Council that called for a
different distribution of funds. As we reviewed the previous proposal that
was being considered, we realized that the three museums, particularly the
Zaharias, Beaumont Heritage Society and Spindletop had already entered into a
budget year with a fully anticipated perception that they would receive
funding equal to that amount which they had received in the prior year. The
Fire Museum of Texas has never been funded out of this particular source of
funds in the past and neither had the Edison Museum which also submitted a
proposal. We felt that the first responsibility we had was to retain a . . at
least a perceived committment to the three museums that had previously been
funded at the levels that they had been and if there were funds remaining that
we would make those available first to the Fire Museum of Texas and secondly
to the Edison Museum, which is what we have done here. So, essentially, I
would rather respond by saying we have not reduced funding from $4,000 to
$1 ,000; we have increased funding to the Fire Museum from zero to $1 ,000.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
Who made this decision to cut the allocations.
EXCERPT FROM REGULAR t,.-fY COUNCIL
SESSION HELD JANUARY 13, 1987 Page 2
CITY MANAGER:
The allocations were not cut, Mr. Cokinos. The decision was my decision, it
was made to maintain a funding level to those three museums equal to what they
had been in the previous years and then to make any surplus available to the
Fire Museum.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
According to the Council letter of December 26th, it showed that the Fire
Museum of Texas was to receive $4,000 to be used for improving display cases
and purchasing hardware and furthermore I think they were planning on buying
harnass so they can pull the old fire wagon with. Now, you say that $4,000
originally wasn't committed to the museum . . . ?
CITY MANAGER:
No, sir. . . . . . .
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
It says right here . . . . . .
CITY MANAGER:
No, sir, Mr. Cokinos. If you will recall, I pulled that item from the
agenda. It was not a recommendation.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
You pulled that item for another reason. It wasn't because of the Fire Museum
of Texas.
CITY MANAGER:
I pulled the item because there was not sufficient funding for the other three
museums. The only way there could be a $4,000 allocation made to the Fire
Museum is if we reduced funding to the other three museums and I could not
recommend it. Council may do that, that's fine.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
Well, you increased the others but you decreased the Fire Museum. Yes you
did.
CITY MANAGER:
Mr. Cokinos, I think if you will look at your tabulation sheet you will find
that the 1986 funding amount for Zaharias, Beaumont Heritage Society and
Spindletop Museum are exactly the same as they are being proposed here today.
EXCERPT FROM REGULAR t,LTY COUNCIL
SESSION HELD JANUARY 13, 1986 Page 3
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
$5,000 on December 26th and this time it was $7,000 . . . let's see, you reduced
. . I mean you increased the Babe Didrikson Zaharias Museum to $7,630 and
according to the Council letter, it was originally scheduled for $5,395. Isn't
that right?
CITY MANAGER:
I think if you will look at the column. I'm not interested in what I
submitted to you because I pulled the item. I did not make that
recommendation to you, Mr. Cokinos, or to the Council.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
Okay, the Beaumont Heritage Society was originally for $8,000. You increased
it to $10,000.
CITY MANAGER:
That was a recommendation that came to me from staff. I . . it went on the
agenda. I pulled it from the agenda and requested Council not to discuss the
item, that I was not making that recommendation. So, I would certainly
apprecsiate it, Mr. Cokinos, if you would look at the funding level from the
previous year. You will there find that the amount is exactly the same as it
is being presented to you today and I think I have explained to the Council
why.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
I've got different figures. The Spindletop Museum shows $5,000 and you
increased it on this particular . . . . . . I mean I have no objections about the
other museums. I'm just wondering why the Fire Museum of the State of Texas,
the only one in the State of Texas, was cut from your original $4,000 to
$1,030? That's all I want to know.
CITY MANAGER:
Mr. Cokinos, that was not my recommendation. That was a letter that came to
me from another department that had reviewed the applicaltions. I met with
that Department Head after I had pulled the item from Council. I said we will
not cut funding levels for museums that already anticipated a certain funding
level equal to the prior year. We will therefore grant those funding levels
as they were last year and fund whatever may be left over to the Fire Museum.
I didn't cut anything. I added a $1 ,000 to the Fire Museum.
EXCERPT FROM REGULAR uiTY COUNCIL
SESSION HELD JANUARY 13, 1987 Page 4
MAYOR MEYERS:
I get paid a lot of money to run this show and knowing that that's a bunch of
baloney, let me make a suggestion here. The grants last year, other than I
think just a typographical error, show $7,360 or probably $7,630 for the Babe
and the same for the Heritage Society had requested $16,856 and they were
adjusted to the same level and the Spindletop also requested $15,000 and they
were kept at the same level which I think you are stating. So, really, it
left $1,030; but I think beyond that . . . have we had a motion? No, that's
good. I think the key here is if in fact, Councilman, if you would want to
suggest something otherwise, there's no reason not to and the Council does
have the final action on how this money is allocated and you are more than
welcome to speak to that now, if you want to.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
Well, the . . . Mr. Mayor, thank you very much. I'm just going back to this
letter of December . . . the recommendation for this year for the Fire Museum of
Texas was $4,000 - grant you, this is the first year . . first time that they
have asked for money from the City. They didn't receive any grants last year
and then here today I noticed that the Fire Museum of Texas, the only one in
the State of Texas, is receiving $1,030 and all I want to do is I want to find
out why. I think I am entitled to know why it was reduced almost $3,700
whatever. . . .
MAYOR MEYERS:
The request was reduced, as I understand it, because at the time the Manager
brought forward, whenever that was, that other proposal, those amounts that
would have been allocated for the other three would have been lesser than they
received last year and had already wheeled into their budgets and, as a
result, I assume to permit them to continue to operate at a funding level that
they were locked into, he readjusted that - is that correct? And, that was
what brought about the $1,030; but, again, I say that if we understand that as
the process, we can stop right at this point and change it in any way that
Council would care to.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
I would like to see the recommendation that the City ?Manager submitted for
this year for the Fire Museum of Texas where it be raised back to $4,000 . . .
MAYOR MEYERS:
Would you read the other amounts and how it would effect those. I don't have
that with me. You've got it right there.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS: I have . . . I have . . .
MAYOR MEYERS:
You've got it right there. Isn't that all the originals? It's the same
totals, right?
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
Yes, sir. The recommendation for this year . . .
MAYOR MEYERS:
What would the Babe get?
COUNCILMAN COKINOS: $5,395.
MAYOR MEYERS: All right.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS: Now, this is from the . . . . . .
MAYOR MEYERS: I understand. And the Heritage Society?
COUNCILMAN COKINOS: $8,000.
MAYOR MEYERS: Even?
COUNCILMAN COKINOS: Yes, sir.
MAYOR MEYERS: Okay, and Edison Plaza?
COUNCILMAN COKINOS: Well, I think that's been . . . . . .
MAYOR MEYERS: I know but did they have zero there, too?
COUNCILMAN COKINOS: They had $3,500.
MAYOR MEYERS: Okay.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
And the Fire Museum of Texas is $4,000 and the Glayds City Spindletop Museum
is $5,395.
MAYOR MEYERS:
Okay, does Council understand what we are doing here. Okay. Now what?
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
Now, I'd like to see this Fire Museum of the State of Texas raised back to the
original $4,000.
MAYOR MEYERS:
And, do you want to do that with the other amounts as it was on that sheet?
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
Yes, sir. I have no qualms about the Babe Didrikson or . . . I'd just like to
see the Fire Museum back where it originally was . . . $4,000. Yes, sir.
EXCERPT FROM REGULAR CITY COUNCIL
SESSION HELD JANUARY 13, 1957 Page 6
MAYOR MEYERS:
Now, does Council have any questions? I think, if I understand it, and then I
will ask for a motion if you would care to make it or you can make it now and
we can discuss it.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS: Yes, sir.
MAYOR MEYERS:
You are suggesting that the Babe Zaharias Museum be allocated $5,395 . . .
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
No, sir. Let's go ahead with the recommendation just like it is on the sheet -
$7,630 for the Babe Zaharias just like you have it, Mayor, and the Heritage
Society the $10,000 and what I want to do is to put the $4,000 back in the
Fire Museum of Texas.
MAYOR MEYERS: Where are you going to take it from?
COUNCILMAN LEE: Where are you going to take it from?
COUNCILMAN BRUMLEY: Where are you going to get the money?
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
I don't know. I mean I don't want to cut anybody. I don't want to cut the
Heritage Society; I don't want to cut the Babe Zaharias . . .
MAYOR MEYERS:
We have a total of $26,290 that we are working with.
COUNCI;_:MAN COKINOS: That's the total.
COUNCILMAN BRUMLEY: Yes, we just have a set amount.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS: Well, let's work it out.
MAYOR MEYERS: Good.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS: All right. What do we need? About $3,000?
COUNCILMAN LEE: Yes, we need $3,000.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS: Okay, let's take $1,000 from each one . . from each one of
the other museums or even $3,000. I don't know. I don't want to hurt any of
the other museums, Mr. City Manager. All I want to do is give the Fire
Museum, which is a rarity, money to operate.
MAYOR MEYERS: Well, let's let you put it together so that you can put it in
the form of a motion, if you will.
EXCERPT FROM REGULAR CITY COUNCIL
SESSION HELD JANUARY 13, 1987 Page 7
COUNCILMAN COKINOS: All right, sir. And, if it's not fair for them to go
back up to $4,000, I would say let's give the Fire Museum $3,000, which the
original allocation was $4,000.
MAYOR MEYERS:
All right. So you are proposing $3,000 for the Fire Museum.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
Yes, sir. Take a $1,000 from the others to make up the difference there.
MAYOR MEYERS:
Well, that would be $2,000. Who do we take it from?
COUNCILMAN COKINOS: Well, I'm open for suggestions.
MAYOR MEYERS: This is your baby.
COUNCILMAN LEE:
I have a little bit of a problem with what you are suggesting, though, and
that is because, in the budget process, we allocated the $26,000 for the
Museums and because the museums that are being funded under this proposal have
already wheeled into their budgets the dollars that are allocated as shown
here that are essentially exactly the same as was received last year, it's
going to create a problem for those museum properties to have any difference
than is . . . difference from that that is shown here, Councilman, and the fact
that the Fire Museum will get an additional $1,000 - which they have not ever
gotten before - is certainly going to be beneficial to the Fire Museum
itself. So, I would speak in favor of the proposal that we have on our desks
rather than to rearrange the dollars as you are proposing.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
Well, I would say let's take . . of course, . . . may we continue on this? Okay,
I would suggest you take say $500 and $500 and $500 and raise that up to
$1,500. Is it possible to . . to save $750 from each one of the
recommendations of this year to apply to the Fire Museum, Mr. City Manager? I
not only want to be fair with the Fire Museum. I want to be fair with the
Heritage Society and the Spindletop Museum and Babe Zaharias.
COUNCILMAN BRUMLEY:
I would agree with what Councilman Lee has said that you've got three
organizations that have made a, you know, just like the City makes a budgetary
committment. They've committed themselves for a budget that . . of which
revenues include in the Babe Didrikson Zaharias, $7,630 and they set their
expenditures along the lines that they will receive from the City $7,630. Not
to give them back what they've budgeted would be asking them to realign their
budget.
EXCERPT FROM THE REGULAR CITY COUNCIL
SESSION HELD JANUARY 13, 1987 Page 8
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
Well, the same falls for the Fire Museum. They have been anticipating .. .
they say their request for this year was $6,000.
COUNCILMAN BRUMLEY:
No, see, the Fire Museum . . . . . .
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
I know it . . . I know
COUNCILMAN BRUMLEY: Okay.
CITY MANAGER:
I guess to respond to your question, Councilman, I think our dilema is exactly
the dilema that you are talking about here now. You've got $26,000, you've
got three organizations that are essentially well into their budget year. You
know, $500 or $1 ,000 may not appear to be a lot of money but I am sure it is
substantial to them and our dilema, frankly, was that we would have preferred
to have seen increased funding for Fire Museum but we had difficulty
reconciling the only way that could have been done would have been to have cut
it. Now, that certainly could be the case if we enter into . . . if we can deal
with that during the budget process rather than after the fact, but this is my
best shot, you know, given the fact that I wanted to keep funding at 100
percent of what it had been the year before; but, if you wanted to change it,
I know that the Heritage Society is represented here.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
My request that in order to give the Fire Museum of the State of Texas a
little breathing room theirselves, that I'd like to see $750 taken from each
of the three to give to the Fire Museum, which would give them $3,250, which I
think is very reasonable. And, they have people from all over the country
coming there at that museum.
CITY MANAGER:
I guess I don't feel as sympathic to the Fire Museum as I should because,
frankly, they anticipated nothing going into their budget. They weren't even
a part of this until about two months ago.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
That's not even in question, Mr. City Manager. That's not fair at all.
CITY MANAGER:
I think it is compared to what the other organizations . . . . . .
EXCERPT FROM REGULAR uITY COUNCIL
SESSION HELD JANUARY 13, 1987 Page 9
MAYOR MEYERS:
I think the other major question, Councilman, is if you want to put that in
the f arm of a motion, this Council will determine . . . we might not . . .
somebody might want to give all $26. . . whatever to somebody. I mean, we have
that prerogative. We are asking the Manager, sure, my point is if you have a
desire to direct the funds in some specific way, it's the Council that's going
to determine where the money goes.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
Well, I hope the Council is receptive on this because I would like to see . .
they have a lot of programs that they want to proceed with and it would really
be a helpful thing to the Fire Museum to get some additional money and I would
suggest, if you want me to put it in the form of a motion, I will, that we
take $750.00 from each of the above and place it in the Fire Museum of Texas
which will make it a total of $3,250.00 and I hope I get a second.
MAYOR MEYERS:
All right. Let me see if I have this correct. The motion is that the Babe
would be reduced by $750, the Heritage Society by $750, Spindletop by $750 and
that $2,250 would be added to the $1,030 . . .
COUNCILMAN COKINOS: That would be $3,250.
MAYOR MEYERS:
$3,280. Now, we have that motion. Is there a second? Okay, being no second,
the motion dies for lack of a second. Now I would entertain any further
discussion that Council would have on the subject.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS: Thank you, Mr. Mayor.
COUNCILMAN SAMUEL:
I would like to make a suggestion. I have a problem with making cuts at this
point because the budgets are in place. I think one way we might be able to
deal with this is in the upcoming budget. We remember that the Fire Museum
had requested more money and we can do it at that point but in cutting a
budget that's already in place, I feel very uncomfortable about it and I do
recognize the need for the Fire Museum and I don't think that's the sign
that's coming from the Council - that we are not concerned . . . . . . so, that's
my feeling.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS:
Councilman Samuel, the recommendation this year were increased on everybody
but the Fire Museum. It was originally recommended that $5,395 go to Babe
Zaharias and you increased it to $7,630. I don't see how you are going to
hurt their budget.
EXCERPT FROM REGULAR CITY COUNCIL
SESSION FIELD JANUARY 13, 1987 Page 10
COUNCILMAN SAMUEL:
From the information that I have before me at this point, what the City
Manager has stated, he is going by what was given last year and he is giving
the same thing over the year— this year. Last year, the Fire Museum received
no funds and therefore they are getting $1,030 this year that they didn't get
last year. No one has been . . I don't think that is being cut when you add
$1000 to a budget. I can't understand that.
COUNCILMAN COKINOS: Thank you, Mr. Mayor.
MAYOR MEYERS: Are there any other questions? Do we have a motion?
COUNCILMAN MOORE: So move for approval.
COUNCILMAN WEISBACH: Second.
MAYOR MEYERS: We have a motion and a second. Any other discussion? Those in
favor signify by saying Aye. (Ayes: Mayor Meyers, Councilmen Lee, Weisbach,
Brumley, Samuel and Moore) Opposed? (Councilman Cokinos)
CITY MANAGER: Mayor, that concludes this part of the agenda.
END OF EXCERPT
EXCERPT FROM REGULAR (.,.t'Y COUNCIL
SESSION HELD JANUARY 13, 1987
MR. LINDSEY WALKER:
Mr. Mayor, members of Council. My name is Lindsey Walker; my office address
is 2537 Calder Avenue. The reason I came down this afternoon, Roberto Flores
last week brought to the attention of Council and, through the media, to the
City that we do have a problem still existing with the Delaware Street
property. And, in line with the same problem which has come up that Councilman
Cokinos has just brought to your attention, you can always do a lot of things
if you have a lot of money and if you don't have a lot of money, you are
constricted in what you can do.
The group of people with whom I am associated have enough funds to clean up
the Delaware Street Park. The problem is they will not clean it up for the
Beaumont Art Museum. They would clean it up for the City of Beaumont. They
raised the point with me that if the Art Museum is not, in fact, going to
utilize the property for museum purposes - if the City is, in fact, going to
fund the downtown Art Museum, that there is no justifiable reason in equity
. . . . . . (tape turned at this point) relinquish its lease on the 20-acre
tract. It is my understanding that they have two things in mind which may
preclude that thought but I believe that Mr. Nichols can work something out
along that line. Firstly, they are not certain that in the future they may
not require the use of that tract for their Kaleidescope operation and,
secondly, the thought has been advanced that perhaps they may wish to use it
as a sculpture garden. In view of the peculiarities of the title of the
reservations and restrictions imposed thereon by the original basic leases, I,
as an attorney, would see no problem with them relinquishing their lease as to
all purposes save and except for these two limited items. This raises again
the interesting question, and with the help of Martin Broussard, I have
secured a release or subordination agreement whereby if I bring a group of
volunteers out there and they clean it up, they would relinquish any claim
which might result against the Museum under the liability possibilities but
the Museum, in owning this property, is confronted with the same problem of
maintenance that you and I have on our property and the Environmental
Protection people are ultimately going to jump on their neck if they don't
keep it cleaned and maintained.
As a long-time resident of this City, I am deeply interested in the
maintenance of that tract of land as green space. My solution might not be
acceptable to the City because, frankly, I don't think the City wanted the
piece of property at the time that we were successful in having the dedication
made through the electoral process. The Art Museum does have three hundred
and some odd thousand, perhaps four hundred thousand dollars invested in it
and they feel completely justified in asking that that money be returned to
them. My personal thinking as a tax payer is that we are returning that money
to them by the support and so forth of the downtown Art Museum.
I would like to see this Council in the future direct itself and its attention
to perhaps requesting a quid pro quo and ask them to relinquish its control
over that tract of land in consideration for the City's support of the
downtown museum; but, at the same time, retain unto themselves the on-going
right to utilize it for museum purposes at any time in the future. Under
those circumstances, the City could then legally permit me and other folks to
enter in and upon the land to sit and enjoy the birds, the bees and the trees
and perhaps even to pick up some sticks and stones and if Mr. Haines would
loan us one of his trucks over a weekend perhaps to park it out there and
let's get rid of all the downed timber that Sister Bonnie left with us. .lust
a thought I would like to leave with you Gentlemen. Thank you. END OF EXCERPT