The lack of just one council member kept the Alexander City Council
from passing an Interlocal Agreement on its second appearance on the
agenda. The ordinance had its first reading at the March council
meeting when four council members were present, forcing Mayor Paul
Mitchell to make the needed quorum of five.
At the April 19
meeting five council members did attend. According to Mitchell
Council Member Dan Church injured himself when he fell Sunday. After
recovering from surgery this would have been his first time back
after several months. Mitchell also reported Council Member Juanita
Wilson was out of town for a funeral.
The Interlocal
Agreement will allow Alexander to join other Saline County cities and
the unincorporated ares of the county in contracting for Emergency
Medical Services (EMS) with one provider. Other cities to be involved
are Bauxite, Benton, Bryant, Haskell, Shannon Hills, and Traskwood.
As stated in the ordinance the,”[P]urpose is to ensure that there
is increased consistency, transparency, and accountability with the
emergency medical services … provider for the citizens of Saline
County.”
Once the agreement
is finalized an EMS governing board will be formed. The board,
“[W]ill be responsible for issuing a competitive solicitation for
EMS services and assuring that the terms of any EMS franchise
agreement are complied with,” the agreement states.
Because only five
council members attended the meeting there could only be a second
public reading of the ordinance. In order to suspend the required
second and third readings and declare an emergency, which allows the
ordinance to become effective immediately, two-thirds of the council
(six members) must be present. The mayor is allowed to be the fifth
member needed for a quorum, but he is not permitted by law to be the
sixth vote in this situation.
At the suggestion of
the mayor, the council approved, in a voice vote, to have the second
reading done by title. After reading the title Mitchell said he will
contact the council members to schedule a Special Meeting when at
least six members can be present. Mitchell added he is under the
impression Alexander is last in approving the agreement.
Attending the April
19 meeting were council members Joe Pollard, Joy Gray, Harold
Timmerman, Lonny Chapman, and Jeff Watson. Besides Church and Wilson,
Council Member Elizabeth Bland was also absent.
Also at the April
19 meeting:
Street Department
purchase retroactively approved
The city council approved a $10,000.00 purchase by the street
department after buying a piece of equipment worth $16,000.00. What’s
known as a street milling attachment fits on the front of the city’s
Bobcat Skid-Steer Loader.
By ordinance the mayor is limited to $5,000.00 without council
approval, but he explained there wasn’t time to call a meeting
before losing this bargain. Mitchell said the city was contacted by
the dealer who sold Alexander the Bobcat.
The attachment is able to grind down asphalt paving, which aids in
blending the resurfacing of one street at an intersection of another
street not being resurfaced. Mitchell explained how the city had to
pay extra for milling as part of past resurfacing projects.
Mitchell also said the attachment, “Is already saving us money.”
He explained how the milling attachment can be used to repair pot
holes without buying asphalt. The street department recently used the
milling attachment, and a recently purchased tack oil trailer, to
repair two holes on Brookwood Rd. between the railroad tracks and
Shobe Road. The tack oil is heated on the trailer allowing it to be
sprayed onto an area being patched.
Mitchell told council members after milling down the pavement the
grindings were mixed with hot tacky oil to make, essentially, a batch
of recycled asphalt. He added that applying tacky oil to an area
before patching gives asphalt something to stick to, allowing the
repair to last longer.
He noted if they had used asphalt the cost is around $90 a ton which,
“doesn’t go very far.” Then there’s the cost of driving the
dump truck to pick up and return with the asphalt.
Alexander has a
new prosecutor/city attorney
Lana M. Fraser has been hired as the city’s new prosecuting
attorney and city attorney. Fraser is from Little Rock.
According to her resume she earned both her Bachelor of Science in
Education in 2000 and a Master of Science in Education in 2006 from
the University of Central Arkansas, Conway. She then earned her Juris
Doctorate from William H. Bowen School of Law in Little Rock.
Fraser taught at Vilonia Public Schools from 2001 to 2016. She was
with the Arkansas Department of Human Services as a Services and
Program Licensing Specialist from 2016 to 2018. She served as a Rule
XV Law Clerk with the Pulaski County Public Defender’s Office from
2018 to 2019. Fraser was the Deputy Public Defender with the Arkansas
Public Defender Commission (Pulaski Public Defender’s Office), from
2019 to 2020.
Since August 2020, Fraser has been a Deputy Public Defender with the
Arkansas Public Defender Commission (Part time position, Faulkner
County Public defender’s Office). Also since August of 2020, Fraser
has been practicing law on her own by forming the Law Office of Lana
M. Fraser.
Mayor Paul Mitchell told council members Fraser agreed to work for
the same salary as the previous prosecutor/city attorney, who
resigned about three months ago. He also said Fraser is already
working on the issue of some of the city park land being claimed by
the original owner after the city made thousands of dollars of
improvements.
Next Meeting
The
next meeting of the Alexander City Council is Monday, May 17 at 6:00
PM in the courtroom at city hall. The public is invited to attend.