After only three months of construction, the Big Red gas station and
convenience store is open for business. At the November 15 council
meeting, Alexander Mayor Paul Mitchell announced that the grand
opening is scheduled for 9:00 AM on Thursday (November 18). The Big
Red is located on the north corner of the Cornerstone Road and Hwy
111 intersection.
It was at the August
16 council meeting Mitchell was given the authority to make all final
decisions concerning the construction of the Big Red in order to
“expedite” the project. The design phase began in January, but
for some unknown reason developers needed to bypass the normal
process of architectural drawings being approved by the planning
commission and the city council in order to stay on schedule.
This gives Alexander
three gas stations/convenience stores; Hess, on E. First Street, and
Mobil, along I-30 being the other two. A fourth will be opening soon.
A Circle K is nearing completion at the corner of N. Alexander Road
and Highway 5. According to Mitchell the only part of the
construction remaining is connecting to the Little Rock sewer line on
the other side of Highway 5.
A zoning ordinance
designating a 1.73-acre piece of property, owned by My ample Storage,
from Open Space/Recreational to Highway Commercial was given its
third public reading and approved by the city council. My Ample
Storage is located along Highway 5, west of the intersection with
North Alexander Road. The property was annexed into the city in 2018.
It’s unusual for
an ordinance to need three meetings to get final approval, but
circumstances seem to be against this particular ordinance. Normally,
the council would vote to suspend the required second and third
readings and move to final approval at the same meeting. That,
however, requires a “yes” vote of two-thirds of the council; in
this case six. This is the third meeting only five council members
were present, the minimum needed for a quorum.
Because of the
planned widening of Highway 5, My Ample Storage is having to move
some of its storage facilities away from the highway. The amount of
property needed for the widening will require the removal of My Ample
Storage’s brick wall along Highway 5, some storage units and the
office.
Also, during the
November 15 meeting;
Firing range
approved
Alexander police
officers will no longer need permission to get target practice, or
qualify using a weapon. The council approved allowing the police
department to set up a recently purchased shooting trailer on
property owned by Alexander Police Chief Robert Burnett.
According to Mayor
Paul Mitchell the trailer includes both drop down and rotating
targets plus a silhouette of someone running as a moving target. It
was purchased from Federal Surplus for $3,500 and includes a
generator and air compressor to power the targets.
Mitchell explained
to council members the main problem the department has with using the
shooting ranges in Saline County is scheduling and cost. One is south
of Bauxite High School and can’t be open during the day or when
there are games. The other is costing the city around $1,000 per year
to use. And now, the FBI and training academy has it booked-up.
Having a city operated firing range will allow officers to train any
time.
New K-9 Officer
hired
Mayor Mitchell
announced the hiring of a new K-9 officer, Josh Lavrinc. Mitchell
said Lavrinc is qualified as both a K-9 officer and trainer.
Ordinance to
redraw ward boundaries under review
Council members were
provided a copy of the proposed ordinance that will redraw the
boundary lines of the city’s four wards. The mayor asked them to
review the ordinance for the December council meeting.
Based on the 2020
Census each ward should have 846 residents, plus or minus
five-percent. Two of the wards have too many residents and two not
enough.
The map provided
with the ordinance was drawn by Metroplan and keeps two existing
council members in each ward. The only difference is Council Member
Juanita Wilson will move from Ward-2 to Ward-4 and Council Member
Lonny Chapman will move from Ward-4 to Ward-2. All other council
members will continue to represent their current wards.
Meadow’s Edge
Phase-3 blackout near an end
For about a year now
residents of Phase-3 in Meadow’s Edge have been asking why they
don’t have street lights. Phases one, two and four have lights, but
not three.
Before Alexander’s
latest subdivision began construction Mayor Paul Mitchell told the
developers to include street lights. Phases one and two received the
lights, but as Phase-3 was ending there was a notable lack of lights.
It was that glaring omission that guaranteed Phase-4 would have
street lights. Phase-4 recently saw its last house go up.
Mitchell told
council members he was contacted by the project’s engineer Joe
White who said the street lights will be in by November 30. Also,
Mitchell said White is speaking to the developer, Walter Woodward,
about installing street signs for phases three and four.
Will the fire
department break another record?
Alexander Fire and
Rescue could be on its way to breaking another record. Fire Chief
Mark Ridgeway reminded council members the department responded to a
record-breaking 754 calls in 2020. He said the department has already
made 745 calls this year.
The
next regular meeting of the Alexander City Council is Monday,
December 20 at 6:00 PM in the courtroom at the Alexander Municipal
Complex. The public is invited to attend.