Thursday, March 28, 2019

Economic Development Corporation

The Copperas Cove EDC March 27, 2019 meeting!

The Directors:
Adam Martin-Present
Marcie Lowery Present
Joey Acfalle-Present
Jeremy Tate-Absent

Council Liaison:
Charlie Youngs-Present

Mayor Candidates:
Joey Acfalle-Present
Ron Nelson-Absent
Bradi Dewald Diaz-Absent
Brandi Weiand-Absent

The Agenda:




This was a simple fifteen minute meeting. The first two action items were for authorization of funds for January and February, mainly for city payroll. The other two action items were for the unaudited financial reports for January and February. They showed the the cash position for the EDC year over end for January and February was $5,800,000, which is an increase of $600,000. All four action items passed with a vote of 3-0.

The new Executive Director, Jonas Titus, starts work on April 8, 2019.

Tuesday, March 26, 2019

Happy Birthday Copperas Cove, P and Z, Special City Council

Happy Birthday Copperas Cove, P and Z, Special City Council!



Happy 140th, Copperas Cove!




Mrs Linda Ledger was the guest speaker and gave the attendees about a 10 minute summary on the history of Copperas Cove. She said that we as the citizens of our city need to be prepared for the 150th (Sesquicentennial) birthday. 







Don Nicholas reads a proclamation to the city from US Representative Roger Williams. There were many other city and county elected officials, along with candidates for Mayor and Central Texas College Board of Trustees, at the celebration.










Councilman Dan Yancey cutting the cake.


Special City Council Meeting on March 25, 2019 (Before the birthday party)


The Council:
Joann Courtland-Present
Fred Chavez-Present
Dan Yancey-Present
Jay Manning-Present
Kirby Lack-Present
Marc Payne-Present
Charlie Youngs-Absent

Mayoral Candidates:
Bradi Dewald Diaz-Present
Ron Nelson-Present
Joey Acfalle-Present
Brandi Weiand-Absent

The Agenda:
The purpose of the special meeting was due to the late delivery of the city's Fiscal Year 2018 Comprehensive Financial Report. During the last council meeting wanted the opportunity to review the report in detail. Jay Manning was reassured that the grammatical errors would be corrected before publication. Marc Payne was busy thumbing through the manual the entire time. 


The vote was 5-1 (Payne opposed it).

Planning and Zone Commission for March 25, 2019


Commissioners:

Bob Martin-Present
Ken Thomas-Present
Rob Endter-Present
Adam Martin-Absent
Howard Hawk-Present
Dale Treadway-Present

Mayoral Candidates:
Bradi Dewald Diaz-Absent
Ron Nelson-Present
Joey Acfalle-Present
Brandi Weiand-Absent

The Agenda:



There were three public hearings for the meeting:
Public Hearing #1 dealt with a requested rezoning on 1501 Canyon Drive (Private Road). The owner  (who is presently overseas) is request that his property be completely zoned R-1 so he can build a home on it. He no representation at the hearing. It is presently zoned R-1 and B-4, which means a future business could possibly relocate there. Six speakers showed up to speak against the rezoning. They told the commission that he has placed the property for sale and don't believe he will build only one home on it or just outright sell it. There were concerns of vehicular access, power access, right of way, easement. The commissioners voted 5-0 to table for 30 days.


Public Hearing #2 dealt with the rezoning of 1006 S 9th Street, from B-2 to R-1. Kid's World Day Care closed and she wishes to return the property to a home. She tried to sell it for four years and one buyer backed out. Vote was 5-0.

Public Hearing #3 dealt with the rezoning of 605 S Main St from R-3 to B-3. When rezoned it would make the entire block B-3 and would be more attractive to future business. Vote was 5-0.

The action item is continued from the last meeting which was tabled. A Conditional Use Permit is being request for 504 S 1st for a convenience store. The owner revised his proposed site plan to get approval from the P and Z. He reduced the building size to 1750 square feet and has 7 parking spaces. He added fencing and fence high lighting for security. He also said delivery will not be an issue. Mr Martin told the owner he received four letters in opposition to the permit. There was a motion to forward to city council approval but it failed to get a 2nd and it died on the table. Then there was a motion to reject the Conditional Use Permit and send to council. It passed 3-2.

The last action item was for the Ranches at Live Oak. It is located in the Extra Territorial Jurisdiction of Copperas Cove. There are requesting a final Plat for nine lots on a 21.56 acre plot of land. Mr Dewald was present for questions. It passed 5-0.


This is your summary of almost three hours of city meetings and function on Monday. 


Wednesday, March 20, 2019

FLASH FLASH FLASH New EDC Executive Director is announced


Copperas Cove Economic Development Corporation announces their new Executive Director

Directors:
Adam Martin-Present
Jeremy Tate-Present
Marcie Lowery-Present
Joey Acfalle-Present

Council Liaison:
Charlie Youngs-Present





The Agenda:
 Today the Copperas Cove EDC announced that Jonas Titas will be the Executive Director of the Copperas Cove Economic Development Corporation. The vote was 4-0.


Jonas Titas is formerly the Deputy Director of the Conroe EDC and has about 20 years experience. He holds a Master's Degree in Public Administration from University of Texas at Tyler.

Speak Up!!! Copperas Cove would like to congratulate him on his selection.




Tuesday, March 19, 2019

City Council Regular Meeting and Workshop - 19 Mar 2019

City Council meeting and workshop for March 19, 2019

The Council:
Joann Courtland-Present
Fred Chavez-Absent (Sickness)
Dan Yancey-Present
Jay Manning-Present
Kirby Lack-Present
Marc Payne-Present
Charlie Youngs-Present

Mayoral Candidates:
Bradi Dewald Diaz-Present
Ron Nelson II-Present
Joey Acfalle-Absent
Brandi Weiand-Absent

Hello again Copperas Cove! As always, we appreciate you checking in - here's the recap from the latest City Council Meeting.

Announcements:
Ryan Haverlah (our Interim City Manger) started the night off with a few announcements.
-The city of Copperas Cove will be celebrating it's 140th birthday! March 25th at 5:30 pm at the City Library, there will be a proclamation, showing of historical photos, story telling, cake, cookies, punch, and other activities. Everyone is encouraged to show up!
-Copperas Cove recently was given an award from the United Way for showing the biggest improvements during the past year

Citizens Forum:
-Terri stepped up first and kicked things off with her continued disappointment in the Fathom mess. They are still conducting improper services with 30-45 min phone calls to fix an issue and there have been a lot of hard times in trying to get answers. She would really like to see these issues her tenants are having be resolved. Moving on from that, she is a volunteer with a local emergency response team and on May 7th, they will be holding a major  mass casualty exercise around Fort Hood. They are needing a lot of volunteer actors to help out with this and can use everyone from children to the elderly.
-Mari (hopefully I spelled that correct) Cruz is an 18 year citizen with Copperas Cove. She's recently had an issue with Fathom where they pulled a scheduled auto draft of her bill and disconnected it on the same day! Then, to add insult to injury, they wanted an additional $55 up front to reconnect it, wouldn't let her authorize it to be turned back on since she wasn't the account holder (although her husband tried to have her added as having permission twice in the past), and then told her that because it was after 3 pm, they wouldn't be able to reconnect her water that day. She added that she has Lupus, her husband is a disabled vet, and they need water for medical reasons. As a final touch, she also noticed added fees on her following bill that resulted from the water shutoff.
-Debbie spoke out about payment issues she's had with Fathom. They have a small family who have been taking measures to cut back on water usage in the past months, yet she see's her bill continuing to go up. This past one, it was over 5,000 gallons. She's noticed that there's two different water and sewage fees instead of one of each like normal and doesn't believe Fathom should be double dipping like that. Editors Note: I've sat in on discussions about this by the council. It's my personal belief that there is a misunderstanding in this case. The city applies a discounted rate for everyone if they use UNDER 5,000 gallons. Once you reach the 5,000 gallon mark, your rate goes up to the "normal" rate. Most of us don't use over 5,000 gallons so we will never see the difference. It is MY personal belief that what is happening with the two line items of water and two line items of sewer is one line item is the discount rate up to 5,000 gallons, and the second line item is the standard rate applied after the 5,000 gallons. If I have this wrong, feel free to let us know in the comments - Jeremy
-Linda with the Five Hills Art Guild is inviting the public to next weekends (May 30-31)Five Hills Art Festival - "Bridge the Gap!". It will have free parking and entry, dancers, art from all across the state as well as one artist coming in from New Mexico, and dance off competitions. It will be Saturday from 10 to 7 and Sunday from 11 to 4.

The Agenda


Action Items:
H1 - The Heart of Texas Defense Alliance came out and gave its quarterly report on activities and requested payments for professional services provided. Keith Sledd was not near the microphone and the A/C was kind of loud, so we missed some of what he was saying, but I did pick up a few things.  

The Department of the Army has approved a Recycling Inter-Governmental Support Agreement (IGSA) allowing Copperas Cove to use their recycling program. The lawyers looked into policy and it doesn't prohibit this type of relationship. To make things more secure, they are now moving to include language specifically authorizing a relationship like this, and then Fort Hood and Copperas Cove will work to put this in effect. 


The Governor is working on some actions to be more supportive of military spouses and families. In the second slide (GCSM Findings and Recommendations), check marks are next to items that are already in place, and the unchecked items are being worked on to be put in place. I also heard some talk about Fort Hood resources being used towards construction of a wall on our southern border, but I think it was something being worked on. PASS

H2 - The Five Hills Art Guild made a presentation discussing the expenses put into the "Bridge the Gap" going on this weekend, and they requested a reimbursement for $8,760 out of the $12,000 already allocated in the city budget. PASS

H3 - The council assigned three members to the sign committee. Two are locally recognized business owners and one is a commercial sign contractor licensed by the State of Texas. Douglas Aldrich (All American Signs), Teresa Lange (Lamar Advertising), and Jennifer Snelling (Quine and Associates) were selected. PASS

H4 - The Copperas Cove Police Dept is looking to get rid of a number of firearms that no longer serve a purpose in the Police Department. Since they legally can't sell them to the public, they are looking to trade them in towards new firearms through a certified dealer (85 used weapons for 15 new weapons) with no financial liability to the city. PASS

H5 - Weaver (the same company that conducted the FATHOM Audit) presented an FY2018 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report. When conducting this audit, they look at cash disbursements, payroll, utility revenue, tax revenue, and capitol projects. In all the areas they reported on, there were no problems found. Jay Manning asks why is this late again? The auditor stated no blame on the city, all the city staff were very helpful and prompt. Weaver took extra time in making the report presentable. Charlie Youngs motioned to approve the report. Jay Manning stated he was just given this report, and it is quite heavy. He can't vote to approve acceptance of this report with so many pages and so little time to review it. He would like extra time to review it.  The rest of the council concurred with his thoughts. FAILED 5-1 with Charlie Youngs being the only one to approve. They will revisit during a special meeting at 5:00, next Monday (March 25th).

H6 - Joe Brown with Parks and Rec gave a presentation on the current fees being charged at the Civic Center. He reminded the Council that it used to be $800 a day and $400 for half a day with a $400 refundable deposit, $100 Kitchen use fee, $100 Audio equipment use fee, $100 Stage use fee, and $40 restoration fee applied to everyone. They were getting a LOT of requests for fee reductions, so  last year the council voted to drop the rental fee and get rid of the half day fee to make it fair for everyone and stop entertaining requests for reduced fees. Now, here we are again with the council requesting a report of the daily operating expenses for the Civic Center to see how much more we can reduce the cost and still cover operating expenses. He took the overall expenses of the Civic Center for the past 5 years, and for each year he divided the amount of expenses for that year by amount of rentals for that year. Then he took all 5 years expense costs and averaged them out. Expense costs are everything from toilet paper being used to the grounds employees being paid to set things up in the civic center, to the floor wax being applied and time to do it. He did not factor in electricity used for the lights and HVAC or administrative staff time which is used towards each rental as well. The number he came up with was $560 a day or $70 an hour to run the civic center. Marc Payne started asking a bunch of questions about how many A/C units the building has, and he noticed that as prices went up over the years, rentals went down. He then factored in the city and school district using the civic center and said that means that hardly any citizens are actually renting the building. Marc further stated that we should not be so tough on tax payers already paying for these buildings or Charities trying to help the community.

From there the council started making form adjustments to specify who can receive up to a 50% discount when seemingly out of nowhere, Charlie Youngs pulled out of thin air that he wants the rental fee to be a flat $250 for anyone and everyone, no discounts applied. Take it or leave it. Joann and Marc immediately agreed. Jay Manning said he would hate to see the city losing money on renting this building and thinks we should stay at cost. Charlie Youngs then said that he thinks the people that are going to rent it are mostly citizens who are already paying for it in their taxes, and he would rather drop the price now with the hopes that rentals go up, and if they don't go up then go back and raise the fee to make up for lost costs. With that, the council voted on the new fee of $250 a day, Sound/Kitchen/Stage usage are $100 each, $400 refundable deposit, and a $40 restoration fee applied to everyone.Editors Note: Why are we as a city renting OUR Civic Center to a customer for half of what it cost to operate it- James  PASS A future agenda item will cover applying the new fees to the schedule, so the fee isn't being applied just yet.


Reports from Staff:
Ryan had some reports for the council tonight. 
-With the ongoing Texas Legislative Session going on, several bills have been presented. SB1 and HB1 both are similar bills (SB- Senate Bill, HB- House Bill) They have to do with relief payments the state gives out to help offset veterans who don't have to pay property tax. With these bills, Copperas Coves budgeted relief would more than double from prior years. Attached to those are some bills - one would expand this to Central Texas College and municipalities that lie in counties that share a border with military installations. 
-SB1152 States that local governments can't use any public funding to lobby at the state level. The problem with this is most cities are part of the Texas Municipal League which goes and does lobbying for the different cities around the state. They play a big part in staying in tune with the Texas Government and fighting for the cities. If this bill passes, the Mayor would have to be the one who goes to lobby for their city, taking some of their attention away from events going on in their city or needs of the city. 

-The Business 190 project is now in its 60% review phase which is expected to be complete by May 1st. The report from the TxDOT public meeting should be ready by the end of April, and will be made available to the public when the city gets it. 

- City employees have recently gone to South Park and cleaned out all the cat shelters (over 70) that had been placed around the park. They then reached out to the local concerned citizens and assured them that this was not a preliminary step to removing cats, but rather a measure to clean up the park. The city would like to remind residents that personal property is not permitted to be left on city property. 

Copperas Cove Workshop Notes

The workshop consisted of a discussion of the Downtown Transportation Feasability Study and the Downtown Masterplan of 2008. Neither plan dealt with traffic flow cor Copperas Cove.

The next 12 million dollar project from KTMPO road project will be the FM 116 railroad underpass project. They plan to start it in 2022 and will need two years of planning with BNSF before that due to coordination of the project. It doesn't address the traffic flow issue or the continued growth on the north side of town. Here are the options the council discussed:

1. FM 116 Railroad Underpass
2. Shift Main St to FM 116
3. FM 116 Realignment
4. FM 1113 Realignment
5. FM 116 and FM 1113 Realignment


The council agreed to have the Interim City Manager plan for the study and bring it back to them. 


With that, the meeting was a wrap! We appreciate your stopping by - be sure to subscribe, comment, and share this blog with other Copperas Cove residents! 


Quality of Life Board Meeting on Mar 14, 2019

Quality of Life Board Meeting on Mar 14, 2019


Board Members:
Adam Redmond-Present
Cheryl Kielman-Present
Marcie Lowery-Absent
Jim McEvers-Present
Dustin Phipps-Present
Robert Sizemore-Absent
Craig Foster-Present

Council Liaison:
Joann Courtland-Absent





The Agenda:


There were four areas discussed at the March meeting:
1. Joe Brown went over with the Board the plan for the baseball opening ceremony, on May 4, 2019.
    They covered the entire agenda for Friday night's ceremony which will highlight the Seffrood family and all the normal introductions. Rachel Sizemore will sing the National Anthem. After the ceremony there will be a baseball themed movie at the park!

2. Joe Brown gave another update on park improvements. Heritage, Highland and Rhode parks will be getting their new parking lots very soon. The prep work is continuing for the new bathrooms.

3. They discussed the Hills of Cove golf cart path project. This was a quick discussion and they are progressing.

4. Golf cart rules were discussed. We have included the attachments that explain what the subject was about.


We need to follow these rules to preserve OUR golf course and also OUR parks!

The only future agenda item for next month was to discuss feral cats at South Park. 

Monday, March 18, 2019

El Corral is open!

El Corral is now open.


El Corral had their grand reopening today, at 3pm. There are many people in Copperas Cove that have been waiting for almost three months for it to reopen. They will start serving inside and outside at 5PM. Their new address is:

901 S. Main St
Copperas Cove, TX 76522







Tuesday, March 5, 2019

Civic Center Fees at the City Council meeting

City Council meeting for March 5


Hello again Copperas Cove!! Tonight's City Council Meeting was a short one, but there was a long discussion involving the Parks and Rec fee schedule. We're going to give you the run down of what was said so you know where your council members stand. So to start things off, lets take roll - 1 note, we don't THINK we saw Mayoral Candidate Brandi Weiand tonight, but we've been wrong with new candidates before. So Brandi, if you were there - let us know! Ok, moving on -

The Council:
Mayor-Vacant
Joann Courtland - Present
Fred Chavez - Present
Dan Yancey - Present
Jay Manning - Present
Kirby Lack - Present
Marc Payne - Absent
Charlie Youngs - Present

Mayor Candidates:
Bradi Dewald Diaz - Present
Ron Nelson - Absent
Joey Acfalle - Present
Brandi Weiand - Absent

Citizens Forum:
We had two citizens up tonight. The first one was Mike and he spoke about bringing a rec center into Copperas Cove. In 2008 we had a vote on it which failed by 95 votes. That was over 10 years ago and we've had a lot change in population and direction of the city. He feels like we need to have another vote on this and see if the citizens are ready for one yet. Mike coaches for various sports and said he could see this being a great benefit to the city.

Next up was Debbie. Debbie was asking when is the last time that the City Park Pool filtration system has been maintained. When she uses the pool, if she sits in the water, she finds hair on her skin that was floating around in the water. However when she uses the pool at the Gym, this is never an issue. She also wants to know why the removed the water fountains from the pool. Now people are forced to go buy water from the concession stand since they don't allow any food or drinks to be brought in from the outside. She feels like it is wrong to force that on the citizens.

The Agenda




Consent Agenda: All items PASS

Action Items: 

H1 - Discussion was brought up with direction sought regarding the Parks and Rec fees schedule related to renting city facilities. This item was requested by Joann Courtland at the previous City Council Meeting after discussion about discounts for non-profits. P&R Director Joe Brown started the discussion with a brief overview of the P&R fee schedule and his thoughts on the requested intent to offer discounts to non-profits who would like to use city facilities. Joe stated that we recently had a reduction in fees across al
l facilities with the intention of nullifying discounts. We were charging $800 a day for facility use, and we dropped it to $500 a day which was along the lines of the discounted rate we were giving anyone who requested one before the council anyways. So to stop taking up council time, they just dropped the fee to $500 with the intention of no more discounts. Joe further advised that traditionally, P&R rentals are not subsidized - meaning that they are meant to bring some money in for the city. 

Joann Courtland responded first, saying she's not trying to set a discount, but wants to come up with a set fee for non-profits because she is trying to look out for the entities that provide things like free meals and services to the entire community with no door charges or qualifications needed. Two of the places she's looking at are the Civic Center and Ogletree Gap. Just for full disclosure, Joann Courtland and Kirby Lack both operate non-profits (Operation Stand Down and Trinity Worship Center - respectively). 

Charlie Youngs asked "when do we stop cutting funds and realize we're losing money?" These non-profits that are holding events should plan and budget for rental fees. With that said, he believes we should set the fee to the daily operating cost. If it costs $250 to operate the civic center one day - then charge that for the non-profits. 

Kirby Lack said his church is a non-profit, and he agrees that they should pay the fees for their events because they are always fund raising events. Non-Profits like the Star Group should get a discount because they help anyone and everyone who comes to their events and they don't make any money from the events. Their events are all about feeding the community and whatever is charged from the city is taking away from that event. To this, Charlie Youngs came back and reinforced that he is concerned about the city taking a loss of daily operating costs, and he's not about to take a loss for the city. 

Joann Courtland comes back and argues that losing a little on a rental fee is better than not making anything from non-use. To this, Dan Yancey reminds everyone that we already dropped the rate to avoid these discussions and help everyone across the board (citizens and non-profits alike). 

Fred Chavez states that he wants to eliminate back door discounts by setting one rate and sticking with it. If an event raising money - then stick to the fee. If they're providing a service to the entire community with no segregation involved, then that's different. Fred Chavez runs the theater out at Central Texas College and they have non-profits come through all the time asking for a discount. There's a lot of things he can be flexible with as the director, but one thing that must stay firm is the pricing. If a non-profit falls under a certain designation, then they can fill out an application with proof of that designation and get the discount. If you don't have that designation, then you pay the regular price. 

Jay Manning came in and said we're trying to collect enough to provide a service, so we need to keep rates the same to benefit ALL citizens. A few years ago, rates were doubled and from doing so, the city lost a lot of business. That was what caused us to lower our fees last year. He feels like we should lower them a little more to try and bring back some of that business we lost. 

Joe Brown stepped in again and said we just spent a LOT of money on renovations and we still have more renovations coming. He feels like we should keep the rates the same to help out with those renovations. Every other city he's worked in has not provided breaks. Our costs are already very low compared to other cities. To this, Joann stepped in and said that Killeen offers a special rate for non-profits and the Killeen Community Center just went through renovations. 

Kirby Lack stepped in and said that Joe has done a phenomenal job turning around our City Parks and Golf Course. We have our own bills to pay and we need to be careful what we give away. Joe added in that we have a couple House Bills looming that, if passed, could force department heads to make pay cuts across the city. If that happens and we lower rental fees as well, that could put the city in a bad position. 

Fred Chavez asked if we could just narrow the fee reduction down to two areas - the Civic Center and Ogletree Gap. Ryan responded by suggesting creating an application with check marks that need to be met in order to be able to get a discount. He thinks this could prevent abuse of the discount and avoid non-profits having to come to the council to request a discount and get one based off a good sales pitch. The council unanimously PASSED this idea. The city will work on an application and bring it forward in a future Council Meeting where they will go over operation costs of the Civic Center, review the application, and decide on a price point for rentals. 



H2 - This item was basically making a few adjustments to the fee schedule for Copperas Cove. Mostly removing fees for services that aren't provided anymore. A few of note:
-Farmers Market - removing the $25 daily fee. There is now only a $25 application fee which is great news for our local farmers. 
-Library has a color print fee now of 15 cents per page
-Library has set its overdue max fee to $10
PASS 6-0

H3 - The Police Department is requesting to have the HVAC system in their IT room replaced. It has been out for about 2 months now, requiring them to leave the door propped open for air circulation. Not only does this create a security risk for a room that is supposed to remain locked, but proper air conditioning is VERY important in any IT room for the computers to work properly. This repair will cost $20,540 which will be covered by other project savings. 
PASS 6-0

H4 - The Police Department has identified excess and obsolete equipment that is of no use anymore and would like to dispose of it. It consists of some old police uniform items as well as some Parks and Rec computer items. They will be transferring these items to solid waste in accordance with the Texas Constitution. 
PASS 6-0

H5 - There is an ongoing project right now along FM116 South and FM 3046 where they are trying to put in a bicycle lane and side walk. The city has determined that they don't have enough asphalt area unless they remove a vehicle lane, and they don't have enough easement room without making a LOT of driveways steep for home owners. What the city is recommending is creating one shared usage path instead (Option 1), which the engineers have already said they can make work.
PASS 6-0

Executive Session
There was a short executive session held regarding the offer of a financial or other incentive to a business prospect referenced as #ED-2018-2 Project Glow. When the council came back out to the Dias, it was announced the no action was taken.




Sunday, March 3, 2019

February EDC meeting!

EDC meeting for February 27, 2019










Directors:
Adam Martin-Present
Chris Mulvey-Resigned
Jeremy Tate-Present
Joey Acfalle-Present
Marcie Lowery-Present

Council Laiason:
Charlie Youngs-Present

There is a vacancy on the EDC, so apply if you would like to serve in Copperas Cove!


The Agenda



    The only item for action during this EDC board meeting was about the possible demolition of the building owned by the EDC, on 201 s 2nd Street. This is the building that housed the old DPS Driver's License Office. They received an estimate for $40,000 to included the foundation. The board reached a consensus to continue to look for possible bidders and continue planning.

Staff reports:
Ms Drussell invited "Workforce Solutions of Central Texas" to speak to the Board. Chris Gallen (Army Retiree) spoke about a wide range of topics to include "Hiring Our Heroes". It is a program where existing Field Grade Officers anf Senior NCOs start in the program 180 days out from retirement and the last 12 weeks of the program the Soldier is placed in an accepting firm and the salary is paid for by "Hiring Our Heroes".

There were three executive session items for Project Etch, Project Glow, and about the search for their new Executive Director. They came out and reported no action taken!


Workforce Solutions documents





Hello Copperas Cove!!!

Friends, Neighbors, Fellow Citizens- There are a lot of things going on in Copperas Cove that most of us aren't always aware of. Aft...