Crossville city council holds their regular February meeting on Tuesday the 13th and will hear the results of the citywide census taken late last year along with making possible decisions on the next move for expanding the raw water supply and taking over the ownership and maintenance of sewer lines to three county elementary schools.
Crossville City Council members L-R J.H. Graham
Danny Wyatt, Mayor James Mayberry, Pamala Harris
and Scot Shanks
The council's evening starts at 5:15 with the audit committee meeting followed at 5:45 by the beer board meeting with one application for Paparitos Southwest Grill on the agenda. The solicitation board meets at 5:55 PM and the regular meeting agenda starts at 6:00 PM.
The contractor who performed the special city census Arnold Harbolt will be presenting the results of the census count to the council during the meeting. The census may give the city additional funding from the state shared taxes that are distributed to cities on a per capita basis. The city has been successful in gaining additional revenue over the cost of the census for the last 20 years between the regular federal census.
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Council will also determine a direction for the city's push to increase the raw water supply for the plateau. During last weeks work session, the council discussed the results of a study of previous reports and estimates of demand prepared by engineering firm J. R. Wauford.
Wauford's report recommended looking at 4 options including, Raising Meadow Park Lake Dam and continuing to harvest from Lake Tansi, Raising Meadow Park Lake Dam and harvesting from Lake Tansi and Caney Fork River, Raising Meadow Park Lake Dam and harvesting from Lake Tansi and Holiday Lake and Harvesting water from Watts Bar Lake.
The engineering firm recommends the city plan a meeting with representatives of the US Army Corps of Engineers on the next steps toward the water supply expansion.
The council will also consider the request of the Cumberland County Board of Education that the city take over the responsibility for maintenance of sewer lines that serve North, South and Brown Elementary schools. The lines were built to hook the schools up to the city sewer service and all repairs and maintenance has been done by the school system.
At the work session, Councilman J. H. Graham said he was in favor of the action and felt it was something the city could do for the BOE. City manager Greg Wood said the line to South was about 20 years old and if the city planned to add more capacity to the Brown line at least one lift station would be required. In addition the city would map the location of the line once they take it over.
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