The Manor City Council on a single evening approved service-and-assessment plans and related bond issuances for multiple public improvement districts, set a public hearing for a voluntary annexation petition and voted not to adopt an ordinance to grant updated service credit under the Texas Municipal Retirement System (TMRS).
The council adopted amended and restated service-and-assessment plans and assessment rolls for the Lagos Public Improvement District and New Haven Public Improvement District and approved the sale and issuance of special-assessment revenue bonds tied to those districts. It also approved a preliminary service-and-assessment plan and called a public hearing for Mustang Valley Public Improvement District to consider levying assessments on Oct. 15, 2025. Council members approved a resolution accepting a petition to annex about 10.0184 acres (the Manor Business Center) and set a public hearing for Nov. 5, 2025. Separately, the council voted not to approve an ordinance to provide updated TMRS service credit and to increase employer deposits.
Why this matters: The council’s actions enable bonding and revenue collection mechanisms for several large developments in Manor, advancing infrastructure and development plans tied to those PIDs. The TMRS vote affects the city’s employee retirement-change proposal and any near-term adjustments to employer contributions.
Most consequential actions
- Ordinance No. 803: adopted the 2025 amended and restated service-and-assessment plan and assessment roll for the Lagos Public Improvement District (assessment collection and related revisions as noted by city legal counsel). Motion passed. (motion made by Councilwoman Wallace; second by Councilwoman Weir)
- Ordinance No. 804: made findings of special benefit and approved the assessment method and rolls for the New Haven Public Improvement District. Motion passed. (motion made by Councilwoman Wallace; second by Councilwoman Weir)
- Ordinance No. 805: authorized issuance of City of Manor Special Assessment Revenue Bonds, Series 2025, for the Lagos PID Improvement Area No. 1 project (bond purchase and related documents). Motion passed. (motion made by Councilwoman Wallace; second by Councilwoman Weir)
- Ordinance No. 806: authorized issuance of City of Manor Special Assessment Revenue Bonds, Series 2025, for the New Haven PID. Motion passed. (motion made by Councilwoman Wallace; second by Councilwoman Weir)
- Resolution No. 2025-41: approved the preliminary service and assessment plan (PSAP) and proposed assessment rolls for the Mustang Valley Public Improvement District and called a public hearing for Oct. 15, 2025. Motion passed. (motion made by Councilwoman Weir; second by Councilwoman Wallace)
- Resolution No. 2025-39: accepted a petition for voluntary annexation of roughly 10.0184 acres (Manor Business Center) and set a public hearing for Nov. 5, 2025 (publication to be made by Oct. 17). Motion passed. (motion made by Councilmember [name in transcript]; second by Councilwoman Weir)
- Ordinance authorizing updated TMRS service credit (Ordinance No. 800 as listed in the agenda): council voted to not approve the ordinance authorizing updated service credit and increased employer deposits. Motion to not approve passed. (motion made by Councilwoman Wier; second by Mayor Pro Tem Hill)
What council said and next steps
City legal staff and consultants attended the meeting and advised council that bond pricing occurred the morning of the meeting and that the SAPs and related documents were updated to reflect pricing. For the Mustang Valley PSAP, the developer presented updated PID assessment totals and noted the PID term and payments would be lower than previously disclosed to buyers.
Public notice and hearings required by state law remain in place: the New Haven annexation schedule was revised to publish notice by Oct. 17 and hold final readings in November, and the Mustang Valley public hearing is scheduled for Oct. 15, 2025.
Ending note
Council approved multiple financing and assessment measures that allow the city and private developers to proceed with infrastructure and bonding plans. The TMRS proposal was explicitly rejected by council, leaving any retirement-rate or service-credit adjustments to future consideration.