Votes at a glance: Oakdale council approves consent agenda, park restroom, airport demolition and construction-standards update (4-0)
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The council recorded unanimous (4-0) votes on the consent agenda, Fish Park restroom contract, demolition of a modular home at the municipal airport, and adoption of updated city construction improvement standards.
At Monday’s meeting the Oakdale City Council recorded a series of formal actions, each approved by roll call vote 4-0.
Why this matters: Council votes implement capital projects, maintenance actions and standards that guide future development and municipal work. Several items approved allocate restricted funds, award contracts and update engineering standards used for public and private infrastructure.
Votes and key details:
1) Consent agenda — Approved 4-0. Council approved the consent agenda by roll call (Council member Katerine; Mayor Pro Tem Smith; Council member Gilbert; Mayor Barrios voting yes). Council discussion noted that Community Development Block Grant funds (item 9.4) saved the city about $160,000; the consent agenda included routine administrative items and event notices.
2) Fish Park restroom (Agenda item 11.2) — Approved 4-0. Resolution authorizing the City Manager to execute an agreement with Public Restroom Company for $259,637 and a 10% contingency of $25,963 for a total project budget of $285,600 to be funded by Parks Capital Facility Fund 343, capital project 2605. Procurement will use Sourcewell contract no. 08172PRM.
3) Airport modular home demolition (Agenda item 11.3) — Approved 4-0. Council awarded a contract to Flores Excavation and Demolition, Inc., in the amount of $8,516 to demolish an uninhabitable city-owned modular home at Oakdale Municipal Airport; the work will be funded by the Airport Capital Replacement Fund (Fund 657).
4) 2025 Oakdale Construction Improvement Standards update (Agenda item 11.4) — Approved 4-0. Council adopted the updated standards, which provide technical design details for streets, sewer, water, storm drainage, lighting and related public improvements; staff said there is no immediate fiscal impact and the standards will be published and incorporated into future capital projects.
Each of the votes listed above was recorded in the meeting minutes by roll call and passed with unanimous support of the four members present.
