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Troy City Council approves brownfields cleanup, IT contract, opioid settlement opt‑in and other routine measures
Summary
Troy City Council on Oct. 20 adopted a package of resolutions and ordinances that authorize an environmental cleanup grant, a three‑year IT services contract, participation in national opioid settlements, increases to fleet spending, 2026 public‑health funding, a required cybersecurity program, a state speed‑limit study request and final plats for two subdivisions.
Troy City Council on Oct. 20 adopted a package of resolutions and ordinances covering an environmental cleanup, city IT services, opioid‑settlement participation, fleet contract increases, public‑health funding, a statutorily required cybersecurity program, a state speed‑limit study request and two subdivision final plats.
Council members voted on each item during the meeting and all listed measures were approved by recorded roll call votes (adopted 10–0; one council member was excused). The measures include grant and contract authorizations that allow city staff to finalize agreements and implement the work described in the adopted resolutions and ordinances.
The most resource‑specific items:
• Brownfields cleanup (R51‑2025): Council adopted a resolution authorizing the director of public service and safety to enter a subrecipient grant agreement with the Miami County Land Reutilization Corporation and to enter a professional services agreement with Virgison and Neiple Inc. of Columbus, Ohio for work tied to the Ohio Department of Development Brownfields Remediation Program at 1375 South Union Street. The resolution was adopted as an emergency measure. (Vote: adopted, 10–0; mover: Mr. Witten; second: Mr. Pierce.)
• Trimble software services (R56‑2025): Council approved a sole‑source, three‑year professional services agreement with Trimble Inc. of Westminster, Colorado for computer‑related software services at a cost not to exceed $44,000 per year. The resolution was adopted as an emergency measure to allow execution of the contract. (Vote: adopted, 10–0; mover: Mr. Witten; second: Mr. Twist.)
• Opioid…
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