Get Full Government Meeting Transcripts, Videos, & Alerts Forever!

City council approves multiple contracts, reserve transfers and appointments; bond authorized for Arts Council

January 07, 2025 | Saratoga Springs City, Saratoga County, New York


This article was created by AI summarizing key points discussed. AI makes mistakes, so for full details and context, please refer to the video of the full meeting. Please report any errors so we can fix them. Report an error »

City council approves multiple contracts, reserve transfers and appointments; bond authorized for Arts Council
Saratoga Springs City Council on Tuesday approved a slate of routine and capital-related actions, including health-plan agreements, vendor contracts, reserve-fund uses, invoice payments and a bond authorization to cover additional costs for the Arts Council building project.

Key outcomes recorded in the meeting minutes and roll calls included:

- Authorization for the mayor to sign an agreement with Wallpoint for Senior Rx Plus, described as non-Medicare supplemental drug coverage attached to the Anthem Medicare plan. The council voted 4-0 in favor.

- Authorization for the mayor to sign an Anthem Medicare preferred PPO group agreement to provide retiree coverage; the motion passed 4-0.

- Approval of a contract with Sanders Fire and Safety for semiannual inspection of the vault suppression system for the accounts department (amount recorded in the agenda as $10.40); motion passed 4-0.

- Several reserve transfers and budget items: approval to use up to $500,000 from the reserve fund for payment of bonded indebtedness; approval to use $588,196.42 from the water system reserve for 2025 water fund capital improvements; approval to use up to $500,000 from the retirement system reserve. All motions passed, with recorded votes of 4-0 where roll calls were taken or unanimous voice votes recorded.

- A 2025 bond resolution authorizing additional serial bonds not to exceed $171,805 to cover higher-than-expected bids on the Arts Council building reconstruction passed on a roll call vote. The resolution stated an estimated maximum cost of $696,805 for the Arts Council project and authorized the $171,805 increase; the roll call recorded ayes from Mayor Safford, Commissioner Moran, Commissioner Kuczynski and Commissioner Cole.

- Budget and capital amendments associated with the bond were approved, including transfers of bond premiums into the 2025 debt service fund and a capital budget amendment to transfer proceeds to the Arts Council project; motions passed 4-0.

- A number of purchasing and invoice approvals and contracts were approved for the Department of Public Works: a materials contract with Infinity Aggregates for crushed stone, gravel and sand (valid through 12/31/2025, unit bid amounts subject to appropriation); alarm services contract with Mahoney Notify Plus (valid through 12/31/2025, not to exceed $40,000 at unit bid rates); and multiple small invoice payments to Absolute Pest Control and NAPA Auto Parts. All were approved by voice vote as recorded in the meeting.

- The council certified the appointment of Clinton (Clinton Green) to serve as a commissioner of deeds pursuant to Section 139 of the Executive Law; the motion passed 4-0.

During the meeting presenters and department heads provided brief explanations for each item. No items on the consent or finance agenda were defeated. Where roll-call votes were required, the transcript records the roll-call for the bond resolution and those ayes are recorded as above; other routine items were approved by unanimous voice vote (four in favor, none opposed, no abstentions).

Complete contract documents, invoice details and bond-resolution text are part of the official meeting record and the agenda packet; the council indicated staff would post additional information to the city website and distribute a press release with scheduling and early-voting details relevant to a separate upcoming special election item discussed during public comment.

Votes and approvals recorded during the meeting will be entered into the official minutes and the city’s procurement and finance systems.

View full meeting

This article is based on a recent meeting—watch the full video and explore the complete transcript for deeper insights into the discussion.

View full meeting

Sponsors

Proudly supported by sponsors who keep New York articles free in 2025

Scribe from Workplace AI
Scribe from Workplace AI