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Votes at a glance: Bee Cave council approves annexation, interim zoning, retirement ordinance and several routine items

October 28, 2025 | Bee Cave, Travis County, Texas


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 »

Votes at a glance: Bee Cave council approves annexation, interim zoning, retirement ordinance and several routine items
The Bee Cave City Council voted unanimously on several ordinances and routine items at its Oct. 28, 2025 meeting. Key outcomes:

• Ordinance 590 — Annexation (Meissner Tract): Council approved the voluntary annexation of a 32.657-acre tract commonly referenced as the Meissner Tract at 15615 Hamilton Pool Road. Staff said service commitments in the annexation services agreement include water and wastewater service by the PUA and fire/EMS by LTFR; police, code enforcement and planning services will be provided by the city. Public notice was published and letters to public entities and the school district were sent in October. The council’s vote was unanimous.

• Ordinance 591 — Interim zoning (Agriculture): Following annexation, council approved interim Agricultural zoning for the annexed tract as required by the Unified Development Code; staff noted council may act within 120 days (deadline: Feb. 25, 2026) if another zoning designation is requested. Vote was unanimous.

• Ordinance 592 — Municipal retirement code corrections: HR staff presented minor wording corrections to the city’s municipal retirement provisions to fix clerical errors and correctly reference internal positions and the appropriate retirement system (Texas Municipal Retirement System). The council approved the corrections unanimously.

• Consent agenda and finance report: Council approved consent agenda items and later approved the finance and investment report for the period ending Sept. 30, 2025. Staff flagged an unexpected $675,000 sales-tax audit payment from a company that had not been reporting, which boosted September figures. Council discussed the source and the role of the sales-tax audit consultant in catching the anomaly.

All recorded votes for these items were unanimous. The council adjourned after an executive session in which attorneys briefed the council on pending litigation and potential nuisance property litigation; no actions were taken publicly after that session.

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Scribe from Workplace AI
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