Vienna council approves budget revision, fire truck appropriation, litigation strategy and prevention donation
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Summary
The council unanimously approved General Fund Budget Revision No. 5 and a fire-truck appropriation of $1,256,068; it also authorized a litigation strategy in opioid litigation (6–1, one abstention) and approved an $8,500 donation to the Wood County Prevention Coalition with a recusal noted.
The Vienna Common Council approved a package of administrative and procurement items including a budget revision, acceptance of procurement bids and several resolutions at the meeting.
Key outcomes at a glance: - General Fund Budget Revision No. 5: Council approved moving $1,206,080.68 from capital reserves into a capital account (motion passed unanimously).
- Fire truck procurement and appropriation: Council accepted the bid recommendation for a new fire truck (one bidder was reported) and approved a resolution appropriating $1,256,068 for the purchase, with a directive that no funds be expended until the truck is built and accepted by the city (motion and resolution passed unanimously).
- Opioid litigation strategy authorization: The council authorized implementation of recommendations from the National Opioid Litigation Council's 12/02/2025 letter and empowered the city’s opioid litigation counsel (Peterson, Carpenter and Bessler) to take actions to preserve litigation posture, including maintaining the August 2026 trial schedule. The resolution passed 6–1 with one abstention.
- Donation to Wood County Prevention Coalition: The council approved a one-time $8,500 donation from settlement funds to the Wood County Prevention Coalition, conditioned on the coalition providing proof it is pursuing 501(c)(3) status and a reasonable timetable; the meeting record notes a recusal for this vote.
- Police vehicle financing: The council accepted sealed-bid financing proposals for Dodge Durango police vehicles and approved the recommended financing (the transcript’s numerical details for interest rates and exact loan terms are garbled in the record; council approved the financing unanimously).
What the approvals mean in practice: The budget revision and appropriations clear financial authority to proceed with purchases once procurement and delivery conditions are met; the appropriation language explicitly prevents payments until equipment is delivered and accepted. The litigation authorization lets the city’s counsel implement certain litigation maneuvers described in the National Opioid Litigation Council letter while preserving rights to reassert claims as needed.
Next steps and follow-ups: Delivery and acceptance milestones for the fire truck and police vehicles will govern disbursement of funds. The council also requested a plan for long-term opioid fund spending (see separate article on the opioid funds debate).

