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Freeport council approves multiple ordinances, resolutions and appointments
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Summary
The Freeport City Council approved a slate of routine and capital measures, including amendments to trash/dumpster rules, utility connection fees, surplus property liquidation, multiple procurement resolutions and several appointments; most items passed unanimously.
The Freeport City Council on Feb. 16 approved a series of ordinances, resolutions and appointments covering code updates, purchases and personnel actions, moving routine business off the agenda and into implementation.
City Manager Boyer recommended changes to water and sewer connection fees and other technical amendments to municipal code that the council approved. "We haven't revised this in over nine years, and it is necessary to recapture some of those costs that have been eroded away in inflation," Boyer said during the meeting.
Why it matters: the measures include code clarifications affecting construction dumpsters and temporary containers, updated utility connection charges, and contract and equipment purchases that the city said are budgeted or exceed managerial thresholds and therefore required council approval.
What passed: the council approved the consent agenda (which included department reports and finance bills totaling $1,406,976.13 and payroll of $718,450.74), confirmed appointments to commissions, and passed second‑reading ordinances on temporary dumpsters (ordinance 2026‑06) and water/sewer connection fees (ordinance 2026‑07). The council also adopted resolutions to purchase Neptune water meters (resolution 2026‑15), to renew a pole‑attachment agreement with Syndeo Networks (resolution 2026‑16), and to consolidate and expand an Iwerks software agreement (resolution 2026‑19).
Fire department and safety purchases: Chief Gordy explained the fire department's plan to phase replacement turnout gear that is known to contain PFAS chemicals. "NFPA says 10 years," Chief Gordy said when asked how long the gear remains serviceable. Council approved the purchase plan and a purchase limit not to exceed $75,000 (resolution 2026‑17).
Airport and other contracts: Council authorized a 20‑year memorandum of agreement with the Federal Aviation Administration for Alberta's Airport operations (resolution 2026‑18), a continued pole‑attachment agreement with Syndeo to maintain downtown broadband and a vital feed for the police dispatch center, and accepted various competitive bids for maintenance and services.
How the votes went: most motions passed unanimously, typically 8‑0. The Syndeo Networks agreement adopted 7‑0 due to one member recorded as absent during that roll call.
Next steps: ordinances that were introduced on first reading — including proposed mobile food‑truck licensing changes and a new Public Works environmental health and safety coordinator classification — will return for a second reading and further council consideration.
The meeting then moved toward an executive session to discuss a real‑property matter.

