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Votes at a glance: St. Clair County approves $24.7M in disbursements, multiple contracts and grants
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Summary
At its March 19 meeting the St. Clair County Board of Commissioners approved county disbursements of $24,671,817.08 and a series of contract amendments, appointments and grant applications, including hazardous-material study work, park development phases and roofing and software contracts.
The St. Clair County Board of Commissioners on March 19 approved a package of disbursements, appointments, contract amendments and grant applications.
Key votes and approvals recorded during roll call or by ballot included: • County disbursements: The board approved county disbursements in the amount of $24,671,817.08. • Appointments: Teresa Hogart Daughtry appointed to the library board (District 5) for the remainder of a term to 08/26/2030; Daniel Crocker won the veterans-affairs ballot; CMH appointments resulted in Stephen Fair and Kyle Schwiekic being selected by majority ballots; Nancy Thompson noted as the District 6 appointee (unopposed). • Contracts and amendments: Approval to expand the Tetra Tech hazardous-material study at the Port Huron Courthouse with an increase not-to-exceed $49,935; contract with TriStar Roofing for airport hangar roof replacement not-to-exceed $133,500; Hubbell, Roth & Clark Inc. proposal for North Channel County Park Phase 2 not-to-exceed $107,322.60; OAM proposal for Columbus County Park Phase 2 $71,600; Thermolyneux preventive maintenance contract $12,465; other routine maintenance and procurement items were also approved. • Grants and programs: Adoption of resolutions to submit Department of Natural Resources Trust Fund and Recreation Passport Grant applications for trail and park improvements; approval to apply for the 2024 state and local cybersecurity grant award in the amount of $70,000; Michigan Indigent Defense Commission grant application for $4,873,024.27; Materials Management Planning Grant revision $232,441.
Most motions were moved, seconded and carried by roll call with commissioners recorded as voting yes in the transcript. The clerk noted that ballot records and related voting records are retained in the clerk’s office and available per county procedure.
Why it matters: These approvals include multi-million-dollar disbursements, capital and maintenance contracts, and grant applications that affect county facilities, parks, public safety, and program resources.
Next steps: Administrative follow-up, contract execution, and grant-submission steps will be handled by the relevant departments; ballot records and minutes will document the formal results.

