Idaho Falls council approves contracts for airport study, undergrounding, hazmat vehicle and public-works projects
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Summary
On April 2 the council approved an FAA-concurred environmental assessment contract for tower relocation, accepted Idaho Falls Power bid awards for downtown alley undergrounding under a $2M IIJA grant, authorized a state-region hazmat apparatus purchase ($1.28M), and approved several public-works bids and professional service agreements.
The Idaho Falls City Council approved a slate of infrastructure and procurement actions at its April 2 meeting, moving forward projects ranging from an airport environmental assessment to downtown utility undergrounding and a heavy rescue hazmat vehicle for the regional response team.
Airport: Director Turner presented a siting and environmental package for relocating the air traffic control tower and associated VOR relocation. Council authorized a work order with the Artura Group in the amount of $1,008,700.82; Turner told council the FAA has concurred and the funding is available in prior airport-improvement program accounts.
Downtown utilities: Josh Rootz, CFO for Idaho Falls Power, briefed council on a $2 million subrecipient grant from the Idaho Governor's Office of Energy and Mineral Resources (part of IIJA) to underground overhead lines in downtown alleyways. Rootz said the first alleyway phase is nearly complete and two more phases were bid; the council accepted the low bidders for general and electrical work and authorized contract execution for the alley upgrade project (total with contingency about $866,848.18).
Hazmat apparatus: Municipal Services recommended purchase of a Pierce Enforcer heavy-duty hazmat rescue apparatus through the HGAC cooperative contract for $1,279,871 to serve Region 7. The council approved the purchase and authorized mayoral and clerk signatures; staff estimated delivery in 36—9 months.
Public works contracts: Council awarded the Silk Coast 2026 pavement maintenance contract to HK Contractors (about $1.757M), approved the Birch Street South roundabout contract to DLVEC Inc. (~$1.333M), and authorized a professional services agreement with Strata Inc. (about $285,220) for federally aided intersection improvements. In an earlier item, the council rejected an unresponsive bid for water-line surface repairs and awarded the work to JM Concrete (estimated $904,530).
Council members discussed vetting processes and project sequencing; Director Alexander and Public Works staff explained internal review workflows and coordination to minimize traffic impacts during the construction season. All procurement motions passed on voice votes recorded in the meeting minutes.
What comes next: staff will finalize contracts and execute agreements; construction schedules were described as starting in late spring and running through the summer where applicable.
