Lifetime Citizen Portal Access — AI Briefings, Alerts & Unlimited Follows
Votes at a glance: rezoning, ordinances, licenses and contracts approved by Aberdeen council
Loading...
Summary
At the same meeting the council approved a series of consent and new-business items: a rezoning petition, subdivision and signage ordinances, a retail wine license for Costa Brava, a dispatch software contract, construction payments and a sanitary sewer lining contract; the council also approved payroll and claims.
The Aberdeen City Council approved a package of council business including rezoning, ordinances, license approvals and several contract awards.
Key votes and outcomes - Rezoning petition (260301): Council adopted the rezoning request for property at 903 25th Avenue NE after planning staff recommended approval. Roll call read by the clerk recorded unanimous support in that vote.
- Subdivision ordinance (260302): Final adoption of the subdivision ordinance was approved on roll call after staff reported no changes since first reading.
- Signage ordinance (260305): Council adopted amendments to the City Code’s signage regulations on second reading; staff reported no public comments or concerns.
- Costa Brava Peruvian Kitchen: Council approved a new retail off-sale wine and cider license for Costa Brava, LLC (104 S. Main St.) after a public hearing and no objections.
- Surplus of police firearm: The council approved surplus and transfer of a retired officer’s firearm; the Fraternal Order of Police will reimburse $600.
- Tripmaster dispatch software: Staff recommended Tripmaster following demos and bids; council approved a five-year contract and first-year payment of about $56,625.
- Construction and infrastructure contracts: Council approved a schedule-B payment to Landmark Structures and awarded a sanitary sewer lining contract targeting the old industrial park; assistant engineer Destin reported projects are progressing and recommended award to the identified bidders.
- Claims and payroll: Council approved payment of weekly claims and payroll for the period March 22–April 4.
Why it matters: These actions advance multiple capital and operational priorities for the city — from permitting new businesses to maintaining core infrastructure — and create the contract authorizations and budget outlays needed to proceed.
Ending: Items approved at this meeting will move to the implementation phase under the city’s respective departments. Any bidder or contract paperwork will be finalized by city staff per normal procurement procedures.

