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Clerk reads consent/projects list including ROW purchases, public-works contracts and legal services; council discusses consent rules
Summary
The clerk read a consent and projects list for introduction that included right-of-way acquisitions (Kicker Road sidewalk ROW $1,500 and another $239), a public-works contract for pump improvements, authorization for a professional services agreement for HR benefit software ($84,114), a right-of-entry for Charter Communications at the airport, and other routine items. Council members asked how items qualify for the consent agenda.
Jimbo, the clerk, read a series of consent and project items for council introduction. Items included a riparian easement with the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources for a grant; a legal-services agreement relating to product-liability litigation for PFAS/"forever chemicals"; a right-of-way permit for Lexington Downs Homeowners Association; a commercial right-of-entry agreement with Charter Communications to install FAA communications equipment at the airport; authorization for Tuscaloosa Paddle Board Inc at Lake Nichol; and a tentative public-works contract to Mark Johnson Construction LLC for Hillardian Fletcher Pumping Improvements.
Jimbo also noted authorizing the CFO to draw funds for Kicker Road sidewalk right-of-way acquisition in the amount of $1,500 and a separate ROW amount of $239 for the same project. The clerk said a professional-services agreement with Plan Scribe Benefit Administration Inc for $84,114 was included for HR software benefits administration; another item authorized a minor public-works contract with Premier Service Company not to exceed $75,000 for traffic signal services.
A council member asked what distinguishes items that go on the consent agenda. Another member explained that the council's rules of procedure and a specific resolution designate which items are appropriate for consent and that it is not strictly a dollar-amount threshold. The clerk and others noted items can be flagged for the larger agenda if they are not on the consent list.
Why it matters: these consent items allocate city resources, authorize contracts, and start procurement and right-of-way processes that can affect budgets and construction schedules. Council discussion emphasized the procedural rule—rather than a single dollar rule—governing consent placement.
Next steps: items were introduced for council consideration on the consent agenda; the transcript does not record final votes on these consent items in the provided excerpt.

