Lifetime Citizen Portal Access — AI Briefings, Alerts & Unlimited Follows
Council adopts opioid settlement participation, fire-truck financing and multiple zoning ordinances (all votes unanimous)
Loading...
Summary
The City Council unanimously adopted a Remnant Defendant opioid settlement participation (estimated allocation $12,044), approved financing documents for a fire truck, and adopted several zoning and conveyance ordinances on second reading; most votes recorded 5-0.
The Stillwater City Council on April 20 adopted several resolutions and ordinances covering an opioid settlement participation, financing for a fire truck and a set of zoning and property-conveyance actions.
City Attorney Kimberly Karnley described a Remnant Defendant opioid settlement and said the city's estimated gross allocation is $12,044; council voted 5-0 to adopt Resolution CC-2026-7 authorizing participation and release of claims as described in the settlement documents. "By participating, we will be allocated based on a percentage and the estimated gross allocation for the City Of Stillwater is $12,044," the city attorney said.
Council then adopted Resolution CC-2026-8 to approve an equipment lease purchase agreement and related financing documents necessary to close on a ladder fire truck ordered in 2022 and recently delivered; the resolution passed 5-0.
On second reading the council adopted several ordinances by unanimous votes: Ordinance 35-95 (rezoning land at 3020 N Jardo Road to two-family/multi-family), Ordinance 35-96 (rezoning 3398 N Jardo Road to small lot single-family), Ordinance 35-97 (conveyance of city-owned property at 1224 N Husband Street to Independent School District #16 with a citizen-initiated referendum provision in the city charter), Ordinance 35-99 (rezoning 3621 & 3605 N Prosperity Lane to commercial shopping), and Ordinance 36-00 (amending the Public Art Program committee quorum rules). Each of these motions was moved, seconded and recorded as a 5-0 vote.
The meeting also advanced three first-read ordinances to second reading (36-01 and 36-02 easement closings discussed earlier; 36-03 amending a municipal cable permit to reflect changes with a provider), each advanced unanimously.
The council recessed for SUA and SEDA meetings (each approved consent dockets 5-0) and later entered an executive session (25 O.S. 307(B)(1)) before reconvening with no action recommended from the executive session.

