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Votes at a glance: Rosenberg council passes microchip ordinance, election-sign policy and electricity procurement
Summary
In a single meeting the Rosenberg City Council approved an ordinance to require microchipping of owned pets (6'0'1), adopted an election-signage policy for city polling places, authorized electricity procurement agreements via OMNIA/Tradition Energy (7'0'0), and approved a settlement in cause no. 24-CCV-074997.
Here are the key votes and formal actions the Rosenberg City Council recorded at this meeting.
- Consent agenda (excluding items G and I): Approved by voice vote, 7 to 0.
- Ordinance No. 2026-08 (Item G) ' Microchip requirement for owned dogs and cats: Motion to approve (moved by Councilor Jaramillo, seconded by Councilor Vargas) passed by voice vote, recorded in the meeting as 6 to 1 in favor. The ordinance replaces the external tag registration requirement with a microchip-and-registration requirement and includes a provision that the council discussed to avoid fines for properly microchipped animals during an initial implementation period.
- Resolution R426 (Item I) ' Election signage policy for city-owned polling places: Adopted after discussion on sign supports and inclusion of nearby vacant land in the sign-count rules; motion recorded as passed (numeric tally not separately recorded in the transcript segment).
- Resolution R4028 ' Authorization for city manager to execute electricity supply agreements (OMNIA/Tradition Energy): Motion by Councilor Jaramillo passed 7 to 0. The resolution authorizes contracts up to 84 months and caps supply rates at 7 cents per kilowatt-hour; staff provided confidential pricing at the dais.
- Settlement in cause No. 24-CCV-074997: Councilor Vargas moved to accept the settlement and authorize the city manager and city attorney to execute necessary documents; the council approved the motion (tally not fully recorded in the transcript).
- Executive session: Council moved to hold an executive session to consult with the city attorney on pending litigation, real property and economic-development negotiations under Texas Government Code sections cited in the meeting.
The council ended with a motion to adjourn.
