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Incumbents fill Nocona ballots, city council only May race

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As election filing came to an end on Feb. 15 only the City of Nocona will have an election on May 4, as the other two entities had all their incumbents file with no new names.
The City of Nocona, Nocona Independent School District and Nocona Hospital District are the only governmental entities in the county that have elections in May. The remainder of the other entities moved their elections to November in conjunction with the county.
However with the approval of the Tier 2 petition last Friday, the county will add an election for that issue on the May 4 ballot.
On the Nocona City Council Robert Fenoglio will run unopposed for mayor. There are two places open on the council with incumbents Tom Horn and Don Davis filing for re-election, along with Robert Dwayne Fuller.
City Secretary Revel Hardison said Ricky Roberts filed for the council race, but his petition was rejected when his voter registration verified he lives outside the city limits.
For the NISD board, place three filled by Greg Fuller and place four filled by Pat Keck will be on the ballot. Both incumbents have filed and the district is expected to cancel its election.
The hospital district also will cancel its election as all four incumbents filed for the four places on the board: Melissa Murphey, Chris Keck, Ken Koontz and Charlie Brown.

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Rain runoff still helping lakes fill

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Runoff from the ongoing spring rains are bringing great benefits for Montague County lakes as they continue to slowly rise.
Lake levels
Amon G. Carter
May 7 – 100% full,
920.86 msl
April 30 – 100% full,
920.68 msl
Lake is full at 920 msl

Lake Nocona
May 7 – 83.7% full,
824.79 msl
April 30 – 73.1% full,
822.91 msl
Lake full at 827.5 msl

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Pending litigation leads to executive session

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Members of the Montague County Commissioner’s Court face a lengthy agenda when they meet at 9 a.m. on May 13.
An executive session is listed for deliberation on pending litigation. The court also will begin the preliminaries of budget planning with a workshop.
The court will review an engagement letter with Edgin, Parkman, Fleming and Fleming to conduct the annual outside audit.
The sheriff’s office staff will submit several items lead by a request to purchase a radio console for dispatch, along with a memo of understanding between Flock Safety and the SO and an application for participation with the Law Enforcement Support Office.
Commissioners will finally close out the Federal Emergency Management Agency project 4223 for county flood damage during the spring of 2015.

Read the full story on all the agenda topics in the mid-week Bowie News.

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Bowie BISD bond vote fails, 73% say no

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By BARBARA GREEN
[email protected]
Bowie Independent School District trustees said they wanted a mandate one way or another in regard to the $65.8 million bond proposal, which was one of multiple reasons it went back on the ballot.
While voter turnout out was smaller than the Nov. 7, 2023 election, the mandate was clear as 73.28% of voters said no to the bond. Trustees had hoped a massive education campaign and a single issue election would boost voter turnout, however, that was not the case.
BISD asked voters to reconsider the same $65.8 million proposal that failed 855-1,079 last November. In that Nov. 7 election 1,934 people voted.
On May 4 there were 1,785 total voters, 149 less than in the fall. There were 477 votes supporting the bond and 1,308 saying no. The bond failed by 831 votes with only 26.72% saying yes.
Forestburg ISD asked voters to consider a pair of infrastructure centered bonds and the results were close. The most recent bond election for FISD was in 2018 and it failed 301-195.

Read the full story in the mid-week Bowie News.

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