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Fiery crash closes U.S. 287 at Bellevue Monday

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Firefighters had to remove the fiery cargo before it could be extinguished from the semi-truck trailer wreck. (Photos Henrietta VFD)

A car-semi-truck accident on Monday shortly before noon caused a fire and shut down the highway for almost five hours.
Area emergency responders worked this auto-semi-truck wreck that occurred about 10:45 a.m. on Monday in Bellevue in the northbound side of U.S. Highway 287. Henrietta Volunteer Fire Department responded along with Bellevue, Vashti, Bowie Rural and City of Bowie Fire Departments.
Officials with the Department of Public Safety said the accident involved an 18-wheeler that was traveling southbound and a passenger vehicle that was northbound. DPS reported the passenger car drove into southbound traffic for unknown reasons and collided with the 18-wheeler hitting a diesel tank causing both vehicles to catch fire.
The car’s driver, was removed from the vehicle by a trooper and transported to John Peter Smith hospital in Fort Worth with nonlife-threatening injuries. The truck driver was transported to United Regional in Wichita Falls with serious injuries, but not believed to be life-threatening.
This semi-truck was hauling boxes of LEGOS. When the truck cab caught fire it spread into the trailer. Firefighters reported the cargo was difficult to extinguish due to it being plastic and all the cardboard boxes. Firefighters had to remove some of the cargo in order to extinguish the blaze. This section of the highway was closed until 4:30 p.m. There was one lane open on the southbound side alternating traffic to help with traffic flow.

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Amon Carter Lake Board to meet

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Members of the Amon Carter Lake Water Supply Corporation will meet at 6 p.m. on May 26 in the office at 607A Lindsey for a monthly meeting.
Items on the agenda include a consent agenda and minutes and financials. Possible discussion/action may be considered on the following topics: Treasurer’s report, review of finance and current loans; president’s report as to the written agreements with contractual employees; consider current water rates and a possible increase; and review of expenses and areas that need amendment.
An executive session may be entered to discuss personnel issues.

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Saint Jo City Council hires fire marshal

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The City of Saint Jo has a new fire marshal as the city council made the appointment during its May 13 meeting.
Gary Hines, a retired professional firefighter and certified fire investigator, will take the position. City Secretary Debbie Dennis said the post is required by ordinance but has not been filled for a long period.
The council set dates for a budget workshop for 2 p.m. on June 14 and 2 p.m. on June 28 for the ordinance workshop, as the council works to update its rules.

Aldermen gave their support to a proposition by Councilman Jack Dunn who is asking the Legislature to allow Texas’ smallest cities, those with 2,500 or few in population, to receive an additional share of sales and use tax. He would like to see the funds used in these communities to repair and replace aging infrastructure without new taxes or reliance on state grants.
In letter to State Rep. David Spiller, whom Dunn will meet with on June 1, the alderman explains much of the state’s 6.25% share generated locally flows into general funds and is spent on other priorities. He would like Spiller to author this legislation. Dunn gave the letter to the council along with a powerpoint on the plan.
“A single water treatment plant upgrade or sewer rehab carries massive, fixed costs that do not shrink with population size. These communities, often with only a few hundred or a couple thousands residents, simply cannot spread those costs across enough ratepayers or a broad tax based,” the letter states.
Dunn suggests a “graduated sales tax retention policy:” 1% additional share for cities with 2,500 or fewer residents; .75% for those 2,500 and 5,000; and .50% for cities between 5,001 and 10,000. It would be dedicated to infrastructure. Dunn says the overall statewide fiscal impact would be negligible, but could help sustain small, rural cities.

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City of Nocona buys water storage tank, review dam repair

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The Nocona City Council approved a bid for a new 203,000 gallon capacity tank for potable water at the water plant and learned a slide repair to the lake dam is going to be pretty costly.
At its May 12 session the council received three bids on the tank and went with one from Tank Depot of Cleburne for $193,923. It is for a a 217,600 gallon tank usable for 203,000 gallons. The price could change slightly since it was based on estimate freight costs.

Read the full story in the Thursday Bowie News.

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