The Beaver FM beaver1003.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from beaver1003.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
APSU officials announced that campus activities Monday have been switched to a remote system, and city and county officials advised people to stay off the roads when possible.
Snow is expected to begin at midnight Sunday night and continue into Monday. The National Weather Service in Nashville said 3 to 7 inches of snow could fall.
“Based on the information we have been monitoring, this is likely to be a significant snow event,” Montgomery County Mayor Jim Durrett said in a statement released Sunday afternoon.
Durrett and Clarksville Mayor Joe Pitts are urging people to stay home on Monday.
“Road crews and equipment are ready to go, but with the amount of snow predicted and the freezing temperatures, it will take crews longer to clear the streets,” Durrett said.
Mayors urge everyone to stay home Monday, schools go remote clarksvillenow.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from clarksvillenow.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Clarksville Now
CLARKSVILLE, TN (CLARKSVILLE NOW) – Clarksville Mayor Joe Pitts presented the city’s $462 million traffic plan to City Council members at a special session on Tuesday.
Pitts stressed that the plan he presented is only the first version and is nowhere near final. He encouraged council members to research the plan and gather input from constituents.
Pitts also said that the city would collect input via a digital survey.
To view the entire traffic plan, and to share your thoughts, click here.
A map showing projects included in tier 1 of the City of Clarksville’s 2020 Traffic Plan, version 1
The plan
The new edition of the Clarksville City Council has wasted no time taking on tough topics, which last week led to a six-hour, marathon executive session with plenty of fireworks.
Whether Thursday’s 7 p.m. regular council voting session will also be as lengthy remains to be seen, but the meeting agenda suggests it could be.
Topping that agenda is the ordinance that could seal the immediate fate of the long-discussed downtown performing arts center. There is plenty of skepticism about it among council members, but proponents of the plan say some of that skepticism is rooted in misinformation.
On the council s February agenda is second reading of an ordinance that, if approved, would authorize the city s purchase of the Roxy property. The fair market value purchase price is quoted at $810,000 after appraisal. The second reading vote was postponed one month by the new council for further study.