Seguin, TX, USA / Seguin Today
May 10, 2021 | 5:53 AM
Former and current city leadership was on hand for the SSLGC water expansion project. Pictured are (from left) former Seguin city managers Jack Hamlett and Doug Faseler, and current City Manager Steve Parker. Photo courtesy Seguin Mayor Donna Dodgen
(Nixon) A new multi-million-dollar water treatment plant, which secures the future water needs for this area, is on its way up in Nixon.
City leaders from the City of Seguin and the City of Schertz recently joined the Schertz-Seguin Local Government Corporation (SSLGC) Board of Directors and staff for the groundbreaking of its $33 million dollar Guadalupe Project located in Nixon. The project consists of a new 6.0 MGD water treatment plant, wellfield (including six wells five drilled in the Carrizo Aquifer, one drilled in the Wilcox Aquifer), wellfield access roads, and pipelines to carry water from each well to the new water treatment plant.
Texas Public Radio
Just east of I-37, Denver Heights residents woken up to a blanket of snow on Monday, Feb. 15, like much of the city.
A report on San Antonio’s response to the winter storm is expected to be ready by the middle of June, making it more than four months before the public fully sees the shortcomings of the energy crisis that left many residents without power and water for days in February.
While responses to questions by a special committee overseeing the process are starting to come in, many answers still remain. Members of the San Antonio City Council expressed concern about lapses in communication on Thursday, and on Friday responses from the San Antonio Water System and City of San Antonio were released.
City council OKs part of $7.6 million incentive package for Weston Urban s downtown high-rise
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San Antonio developer Weston Urban plans to build a 32-story tower at 305 Soledad St.Courtesy of Weston Urban
City Council approved part of a $7.6 million incentive package Thursday that local developer Weston Urban is set to receive for building downtown’s first residential high-rise.
The firm plans to start construction this month on the $107 million, 32-story tower at 305 Soledad St., which is currently a parking lot, according to city staff.
It will include 351 market-rate apartments, a courtyard, pool, deck and communal areas as well as roughly 7,000 square feet of ground-floor retail space and a parking garage. Construction is expected to conclude by December 2023.
Both area lawmakers said they plan to attend the Texas Legislative Conference, a nonpartisan organization of Texas business and political leaders, will be held Thursday and Friday at New Braunfels Civic/Convention Center.
âI will try to attend, but we will have a calendar on the floor that day and representing my district on the floor is the job my constituents elected me to do,â District 73 Rep. Kyle Biedermann said of the event sponsored by the Greater New Braunfels Chamber of Commerce.Â
The conference begins with an informal reception at 7 p.m. Thursday and continues Friday with a 7:30 a.m. breakfast, opening session and three seminars addressing public policy issues.