This has been an eventful week in the city of Bedford. The
city commission met Monday morning for its regularly scheduled meeting. I was
very sick and wanted to stay home but I knew there was a lot to discuss so I
went to the meeting. I am glad I did.
In my
last blog entry, I warned that snow was on the way. Monday morning people
living in Bedford woke up to about 3” of snow. The untimely snow accumulation
caught the Bedford city commission off guard in a number of ways leaving the
streets of Bedford covered with snow. On the Friday before the snow, I learned
the truck (the city uses for snow removal) has major problems. According to a
certified mechanic, the frame on the truck is “pushed down and bent in on the
passenger side.” He does not believe the truck would be safe to drive, let
alone plow snow on public streets. So, where do we go from here? At the city
commission meeting on Monday, I informed the commission of what the mechanic
told me. During the meeting, I tried calling the mechanic but he did not answer
the phone at the shop. I recommended that commissioners Harold Green and Frank
Floyd begin research on purchasing a new truck and when they found something we
would have a special meeting to decide on the purchase. Mayor Russell Clifton
and the other commissioner Darrell Harmon agreed. Thankfully, Jimmy Hoskins was available to
clean the streets for the city. Hoskins is the sewer plant manager for Bedford.
A few weeks ago,
a young man came to my house selling Family Heritage insurance. He compared it
to AFLAC on steroids. I explained to him that we have a no solicitation
ordinance in town and that he would need to check in at city hall before going
door to door in our community. I called Rita, the city clerk, to have her put
him on the agenda for the meeting Monday. His first name is Justin and he may
come knocking on your door to try selling you insurance.
The reason I
wanted to clarify the door to door salesperson is because I want to protect the
residents of Bedford. There have been reports of houses being broken into and
people in the area being robbed and instead of worrying about catching the bad guys;
I want to screen anyone who wants to go knocking on doors in this town. If anyone has concerns about a suspicious
salesperson he or she should contact city hall or the sheriff’s office
immediately. Most of the time, it is an
honest person trying to make a living in sales. But, I would rather err on the
side of caution.
Members from the
Bedford Volunteer Fire Department showed up at the meeting. It was nice to see
them present. I realize those individuals have jobs and busy schedules and
cannot attend every meeting so it says a lot for them to be in attendance when
they have time. Going forward, I hope someone can represent them at every
meeting.
The commission
decided to renew their contract with Republic Waste Services for the next year.
Inside the city limits of Bedford, everyone is mandated to have trash pick-up.
The city pays a percentage of the fee charged by whoever collects the trash.
For years, Rumpke provided that service but was under bid by Republic last year
and again this year. Both companies provide adequate service, but I wanted to
award Rumpke the job because they have unlimited pick up every week while
Republic allows for unlimited pick up once a month. For me and my household,
the 96 gallon can is plenty. But there are people in town who have a lot more
and no matter how many times they are told unlimited trash is once a month,
they pile it on the curb and there it sits for three weeks. A sales representative
for Republic said they would do unlimited trash pickup every week during the
meeting and I hope her drivers are made aware of that so they can act
accordingly.
Now, I want to
address the poll on my blog about the city of Bedford going moist. Although,
not many people have voted on it I have received an incredible amount of
feedback from it. I have to say, I had no idea how many people want some kind
of alcohol sales in Bedford. Out of all the feedback, only two people contacted
me to voice their concerns against it. I respect them and their opinions. I hope they respect my position to serve all
the people in town. Therefore, I am going to try to get something on a ballot
so that all the people can vote on it. There is a lot of work to be done to get
it on the ballot and it takes time.
I will be
attending conferences in December and January for newly elected officials. The
meeting in December is located in Louisville and the one in January is in
Lexington. Although I took part in a webinar last week, I am ashamed to admit
the last time I was at one of these conferences was back in 1992. I look
forward to the conferences and hope to learn ways to improve the city of
Bedford. Regardless of how much I learn at those conferences, the status quo in
Bedford is up to the residents. The city commission is ruled by majority. If
nobody from the community shows up at the meetings to voice their opinions the
group will do what they think is best for everyone, whether it is or isn’t.