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Thursday, Nov. 14, 2024
The White Lake Mirror

Zellar Road work in Whitehall to be completed soon; storm sewer next to be assessed

WHITEHALL — Whitehall city manager Scott Huebler informed the city council during Tuesday's regular meeting that the Zellar Road work is set to be complete either at the end of this week or early next week.
The road work, which was necessitated by recent heavy rain damage, is being completed by White Lake Excavating at a cost of $80,440, the expense of which was approved at a Nov. 1 special meeting of the council so that the work could begin promptly.
Piping under Zellar Road will need to be examined to determine the extent of repairs necessary as well. The council approved a $32,000 bid from Plummers Environmental in Byron Center to assess and repair damage to the storm sewer.
The city will soon have to deal with another unexpected cost, as Huebler reported to the council that a Whitehall police car was recently totaled in an accident. Huebler said everyone involved was OK and that the police officer was not at fault in the accident. The council will be presented with pricing options at its next meeting; another municipality, Huebler said, has a road-ready police car available to sell the city, and the nearby Fremont Ford dealership also has an available vehicle, but that one would require wiring work to be ready for police use and would not be ready for months.
The council unanimously (apart from councilman Jeff Holmstrom, who was absent) approved a Dec. 10 public hearing, to take place during the city council meeting, to discuss amendments to the Tax Increment Finance Authority and Local Development Finance Authority budgets.
Also Tuesday, the council unanimously approved a memorandum of understanding with Whitehall District Schools regarding the use of a school resource officer (SRO). The SRO program has been in place for some time, originally funded by a grant, according to Huebler, but since the expiration of that grant the arrangement had been informal. The MOU's approval formalized the arrangement without a change to the involved finances.
The council praised the Department of Public Works employees for their work in leaf pickup to date. The DPW picked up those responsibilities from Lakeshore Leaf, which informed the city earlier this month that it would be unable to fulfill a five-year contract it and the city agreed to last year. Councilman Scott Brown said the DPW is doing as good a job or better than Lakeshore Leaf did the year prior.