Bay Area Edition | November 2025

Government

BY RACHEL LELAND

League City approves $2M fleet modernization League City officials authorized the purchase of nearly $2 million in vehicles while retiring more than 30 vehicles from the city’s existing fleet. The details The vehicles—approved at League City City Council’s Oct. 28 meeting—will be used by police, emergency medical services and public works city staff. In total, the purchase includes 26 new vehicles, documents show. Seven of those will go toward police and first responders, while the remainder will be considered general purpose. One more thing City Council also voted to declare over 30 existing city vehicles surplus property and send them to auction in 2026, Communicators Director Sarah Osborne said.

League City approves noise ordinance League City residents now have to abide by an updated noise ordinance that gener- ally prohibits “unreasonable noise.” What happened League City City Council on Oct. 28 approved the final reading of an ordinance that would create a special event sound permit process and generally prohibit unrea- sonable noise, with some exceptions. The details Whether a noise is unreasonable will depend on the frequency, duration and recurrence of the sound in addition to its volume and location, documents show. The city will presume amplified sound generated from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. in residential areas to be unreasonable.

Fleet upgrades

The approved purchases, according to city documents, include 19 general-purpose vehicles and equipment for $1.2 million , including:

14 general-purpose city vehicles

3 mowers

2 emergency equipment replacement reserves

The council also approved the purchase of seven new vehicles for $655,500 , including:

1 ambulance

1 fire marshal responder truck

5 police special investigations unit and captain vehicles

SOURCE: LEAGUE CITY/COMMUNITY IMPACT

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COMMUNITYIMPACT.COM

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