Government
BY ALEX REECE
Prosper Town Council members approved various public safe- ty-related contracts totaling about $563,330 during a Nov. 14 meeting. The contracts will allocate money toward renewing records contracts, new vehicles and more, according to the agenda item. The breakdown One contract was a $112,812 renewal for the annual software assurance of the town’s com- puter-aided dispatch and record management systems, according to meeting documents. Prosper officials first entered the agreement with the software provider, Integrated Computer Systems Inc., in 2009, according to meeting documents. Another contract approved during the Nov. 14 meeting was $45,904 to go toward in-person physicals for all Prosper Fire Department members. The funds were available through the town’s fiscal year 2023-24 budget, according to meeting documents. Prosper council OKs $563K for public safety
Fiscal year 2023-24 general fund
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Police services: $9,583,528 Administration: $9,800,919 Fire services: $10,562,449
Total $48.85M
Public works: $4,727,062 Community services: $7,355,779 Development services: $4,139,855 Engineering: $2,684,047
SOURCE: TOWN OF PROSPER/COMMUNITY IMPACT
What else? One contract for $404,613 purchased several vehicles for various town departments, including the police department and fire department. Here is a quick look at what the money will go to: • Five 2024 Chevrolet Malibus for the police department • One Chevrolet Malibu for the Fire Department • One John Deere 410P and one Ford F-550 truck for the Public Works Department Funds for the vehicles were available through the town’s fiscal year 2023-24 budget, according to meeting documents.
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Prosper’s routes prohibiting trucks have been updated for the first time in eight years. Prosper Town Council members amended the town’s “no-thru” truck routes during a Nov. 28 meeting. The breakdown Prosper council updates truck routes only apply to commercial motor vehicles, which typically weigh more than 26,000 pounds and include vehicles carrying haz- ardous materials or solid waste, according to meeting documents. Local deliveries will also not be affected by the new ordinance, just the larger commercial trucks passing through town, according to meeting documents. Prosper Town Council members last discussed updating the routes during an Oct. 24 work session. The routes prohibiting trucks
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