EDMOND —
The Stormwater Drainage Advisory Board met recently to discuss the stormwater detention requirement at the Adult Softball Complex being built at State Highway 66 and Post Road.
The board will advise the City Council to waive the detention requirement and fee after learning it serves no purpose to create detention in the middle of the Coffee Creek basin flood plain.
“They (Jacobs Engineering) looked at detention and the only way they could do more detention was to build more berms out there and create a bigger problem,” said Steve Manek, city engineer.
Development is not allowed in a flood plain except for recreational usage, said Charles Lamb, mayor.
“We are developing more accurate current data with the study of Cross Timbers and Coffee Creek than what the FEMA maps represent,” Lamb said.
Long-term plans calls for the construction of eight full fields, said Steve Commons, assistant city manager. In December it was announced that only a four-field softball complex will be in a new community park near Post Road and State Highway 66 at a cost of $4 million. Commons plans to ask the Capital Projects and Financing Task Force on Tuesday to consider funding an additional $1 million to get the additional four fields built.
The city purchased the park property in 2007 for $1.5 million with money from the city’s 3/4-cent permanent sales tax approved by voters in December 2000 for capital improvements.
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Board alters City of Edmond's softball complex plan
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Clean-up continues for Edmond tornado victims
Mid-June is the approximate time that work is expected to be completed in Edmond for replacing nine transmission structures lost in Sunday’s tornado, said Brian Alford, OG&E spokesperson. Repairs could take longer, depending on weather conditions, he added.
Work in Edmond focuses on the Forest Oaks and Thornbrooke additions, both along Bryant Avenue. Twelve homes were damaged in the city by the storm that also dropped hail on northwest Edmond. Major damage impacted three of the homes while the other nine homes had minor damage, said Matt Stillwell, director of the city’s emergency communications and management.
Contract crews from out-of-state are helping OG&E in their restoration effort throughout central and southern Oklahoma, Alford said. -
UCO waits to see its slice of budget pie
Gov. Mary Fallin’s effort with legislative leaders to allocate $33 million of state money to higher education will be a restoration of money borrowed by the state to balance the state budget during the recession, said Steve Kreidler, executive vice president of the University of Central Oklahoma.
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Okla. sees gas price record just before holiday
Oklahoma City has seen an all-time high price for a gallon of regular unleaded gasoline — just in time for one of the busiest travel periods of the year.
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St. Mary's students make prayer blankets
Fourth- through seventh-grade students at St. Mary’s Episcopal School were expediting their effort this week to make as many “prayer squares” as possible before Friday — the last day of school — for tornado victims.
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Yukon resident provides ‘Bikes 4 Kids’ who have none
He may not look like Superman or dress like him either, but for thousands of children in the metro area, one man fills that role daily as he does good deeds for children he has never met.
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Memorial service for tornado victims set
Gov. Mary Fallin announced that a memorial and prayer service will be at 6 p.m. Sunday at the First Baptist Church in Moore. The service will honor and remember the victims of the May 20 tornado that killed 24 people in Moore and the May 19 tornado that killed two in the Shawnee and Carney area. It is open to the public.
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Carpenter Square Theatre gets Disney-fied with ‘Something Intangible’
Carpenter Square Theatre presents “Something Intangible,” a comedy-drama based on Walt and Roy Disney in 1940s Hollywood. Bruce Graham’s tale focuses on the period when they are developing a full-length animated film set to classical music. The new play will be performed through June 8 at 800 W. Main in downtown Oklahoma City.
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Carr earns Bachelor of Arts degree in Economics & Business
Steven J. Carr of Edmond received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Economics & Business. He graduated with honors and distinction.
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