Replacing water lines downtown, overhauling the Cook Street Water Treatment Plant and repairing the resulting torn up streets is at the top of Truth or Consequences’ Infrastructure Capital Improvements Plan, a five-years-out, elevator-speech look at projects.
The ICIP is the go-to document for legislators’ advocating for and voting on capital outlay bills for their districts. The state departments use it to order their thoughts on and eventual funding of infrastructure projects. If it’s not on the ICIP list, it doesn’t get funded.
All cities and counties are supposed to have their ICIPs into the state by September 6. The Truth or Consequences City Commission held a public hearing on July 10 and then approved the top six projects at the August 27 meeting.
The only public comment was a complaint by a resident that no one was there to speak and the city needed to do a better job engaging the public. Commissioner George Szigeti said the lack of public comment demonstrates its confidence in the board. City Attorney Jay Rubin said Open Meetings Act is being followed.
The City Commission had a thorough discussion at the August 27 meeting, demonstrating its members’ extensive collective memory and intimate knowledge of the city’s aging infrastructure problems. It ranked the top six projects. Staff will now seek state funding for these projects and try to get them going this year.
Number one on the commissioners’ list is replacing water distribution lines downtown, renovating the Cook Street Station and fixing the resulting torn-up streets. Grants and Project Coordinator Traci Burnette said ICIP projects must be “shovel ready,” meaning a Preliminary Engineering Report is complete and local funding is already dedicated to the project. An $8-million to $9-million grant application is in the works with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, she said, and the 2014 PER was updated in 2017.
The second project also addresses water. The city has completed a PER on replacing water lines on U.S. Interstate Highway 25’s Business Loop through town, having received a $1.2-million grant from the state. What’s lacking is about $500,000 to repair the streets.
The third project is replacing street lights all over the city, changing the housings and bulbs to LED lights. The old lights will soon be so outdated that bulb changes will be impossible. Burnette said the project is shovel ready. The current placeholder for the project is $50,000.
Work on storm drains citywide, to address the flooding problem, especially downtown, is fourth on the list. City Manager Morris Madrid said the city has paid $120,000 to $250,000 a year over many years to the county for flood control, suggesting the county should help fund the project. City Commissioners agreed. Burnette estimates $3 million for the project.
The fifth project is related to a MainStreet “Great Blocks” grant that proposes to beautify Foch Street between Broadway and Main. The grant only covers design, so the city is seeking construction money. The estimated cost is $1.3 million.
The sixth project is improving roads leading to the new Sierra Vista Hospital entrance, including 9th Street, Silver Street and Gold Street. The estimate for the project is $1.7 million.