The design and review board and planning and zoning commission do not have June meetings.
Thomas Concrete is finishing a job out of town and then is planning on moving into the village to finish that work.
The village received the F550 on May 30. It will go in for undercoating, then be put into service. The Ranger is scheduled for a mid-June build.
The village should be seeing a delivery date in the next few weeks for the playground equipment for Airport Park. The new equipment will be in the area between H&R Block and the left-field fence. When the village puts down the pad for the playground equipment, it also will provide access to the trail from the park.
Council thanked Brad Conn for recently edging and mulching at Clay Street Park.
Cleanup Day was held May 31. It was another successful event, although a bit slower than usual. Council thanked the street department, Nate Troyer and Brent Hofstetter for their hard work.
HDM requested permission to close South Monroe Street on Friday, June 27 for a food truck to set up (no earlier than 9 p.m.) and then South Monroe and Court streets all day on Saturday, June 28 for Thunder Over Holmes County.
Council discussed restricting west-bound traffic on East Clinton Street to right turn only at the intersection with North Clay Street during peak traffic volume times. Members also discussed a possible right turn only coming out of No Name Street onto South Clay/South Washington streets. It was decided council would put it on the agenda to decide at the next council meeting.
A street department job posting is out, and applications are being accepted at this time. Anyone interested can stop by the village offices to pick up an application.
The Aquaman lawsuit with the village has been settled.
The village is awaiting confirmation from the state about its DORA application.
The village time capsule is closed and stored at the county recorder’s office. Its bicentennial banners are ordered and will hopefully arrive in time to put them up after the Hometown Hero’s banners come down after the Fourth of July.
Mayor Kelly Hoffee talked to Chris Young, Holmes County engineer, about the benefits of new smart lights in downtown. He suggested she talk to Dave Hoffman from ODOT because he could answer more questions. Hoffman told Hoffee the new lights will be better than what the village has now, but if council wants an idea of how much better, he and his team will run some numbers when he returns from vacation.
The new online bill pay system will not be ready for the June water bill, but council is hoping it will be available soon.
ODOT is currently doing a safety study at Glen Drive.
Secretary of State Frank LaRose sent a letter honoring Millersburg for its bicentennial.
The next council meeting is scheduled for July 14.