Jury itching to improve capital projects
“We plan for the future,
for the next generation,” Wanda Bennett, District 3 Bossier Parish
Police Juror, said in a wide ranging discussion about the jury’s work
earlier this month.
If
there is an award for governmental long range planning, the Bossier
Parish Police Jury would surely be a contender for recognition. As
suggested in my last column, the jury’s longterm transportation and
infrastructure planning is a heavy contributor to Bossier Parish’s continuing growth.
But
equally important in the jury’s success in significant parish
infrastructure improvements is the ability to find funding from sources
other than the jury’s budget as noted below. And that’s a consideration
for Bossier Parish residents to keep in mind for the future of those
improvements.
Parish
Engineer Butch Ford arrives at our visit about transportation and
infrastructure issues armed with those plans. Picking up where we left
off two weeks ago, Ford said he works closely with Parish Administrator
Bill Altimus and Parish Treasurer Sheryl Thomas on budget forecasting to
plan capital improvement projects.
Project plans currently span a chart running through 2024 – and include yearly
costs of operations, the amount of asphalt to be purchased, equipment
purchased annually, concrete and drainage repairs, bridges and the debt
service on the south extension of Arthur Ray Teague Parkway.
“This
type of budgeting and forecasting is what we use to determine which
projects we’re going to do over the next three years,” Ford said.
Ford
ticked off where the jury stands on current and recently completed
capital projects – which aren’t all transportation related.
The
Kingston Road widening project is underway with costs shared by the
Bossier Parish School Board, the Kingston Crossing Apartments developer,
the jury and Bossier City – for the near $2 million project. Last year
the jury completed improvements to Wimple Road from Airline Drive to
Cross Creek, a $1.1 million project, and has scheduled the next step of
the project for this year – to Lakewood Subdivision – a $1.8 million
project. These projects are in addition to those listed here two weeks
ago.
Another aspect of the jury’s transportation work came at
Ford’s recommendation to improve the parish’s road bases. Altimus said
Ford’s extensive knowledge of soils and asphalt composition, along with
his previous state Department of Transportation and Development work and
experience with a private testing company convinced the jury to
undertake this soil cementing process to extend the life of parish
roads.
“No one around
here was doing that,” Altimus said. “It increases the original cost of
redoing or doing a road from what we were used to. [But] this action has
really increased the life expectancy of the roads from what we
experienced in the past with the added plus of being able to take a
beating from the weight and vast number of loads experienced due to the
gas boom.”
Drainage
improvements are another area of parish capital improvement. Presently
underway, the Eastwood- Merrywoods drainage project in Haughton is being
funded in large part by a statewide flood control program grant – while
a $350,000 Louisiana Community Development Block Grant is making
possible the jury’s assistance to the small community of East Benton to
finally have real sewer service. The jury will see to the construction
aspect; the town of Benton will treat the sewerage.
Although
roads long have been the focus of the jury’s capital improvement
concerns and projects (and more recently, the construction of a utility
system), Ford said the jury’s focus is now turning to bridges.
“We
can spend up to $150,000 on a bridge doing maintenance work,” Ford
said. “But our bridges are getting older and they need to be replaced.
We’ve identified around 10 bridges that are long, old bridges that are
going to need to be replaced over the next seven or eight years.”
He
said the parish has contracted with a consulting firm to assist with
what’s likely to be a major and costly long-term project.
Ford
said Bossier Parish has 116 bridges – 100 of which the parish
maintains, and many of which the parish has replaced with the funding
assistance of the federal Off-System Bridge Program.
But
the larger bridges in need of replacement may pose something of a
funding challenge as the program’s current funding cycle doesn’t include
Bossier Parish. That’s a concern for Ford who explained to jurors in
the last budget session that the jury can’t depend on the federal
program funding in the future.
The jury will need to have a program of its own.
So
that brings us to more on the bridge issue, along with review on just
how the jury’s capital improvement budget has been funded, as well as
outside funding that may or may not be available in the future in the
next issue of Forum.
Marty Carlson, a freelance writer, has been covering local news for the past 17 years. She can be reached via email at martycarlson1218@ gmail.com.