Thursday night’s City Council meeting will kick off on Zoom with a special study session addressing the city’s financial status, followed by a regular meeting.
Below is a summary of what’s on the City Council’s 88-page agenda packet for the city’s Jan. 28 meeting.
Study Session (5 p.m.). No further details are listed on the agenda packet, other than a four-word “financial update study session” description, but the topic has been expected to hit the agenda following the failure of Measure M last year.
Presentations. The council will begin their regular meeting at 7 p.m. with acknowledgements of the seven local restaurants that participated in the city’s Great Plates Delivered stimulus program. Related article: Restaurant stimulus ends in Citrus Heights, amid FEMA payment delays
New subdivision. The council will consider approving an amendment to an agreement relating to the 23-home Wyatt Ranch Subdivision, which changed owners last month from Mark and Dawn Swinger to Citrus Heights 23, LLC, a Utah-based limited liability company. The development, located off Sunrise Boulevard near Sayonara Drive, has been slow to move forward.
Department reports. The council will conclude its likely short meeting with six department reports reflecting on the past year or addressing specific topics. The city’s administrative and general services departments will each give a report, along with the city manager’s office, the police department, and the community development department.
The Jan. 28 council meeting and study session will be held online via Zoom, with members of the public able to comment by using the “hand raise” function or dialing *9 if joining by telephone. Written comments up to 250 words can also be submitted by email to cityclerk@citrusheights.net and will be read aloud during the meeting.
To join the public Zoom meeting or study session, see links posted in the council’s agenda packet. (click here)
Want to keep updated on civic news in Citrus Heights and other local developments in 2021? Sign up for The Sentinel’s free e-Edition and you’ll get two emails a week with all local news and zero spam. Click here to sign up.