OT RED-H ER SUMM
ALL VARIETIES BAGGED MULCH
4 FOR $10
MULCH
Present or mention coupon at time of purchase. Liberty Hill location only. Delivery not included. 2 cu. ft. bags Offer expires 9.6.20.
Family Owned & Operated Since 1975
(512) 515-1336 • 989ROCK.com •14775 W. SH-29, Liberty Hill • Mon-Sat 7am-5pm
2020
Volume 33, Issue 37
COVID-19 positivity test rate remains high
By MIKE EDDLEMAN Managing Editor A week into August the daily new confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Texas and Williamson County are down from July numbers, but health officials are keeping a watchful eye on the positivity rate. Across Texas, there have been just over 56,000 new cases since Aug. 1, down about 10,000 cases per week from July numbers. But the rate of positive tests remains high, currently at 13.88 percent for the state, which is nearly three times the number the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) identifies as a hotspot for the virus. The positivity rate in the county is even higher than the state average, at 17.58 percent. “While there are encouraging signs that community-based viral transmission may be starting to plateau or even decline, COVID-19 is still rampant across Central Texas, including here in Williamson County. Our current rate of new cases is averaging around 12
See COVID, Page 3
www.LHIndependent.com
News@LHIndependent.com
August 6, 2020 | 50 Cents
Council to consider ditching current City drainage plan
By MIKE EDDLEMAN rent engineers and other engineers and Managing Editor (Halff Associates) actually looked at our Prior to July, there was no sign Liberty current drainage plan and their comment Hill had issue with its extensive drainage was that ‘we wish every city we’ve done master plan, though very little action had a drainage mitigation plan for was set up been taken to implement the plan since it as Liberty Hill being that the center of the was adopted midway through 2018. town is at the highest point with a river to But in early July Mayor Rick Hall an- the north and a river to the south.’” nounced to the Council that he was in disIn the Council packet on July 27, the cussions with Halff Associates to revisit Council was given the new proposal the City’s drainage improvement needs, which emphasized five steps, including and believed he would be able to come flood risk refinement, conceptual drainage back with a more affordable plan to ad- capital improvement project refinement, dress the issue. drainage maintenance, a drainage utility The plan approved in 2018 was devel- rate study and drainage criteria recomoped by K. Friese and “Their proposal to get the flooding down Associates and was presented in phases. and maintain it is to open up our natural The issue was raised at canals that we have here, and our channels both July meetings, with Hall sharing a one-page in the city, and to get that water to the river synopsis of the refined instead of holding it back and creating plan with the Council. more problems down the road for us. This The Phase 2 report was estimate came back at about $265,000 72 pages with methodology, funding recommenfor their proposed plan for us.” dations, maps, and a de~ Mayor Rick Hall tailed list of 17 identified problem areas. The City invested $22,471 mendations. The estimated budget for the into the study. five areas to be addressed is $265,000. “The company that came back and did “Their proposal to get the flooding down that drainage study for us, their proposal and maintain it is to open up our natural was somewhere in the neighborhood of canals that we have here, and our chanabout $7 million,” Hall said. “If that’s nels in the city, and to get that water to what we need to spend that’s what we the river instead of holding it back and need to spend, but the proposal was buy- creating more problems down the road for ing a lot of property around town and us,” Hall said. “This estimate came back turning that into retention ponds to slow See DRAINAGE, Page 5 the water down. I’ve spoken with our cur-
UNANSWERED QUESTIONS: Without the use of retention ponds, how will the drainage flow be controlled? What prompted the decision to seek out a new drainage plan solution? Should Council approval be sought before requesting that engineers redo a Council-adopted master plan? What will be the ultimate cost of the work being done by Halff Associates? Was K. Friese and Associates approached about the cost concerns regarding the adopted plan? Does the proposed $265,000 cost of the new plan include all work required to mitigate drainage issues? Because of the City of Liberty Hill’s lack of communication with The Independent, these are questions that can’t be answered through documents or attendance at City meetings.
DeYoung talks of refocused effort on Council
By MIKE EDDLEMAN Managing Editor Taking a moment to speak personally to the community, City Council TONY member DEYOUNG T o n y DeYoung LH City Council stepped away from the dais at the July 27 meeting. In the public comments portion of the meeting, DeYoung used his three minutes to defend his independence on the Council, pledge more oversight and encourage residents to get more involved, especially at the ballot box. As he wrapped up his comments, he posed a pair of questions. “What kind of city do you want? What reputation do you want our city to have? I ask that you ponder these questions and head to the polls to cast your
See DEYOUNG, Page 5
Pacesetter K9 donates narcotics detector dog to LHISD Police Department
By ANTHONY FLORES Staff Writer As the start of school approaches, the LHISD Police Department is preparing to keep students in the district safe. Part of that plan for safety includes the introduction of Nosek the K9 onto the force. Pacesetter K9, a veteran-owned and operated K9 training corporation in Liberty Hill, is donating Nosek and helping train officer Jason Wolf to work with the newest member of the force. “Since we’ve been here, we’ve always been big on community involvement,” said owner Brad Langham. “Two years
ago, we volunteered to bring our dogs to the schools and weren’t charging the district for one. Providing the dog will help the school district save a little money in the long run, and instead of paying other people money, they’ll have a dog any time they need it.” Officer Wolf’s training with Nosek will last two weeks. For Wolf, the most impressive thing is the power of the dog’s nose and its ability to accurately detect scents. Langham and Wolf use the example of soup, saying that while a human smells just soup, the dog can smell each ingredient. “The most interesting thing
is how the whole scent detection works,” said Wolf. “He’s going to be a scent dog only, and it’s amazing how accurate their sense is.” When training started, Wolf was thrown into the fire. With Nosek already being trained, it’s up to Wolf to learn to work alongside him. “From day one, it’s you get your dog and start,” he said. “The dogs have been introduced to various scents, so they know what to do. It’s us trying to learn how to read the dog and help guide the dog. A lot of what we’ve been doing is just working through different scenarios.”
Ross hired as manager of new River Ranch County Park
By ANTHONY FLORES Staff Writer Williamson County Parks and Recreation is welcoming Robert Moss as the new manager to lead the development of the River Ranch County Park near Liberty Hill. Moss has spent his life in the parks business, working in the field in different places over a career spanning 30-plus years. “I’ve been in the parks business my entire professional career; I started as an hourly and seasonal employee with Texas Parks and Wildlife Department quite a number of years ago,” he said. “I worked in the state park system for 24 years.” Before joining the Williamson County Parks and Recreation department, Moss started and cultivated a parks department for Marble Falls. After serving ©2020 The Liberty Hill Independent
for over a decade, the parks veteran decided to retire. “I moved to the city of Marble Falls and started up the parks department there,” he said. “Before 2007, they did not have a parks department. I went in there and set things up and was there for 12 years. I retired from both the state and the city administratively.” Retired life for many is the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, the land of milk and honey, the reward for a career filled with hard work. For Moss, it was short lived before the itch to return to his true passion kicked in. “I was retired for about two months and realized I was not ready to stop working,” he said. “I was bored and had been in the business for so long and knew I could continue doing what I loved to do. I started looking for parks work again and found out about this job, applied for it, and now here I am. It’s a passion. It’s what gives me purpose.”
ROBERT MOSS Manager, River Ranch County Park With his vast experience developing parks projects, Williamson County believes he’s the right person to see the new County Park reach its completion. The park, located along the San Gabriel River, is scheduled to open later this year. Despite the current pandemic, things are moving forward as planned. “We’re shooting to open this calendar year, it’s well along, and most of the
See PARK, Page 6
Training areas are designed in several different ways. The training itself allows Wolf to learn Nosek’s behavior and changes in behavior. “So, they hide things. At first, they would tell us, so when the dog alerted or did a behavior change, we knew that it was associated with them picking up the scent of the item,” said Wolf. “Once we learn that they don’t tell us where the item is anymore, so now, we have to search and pick up the behavior changes so I can start presenting him a more detailed search to pinpoint
ANTHONY FLORES PHOTO
Nosek is the new four-legged member of the LHISD Police Department. The trained K9 will specialize in sniffing out narcotSee NOSEK, Page 6 ics with other scents to be introduced in the future.
In Mayor’s race, Hall outraises Branigan - nets nearly $10,000 In the first sign of what the money race looks like in the 2020 Liberty Hill Mayor’s race, incumbent Rick Hall leads the way by a wide margin, behind large donations from developers. In semi-annual required campaign finance reports, Hall showed $9,750 raised and $4,253.43 spent, compared to Liz Branigan’s $1,190 raised and $443.50 spent. Twelve contributions were made to Hall’s campaign between Feb. 15 and mid-July. Among them were business contributions, including $1,500 from Larkspur, which is a Milestone development, $1,000 from Coffin Investment, and $500 from 1941 LTD. The Coffin Investment company profile provides an address on Ronald Reagan Boulevard, and identifies Philip Coffin as a principal. A group of siblings from the Kauffman family are identified as
the partners in 1941 LTD, and is tied to 285 acres located between Liberty Hill and Georgetown at the intersection of Ronald Reagan Blvd and Highway 29. Four other donors – Wyatt Henderson, David Howell, John Marlin and Robert Wunsch – donated $500 each and are all affiliated with MA Partners and the MorningStar subdivision, also near the Ronald Reagan and SH 29 intersection. Steve Bamsch, a Realtor with Keller Williams in Georgetown, contributed $1,000 and Amy Renee Andrews contributed $500. A pair of attorneys – Joshua Kahn and Julianne Bremer Kugle – affiliated with SKLaw contributed $375 each. The top donor for Hall was James Jacobs at $2,500. Hall listed expenditures at Digitex ($704.41 and $156.96), Home Depot ($32), Best Buy ($215.41), Alpha Print Services ($303.10), Min-
ute Man Press ($664.66 and $926.89) and Fidelis Publishing – Liberty Hill Digest Magazine – for $1,250. Branigan’s contributions include $200 she contributed to her own campaign, and $200 from her son, Jon Branigan. Other donors include $40 from Marianne Laughlin, $200 from former Liberty Hill Planning Director Jim Bechtol, and $100 from former City Council member Ron Rhea and his wife, Donna. Branigan’s top donor is former Liberty Hill City Administrator Greg Boatright and his wife, Debbie, for $500. Branigan’s listed expense of $443.50 was at Digitex Printing. Neither candidate reported the purpose of the listed expenditures or items purchased. The candidates’ next finance report will be due 30 days prior to the Nov. 3 election.