Mountain Brook City Council makes several board appointments

by

By Keith McCoy

The Mountain Brook City Council — at its regular meeting for Monday, Nov. 23 — made several appointments to boards and agencies, formalized an on-call contract with Skipper Consulting for small traffic studies, took action to solve a problem involving dogs on Crestline Field and took some actions related to employee benefits.

The Council made the following appointments to boards:

Traffic items

After a presentation by City Manager Sam Gaston, members approved an on-call contract with Skipper Consulting Inc. for small traffic engineering studies and reviews. This will allow the city to contact Richard Caudle at Skipper for “quick advice” on small jobs under $1,000, Gaston said. “Anything over $1,000, we would do a formal contract with the city,” he said.

According to Gaston and Police Chief Ted Cook, the city has seen a sharp rise in recent months in the number of citizen complaints about speeding and requests for stop signs and speed bumps.

The council also agreed to pay Skipper about $2,000 to study the safety of a pedestrian crossing at Overton Road and Knollwood Drive. Caudle said that he could likely have a report on the issue by the Dec. 14 council meeting.

Dogs at Crestline Field

After a request by Shanda Williams, superintendent of the city’s department of Parks and Recreation, the city agreed to take action to prevent pet owners from using Crestline Field as a de facto dog park. The field will be closed from 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. while school is in session, and Williams’ staff will also post new signage.

“We’ve had a big problem with people using Crestline Field as a dog park,” Williams told members. “We have posted signs. We've put out doggie bags so they will clean up after their pets.”

However, not enough people have complied, she said.

“If this doesn’t work, then we may have to come back and do more restrictions, and possibly ban dogs altogether, but as of right now we want to block it during school hours and post signs and give people a warning and a chance to do right,” Williams said.

On Nov. 24, Williams told Village Living that, according to staff at Crestline Elementary, there have been some dogs on the field during school hours that acted aggressively.

After the approval by the council, Williams planned to get the signage up this week.

Councilor Alice Womack suggested that the signage direct people to the city’s dog park.

Personnel matters

The council passed three resolutions regarding personnel matters. 

Back to topbutton