The Clarendon City Council appointed Terri Floyd to fill the vacant term formerly held by her son, Nathan Floyd, during its meeting last Thursday, February 18.
Floyd is a local business owner and has previously served several years on the Clarendon Economic Development Corporation board.
The unexpired term Floyd was appointed to expires in May, and she has already filed to run for the position on this spring’s city ballot.
In other city news last week, the council met with Linda Lewis via Zoom to discuss code issues at the old Neece house at Sixth and Bugbee.
Lewis told aldermen she will have the dilapidated garage torn down within about three months and also said a roofer was coming to look at what needs to be done on the house.
Aldermen also approved a $1,000 donation to the Meals on Wheels program at the Donley County Senior Citizens.
Aldermen considered engineering firms for a Downtown Revitalization Grant application and selected OJD Engineering for that work.
An agreement was approved with Consolidated Nuclear Security, which operates Pantex, for a lightning location protection system station at the Smiley Johnson Municipal Airport. Pantex will pay the city $3,800 for the station being there from 2001 through 2020 and will then pay the city $1,000 per year for the next five years.







SWEPCO is rotating the areas affected by the controlled outages so customers are not without service for more than a few hours whenever possible. The amount of time required to restore service could be delayed in some cases due to system and weather conditions. The temporary outages should not affect critical public health and public safety facilities.
In the Childress District, crews have been clearing snow-packed roadways while removing large snow drifts that occurred in several counties.
The SPP, the regional organization that manages the electric grid across 17 central and western US states, reports a high demand for electricity that is expected to increase over the next several days because of persistent, widespread and extreme cold.
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