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City Manager proposes spending $500k to clean up Arlington

Cars queue up along Abram Street and are parked along the side of the road. The sky is partly cloudy, and Park Place Apartments stand in the background.
Kailey Broussard
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四虎影院
A proposed four-person Clean Team would tackle beautification efforts along major roadways in Arlington.

For six years, Angel Carter and volunteers that signed up for her annual Fish Creek Cleanup Challenge have cleaned up over 70,000 pounds of trash.

Volunteers鈥 finds have run the gamut from fast food bags to jet skis, mattresses, microwaves and safes. People dump items they no longer need, and litter from nearby properties finds its way into creeks like the one in Carter鈥檚 neighborhood.

鈥淲e鈥檙e getting a lot less people dumping over here than we had before, but there鈥檚 still a lot of washdown and still a lot of people that don鈥檛 have the memo yet,鈥 Carter said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 going to happen with any of your creeks.鈥

Though the demand for litter has remained, Carter said she鈥檚 observed a drop in volunteers 鈥 especially since the COVID-19 pandemic. Younger volunteers who grew up participating in the challenge have not returned.

鈥淲e鈥檙e not getting as many in, and I don鈥檛 know the reason for that because the need is still there,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut I noticed that at the food pantries, I noticed that at the community gardens. I noticed it in a lot of places.鈥

City Manager Trey Yelverton told council members Tuesday evening he鈥檚 seen the same issue. The city hosts a bevy of volunteer programs, and Yelverton said the city tends to 鈥渓ove volunteers to death.鈥

鈥淲e get them, we love them, and we use them so much that we burn them out because there鈥檚 too much to do,鈥 he said.

Yelverton proposed the formation of a nearly $500,000 Clean Team in the city鈥檚 2025 budget. The four-person group would scout commercial roads and address problems like litter, broken curbs and overgrown weeds before they鈥檙e reported to the city.

The effort, he said, would underpin volunteer contributions and the various city departments that address blight and litter. The team would also address problems in parts of town where responsibility for projects is unclear 鈥 spaces he describes as 鈥渘o man鈥檚 land.鈥

Arlington鈥檚 code ordinances generally state that surrounding landowners are responsible for their property to the middle of the road. Yelverton said people are less likely to follow through on the ordinance for safety reasons.

鈥淥n Cooper Street, cars are zinging by at 50 miles an hour and they鈥檙e like, 鈥業 don鈥檛 want to get too close; I鈥檓 going to get killed,鈥欌 Yelverton said.

While city employees and service providers generally try to address litter, Yelverton said the city can create a team to more efficiently handle problem spots that aren鈥檛 necessarily under the purview of departments like code compliance or asset management.

鈥淚 just don鈥檛 feel like we鈥檝e got a systematic approach to that right now,鈥 Yelverton said during an interview. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very much hit or miss, and people are off doing their primary duties, but they鈥檙e not focused on the secondary duty.鈥

Carter said she did not initially view the proposal as a positive one because it would not touch neighborhood roads. Ultimately, Carter said she believes the team鈥檚 work will benefit the whole community 鈥 and maybe inspire more volunteers to pitch in.

鈥淲hen people come here to Arlington, they, much like me, are going to see the trash along (State Highway) 360, along (Interstate 20), along Cooper, along Matlock,鈥 she said.

A woman in a red-and-blue floral shirt and a visor poses on the side of a Fish Creek Linear Park.
Kailey Broussard
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四虎影院
Angel Carter recalled an interaction with a child who threw litter into Fish Creek as motivation for her to start the annual Fish Creek Cleanup Challenge. When she told him the creek was not a trash can, he pointed towards the other litter in the water. "It's hard to give an answer for someone when they're pointing right to what everyone else has done. That goes right back to if you're not part of the solution, you're part of the problem," she said.

The Clean Team initiative is among the only significantly new programs proposed in the city鈥檚 2025 budget, Yelverton said. Council members will consider the proposed $722 million budget and a 1-cent property tax increase during a hearing Sept. 10.

Council members Tuesday evening discussed alternatives to spare residents the property tax increase.

Nikkie Hunter, District 3 council member, said she would be in favor of delaying the team until the city could include parks such as Fish Creek in the initiative. She said the city should also focus on expanding volunteer efforts.

鈥淚 just feel for half a million dollars, we need to focus on people that want to clean the city for free,鈥 Hunter said. 鈥淚f they鈥檙e wanting to help clean up in places like corridors, if they鈥檙e wanting to clean up parks, let鈥檚 use that and save half a million dollars.鈥

Council members discussed partnerships with local businesses and finding ways to get the community involved.

Mauricio Galante, District 1 council member, suggested instituting a fee for commercial property owners to fund the Clean Team.

Mayor Jim Ross shot down the idea.

鈥淔ees are a lack of transparency, and it鈥檚 another way of saying tax. That worries me,鈥 Ross said.

This story was updated at 5 p.m. Sept. 10, 2024, to correct the overall city budget amount.

Got a tip? Email Kailey Broussard at kbroussard@kera.org. You can follow Kailey on Twitter

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Kailey Broussard covers health for 四虎影院. Previously, they covered the city of Arlington for four years across multiple news organizations and helped start the Arlington Report.