School boosts tax rate
After conducting the required public hearings, Lamesa Independent School District (LISD) board members unanimously adopted the 2021-2022 budget and tax rate during their regular meeting Thursday.
After conducting the required public hearings, Lamesa Independent School District (LISD) board members unanimously adopted the 2021-2022 budget and tax rate during their regular meeting Thursday.
Local taxpayers will see a slight increase in the property tax rate assessed by the Mesa Underground Water Conservation District this year, but it won’t be as much as originally proposed.
They are considered burrowing vermin in need of eradication by some. Others see them as just plain cute even though they are classified as rodents. If you’re a longtime resident, they don’t really capture notice. For newcomers, the realization that Lamesa has prairie dogs living within the city limits is an interesting fact. There’s at least one West Texas city that has a community of the animals protected by the city. Prairie Dog Town, formed in the 1930’s, has become a favorite tourist site in Lubbock. “A lot of folks don’t like them. They are voracious eaters,” said Sam Har
The following were among the many calls received recently by the Lamesa Police Department:
Just a couple of weeks after returning to school, Lamesa High School students already are preparing for the annual homecoming festivities.
After lots of discussion, adjustments and public hearings, Lamesa city council members are finally scheduled Tuesday to take a vote to adopt a tax rate for the fiscal year which begins Oct. 1.
A downtown Lamesa business will be getting a facelift with the help of a facade improvement grant from the Lamesa Economic Alliance Project (LEAP).
On June 9, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Army Corps of Engineers announced their intention to repeal the current Navigable Waters Protection Rule (NWPR), implemented during the Trump Administration, with a new definition of “Waters of the U.S.” (WOTUS).
Plains Cotton Cooperative Association (PCCA) is set to host a Producer Sign-Up Day for the U.S. Cotton Trust Protocol on Wednesday, September 1, 2021.
Anyone who owns livestock in Texas, including horses, cattle, sheep, goats, pigs, fowl and honey bees in a managed colony, needs to be aware of key changes to the Texas Farm Animal Liability Act that will be effective Sept. 1, according to a Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service agricultural law expert.
P.O. Box 710
Lamesa, TX 79331
806-872-2177