County has 1 new COVID case
Lamesa Mayor Josh Stevens is cautiously hopeful that having only one new case of COVID-19 in a week means Dawson County may be turning a corner in the battle.
Lamesa Mayor Josh Stevens is cautiously hopeful that having only one new case of COVID-19 in a week means Dawson County may be turning a corner in the battle.
Mike Roy was hoping to have movies back on the big screen at Lamesa’s Movieland Theater by the middle of May, if not earlier.
The following were among the many calls received recently by the Lamesa Police Department:
Lamesa school board members approved a change to the 2020-2021 school calendar and handled a variety of other business during their regular meeting Tuesday evening.
Registration for the Dawson County Public Library’s Summer Reading Club has begun both online and at the library.
The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) is scheduled to begin work Monday, June 1, on a $1.39 million safety project to install reflective, raised pavement markers (RRPMs) to various roads in the Lubbock District.
SNYDER – Scurry County’s three public school districts presented diplomas to 189 high school graduates last night. Friends and family members greeted the graduates at ceremonies and parades at Snyder, Ira and Hermleigh schools.
SEMINOLE – In a special meeting on Wednesday the Gaines County Commissioners Court authorized County Judge Tom Keyes to apply for a grant from the federal Coronavirus Relief Fund to cover costs incurred by the county during the recent shutdown of all but the most “essential” services.
Officials with the city of Lamesa were hoping on Friday to announce the lifting of this past week’s restrictions on the use of water from the city distribution system.
P.O. Box 710
Lamesa, TX 79331
806-872-2177