The City Council here voted unanimously tonight to advance talks to sell a four-acre plot of land to Wal-Mart Stores Inc. to develop a small grocery.
The city purchased the land for nearly $17 a square foot. It will sell at $5 a square foot to Wal-Mart, a global corporation once known for the slogan "always low prices."
The move caps last year's controversial city purchase of about nine acres through financing raised by a property tax increase for a bond during a recession. Read more
E-mails show ex-Farmers Branch official warned of expensive fight over immigration ordinance
Tuesday, July 6, 2010 By DIANNE SOLÍS / The Dallas Morning News dsolis@dallasnews.com
The Farmers Branch City Council was warned by its former city manager that litigation over its immigration ordinance would be costly and that similar issues were already being litigated by the city of Hazleton, Pa., "with somebody else's money," according to e-mails disclosed in lawsuits against the city.
Since September 2006, Farmers Branch has paid $3.4 million to fight civil suits in federal and state courts over its renter ordinances aimed at barring illegal immigrants from housing in the Dallas suburb.
In addition, two teams of lawyers have submitted $2 million in bills as the winning side in the federal suit in which a judge ruled in March that immigration regulation to be "exclusively a federal power." The city plans to appeal, and city officials said that effectively puts a hold on any payout to the law firms. Read more
Read this Branch Forum article This is Clearly NOT What the Council Promised Us In 2007
Budget gap revealed at Farmers Branch Town Hall
Fri, Jun 18, 2010 Dallas Morning News Dianne Solis/Reporter
It'll be a lean budget year in Farmers Branch. There's a budget gap of $3 million to $4 million in the upcoming fiscal year of 2010-2011, reports city Finance Director Charles Cox.
He delivered the bad news at a Town Hall last night at the FB senior center--following a video presentation clearly intended to soften the blow coming to the current $42.5 million general fund. Read more