The Donley County Comm-issioners Court enacted a burn ban during their regular meeting Monday, March 11.
County Judge John Howard said Clarendon Fire Marshall Jeremy Powell had requested the ban due to persistently dry conditions. Even with rain coming in this week, high winds and warm weather will quickly make conditions ripe for grass and wild fires.
Under the commissioners’ order no outdoor burning is allowed on a day of a forecasted Fire Weather Watch or a Red Flag Warning issued from the National Weather Service in Amarillo.
Anyone engaging in outdoor burning must contact the Donley County Sheriff’s office prior to ignition and give the dispatcher a burn location, a contact phone number, and approximate burn time. The persons engaging in outdoor burning needs to be present on the site of the burn until the burn is completed.
Anyone engaging in any form of outdoor burning is asked to burn with extreme caution at all times.
Forecasters can issue the watch or warning for all or selected portions within a fire weather zone. The Red Flag event is verified when the weather and fuel conditions listed below are met simultaneously for any three hours or more during the period.
The following weather and fuel conditions must be forecast to occur or already occurring before issuing a Fire Weather Watch and/or Red Flag Warning: Minimum relative humidities equal to or less than 15 percent; 20 foot winds of 20 mph or higher and/or gusts to 35 mph or higher; and an NFDRS adjective fire danger rating of “high” or higher.
For information, log onto www.srh.noaa.gov/ama/. The burn ban will stay in effect for the next 90 days.
In other county business Monday, the commissioners court approved attendance at trainings for JP Clerk Zan Bullock, Judge Pat White, and Tax Assessor Linda Crump; approved purchasing a Duress System in the Hedley JP office for $9,551; and approved purchasing the property behind the Hedley JP office for $5,000.
The court also authorized signatures for the Veterans’ Memorial bank account. The county recently was assigned responsibility for the Donley County War Memorial by the committee that has overseen it since its construction. The funds associated with that committee now belong to the county in a designated account, and the memorial itself is now covered on the county’s insurance.
An interlocal agreement with the City of Howardwick was approved related to the disposition of foreclosed properties in that municipality.
The court also approved a request from the Girl Scouts to remove the cedar tree that group usually decorates for Christmas and replace it with a more appropriate looking tree, specifically an Afghan Pine.
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