Mo’ meetings, news and very little extra to add today. With Rosh Hashanah, budget, flooding and Koval’s retirement, seems like there is room for little else!
MO’ MEETINGS
Meeting: President’s Work Group to Review Council Communication Tools & Processes
Date: Thursday, Oct. 3, 2019 at 12:00 pm
Location: Madison Municipal Bldg 215 Martin Luther King Jr Blvd Room 206
NEWS
City
Out with a bang – Isthmus
Warner Park Recreation Center Celebrates 20 Years – Madison 365
An art boosters guide to Satya’s first budget as mayor – tonemadison.com
Mayor’s 2020 Budget Prioritizes Youth, Transit – Madison Commons
County
Dane County executive proposes $653.7 million 2020 budgets with focus on human services – State Journal
Schools
UW-Madison apologizes for now-deleted Homecoming video of nearly all-white body – State Journal
Other/Mixed
Officials under fire for not publicizing high PFAS levels in Lake Monona after substation fire – State Journal
CITY NEWS/PROJECT UPDATES
From Chief Wahl’s Blog – I’m sure that regular readers of Chief Koval’s blog have noticed that the daily significant incident summaries are missing. We are fine-tuning the mechanics and internal processes that allow for this information to be shared, and hope to resume the daily summaries soon.
OCT 2 FLOODING UPDATE
In the meantime, building owners along low-lying areas in the east isthmus such as East Washington Avenue and Livingston Street should prepare now to protect their facilities from flash flooding. Sand and empty sandbags are available at the following locations:
Over the last 24 hours, City crews set up barriers, road closures, generators for intersection lights, cleared inlets and storm drains of debris and helped remove stranded vehicles.
The Madison area got 3.5 inches of rain, and multiple intersections and roads were washed over with standing water. At about 9:15 p.m., Oct. 1, at north First Street/East Johnson Street/Packers Avenue, there were 20 vehicles stalled in roughly thigh-deep water. Madison Police worked with Traffic Engineering to respond with barricades and traffic control. The water subsided around 2 a.m., Oct. 2, which allowed tow trucks to haul the disabled vehicles away.
Stay connected, informed