In its first meeting of the new year, the Lincoln Parish Police Jury breezed through a fairly lengthy agenda, electing a new president and vice president and reappointing its parish administrator with little to no discussion in the process.
In its first meeting of the new year today, the Lincoln Parish Police Jury will look at its 2021 budget, the future of animal control in the parish, and the continued employment of its administrator and treasurer.
In a time of many changes for the Lincoln Parish Police Jury, 2020 was a year in which “every month something new pops up,” as one juror described it at a recent meeting.
At Tuesday’s special meeting, the Lincoln Parish Police Jury received the final piece of its proposed 2021 budget, on which it’s set to vote for final adoption on Jan. 12.
In a special called meeting Tuesday evening, the Lincoln Parish Police Jury discussed a complaint filed against Parish Administrator Doug Postel and appointed a new member to the parish library’s Board of Control, finishing a process roughly half a year in the making.
At its last meeting, the Lincoln Parish Police Jury performed public evaluations of their two first-year administrative employees, Parish Administrator Doug Postel and Parish Treasurer Chris Hyde.
Addressing a shortfall in the library’s construction bond, researching potential relocation sites for the parish health unit, and raising the parish park’s season pass rates were just a few of the
The Lincoln Parish Police Jury will be asked tonight to dip into the parish library’s fund balance to make up an approximately $233,000 shortfall caused by an error in this year’s property tax noti
A little later than originally planned, the Lincoln Parish Police Jury at its Tuesday meeting is slated to complete its appointment of one of the two vacant seats on the parish library’s Board of C