Communications

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The City of Hastings is committed to communication practices that enhance citizen and employee understanding of City objectives, issues, decisions and challenges. Equally important, the Public Information office seeks to increase citizen engagement and offer meaningful opportunities for feedback about city services and operations.

The Public Information office is responsible for City Hall and Hastings Utilities social media, printed communications, media relations and non-police crisis communications.

The City of Hastings is committed to communication practices that enhance citizen and employee understanding of City objectives, issues, decisions and challenges. Equally important, the Public Information office seeks to increase citizen engagement and offer meaningful opportunities for feedback about city services and operations.

The Public Information office is responsible for City Hall and Hastings Utilities social media, printed communications, media relations and non-police crisis communications.

Questions?

We welcome your questions and our Communications Team will strive to answer your post within two business days. If your question is urgent, email us at engage_administration@cityofhastings.org.

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  • Share Please explain to me how long it takes to have a road resurfaced. For example, on a 5 to 10 year plan, 10 - 20 years etc. on Facebook Share Please explain to me how long it takes to have a road resurfaced. For example, on a 5 to 10 year plan, 10 - 20 years etc. on Twitter Share Please explain to me how long it takes to have a road resurfaced. For example, on a 5 to 10 year plan, 10 - 20 years etc. on Linkedin Email Please explain to me how long it takes to have a road resurfaced. For example, on a 5 to 10 year plan, 10 - 20 years etc. link

    Please explain to me how long it takes to have a road resurfaced. For example, on a 5 to 10 year plan, 10 - 20 years etc.

    Dennis asked 1 day ago

    The city adopts a 1 & 6 year plan every year. Asphalt city streets are typically resurfaced every 25 to 40 years depending on traffic volumes. If there are streets you want us to consider for resurfacing, please let us know. Call the Engineering Department at (402) 461-2330. The actual resurfacing work sometimes only takes a few days.
    Steve Riehle, Lead Engineer for Public Works


  • Share Please inform me of how much of our tax dollars are used to build or renew the cities infrastructure by the normal homeowner versus the local investors and business owners. on Facebook Share Please inform me of how much of our tax dollars are used to build or renew the cities infrastructure by the normal homeowner versus the local investors and business owners. on Twitter Share Please inform me of how much of our tax dollars are used to build or renew the cities infrastructure by the normal homeowner versus the local investors and business owners. on Linkedin Email Please inform me of how much of our tax dollars are used to build or renew the cities infrastructure by the normal homeowner versus the local investors and business owners. link

    Please inform me of how much of our tax dollars are used to build or renew the cities infrastructure by the normal homeowner versus the local investors and business owners.

    Dennis asked 1 day ago

    Utilities infrastructure is built or re-constructed with utilities funds. The streets & storm sewer infrastructure is built, maintained or re-constructed from sales tax, wheel tax, and highway allocation (state & federal gas tax). Property tax dollars are not used for building, maintain or re-constructing Utilities, Streets or Storm Sewer Infrastructure.

    New infrastructure for streets, water, sewer and gas is installed typically through the district process. With that, the City only pays for intersections and infrastructure along City owned parcels. The city portion for water, sewer and gas is paid out of the Utility budget, so that means it is calculated into the rates and paid for by rate payers. The City portions of the street improvements is typically paid out of the General Fund which is tax dollars. It is difficult to assign a dollar amount or percentage to this as each project is different and there are many years that have no projects constructed with the District process. New electrical infrastructure is paid out of the Utility budget by rate payer funds. Also, businesses usually contribute more rate dollars per unit than a typical household, as their utility usage is typically higher.  

    For the replacement of infrastructure, all water, sewer, gas and electric is paid through the Utility budget by rate payer funds. Street infrastructure is paid through the Street Fund or Street Sales Tax Fund. The Street Fund receives its funding from the State of Nebraska through the Highway Allocation, State Motor Vehicle Fee, and State ISTEA funds. Wheel tax is also a revenue source for this fund. The Street Sales Tax Fund receives funding from the ½ cent sales tax that was approved in 2018 and runs through 2028.  None of this work is funded by property tax.


Page last updated: 22 Nov 2024, 05:00 PM