December 22, 2025

FacebookTwitterInstagram
  • Home
  • Teacher Features ’25
  • Columnists
    • Dallas Huston
    • Don Newbury
    • Diane Adams
    • Michael Bunker
    • Luke Clayton
    • Todd Howey
    • Katelyn Sims
    • Veterans Corner
    • Congressman August Pfluger
  • Real Estate
    • Open Houses
  • News
    • ’24 Area Guide
      • Area Guide Locations
      • ’23 Area Guide
      • 5 THINGS !
    • 2025 Youth Fair
      • 2024 Youth Fair
        • 2023 Youth Fair
        • Youth Fair 2022
    • Graduation 2025
      • Bangs
      • Blanket
      • Brookesmith
      • Brownwood
      • Coleman
      • Early
      • May
      • Premier High School
      • Zephyr
    • Rodeo 2025
      • ’24 Rodeo
    • Events
      • Add an Event
      • Celebrations
      • Submit a Celebration
    • Crime
    • Agriculture and Farming
    • Public Notices
    • Business
    • Trending
    • City of Early News
    • Classifieds
    • Outdoors
    • Statewide news
    • Announcements
    • Local News Feed
    • Teacher Features
    • Veteran Svcs
  • Obituaries
    • Submit an Obituary
  • Biz Directory
  • Jobs
    • Post a Job
    • Employer Login
    • Search Jobs
  • Sports
    • High School Football
  • Search
MENU
  • Home
  • Teacher Features ’25
  • Columnists
    • Dallas Huston
    • Don Newbury
    • Diane Adams
    • Michael Bunker
    • Luke Clayton
    • Todd Howey
    • Katelyn Sims
    • Veterans Corner
    • Congressman August Pfluger
  • Real Estate
    • Open Houses
  • News
    • ’24 Area Guide
      • Area Guide Locations
      • ’23 Area Guide
      • 5 THINGS !
    • 2025 Youth Fair
      • 2024 Youth Fair
        • 2023 Youth Fair
        • Youth Fair 2022
    • Graduation 2025
      • Bangs
      • Blanket
      • Brookesmith
      • Brownwood
      • Coleman
      • Early
      • May
      • Premier High School
      • Zephyr
    • Rodeo 2025
      • ’24 Rodeo
    • Events
      • Add an Event
      • Celebrations
      • Submit a Celebration
    • Crime
    • Agriculture and Farming
    • Public Notices
    • Business
    • Trending
    • City of Early News
    • Classifieds
    • Outdoors
    • Statewide news
    • Announcements
    • Local News Feed
    • Teacher Features
    • Veteran Svcs
  • Obituaries
    • Submit an Obituary
  • Biz Directory
  • Jobs
    • Post a Job
    • Employer Login
    • Search Jobs
  • Sports
    • High School Football
  • Search

Brownwood Votes Final Approval for Citations and Fines for Water Violations

June 12, 2012 at 11:17 pm brownwoodnewsstaff
  • Local News
  • Tweet
  • Share
  • Reddit
  • +1
  • Pocket
  • LinkedIn

CityofBrownwoodlogo_smallThe Brownwood City Council issued their final approval Tuesday to implement citations and fines for residents who repeatedly violate water restrictions outlined in the city’s drought contingency plan.

The newly approved ordinance establishes penalties for violating the restrictions and provisions of penalties, which includes disconnection of water service, citations for multiple violations, and providing authority for certain city employees to issue citations for violations of the ordinance.

The ordinance states that the city will work with citizens to seek voluntary compliance, but if they refuse to comply with the drought contingency plan, the ordinance will allow citations to be issued by code enforcement officers and police officers for such violations.

The ordinance also states that if a person if found guilty of a violations, a fine may be assessed up to $2000 per occurrence.  The fine for a first conviction of the plan has been set by the judge at $265 and amount of further fines is at the discretion of the judge.

In addition, the ordinance states that a second violation of the plan may result in disconnection of water service without prior notice to the person.  Service will only be restored upon payment of a reconnection charge, currently set at $35 according to the ordinance.

“It is not the City’s intent to write citations to people.  It’s the City’s intent to request all residents comply with our drought contingency plan,” said Brownwood City Manager Bobby Rountree.  “Our goal is to seek voluntary compliance of the drought contingency plan.  These rains have helped us with a little bit of relief, but I don’t know if we caught a lot of water in the watershed of the lake, so we still need to follow our drought contingency plan.”

Tags: Brownwood, Brownwood News, Bulletin, city of Brownwood, Drought Contingency Plan, news, texas, water restriction violations and fines
Previous Story
Meteorologist Visit Brownwood to Inspect Storm Damage – Photos and Video
Next Story
Early Middle School girls attend Girls in Science Camp

Facebook

Brownwood News
  • Contact Us
  • Veteran Services
  • Advertising
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy

Social

Facebook Facebook Twitter Twitter Instagram Instagram
Brownwood News © 2025 Powered by OneCMS™ | Served by InterTech Media LLC
Are you still listening?
Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; [email protected]) X-Middleton/1
40cd19240f72a2c0161d0ea47a6f99325d743390
1
Loading...