The Boring PartsFederalLocal · USLocal · Canada
Waller, Texas — week of 2026-06-29 · all Waller meetings

City Council to interview Public Works Director candidates

The Waller City Council scheduled a closed-session interview for candidates to fill the Public Works Director position during its June 23 meeting, according to the meeting’s agenda. No vote on an appointment was taken, and minutes have not yet been published.

Executive session focuses on director hire

The council met in executive session under the state’s personnel exemption to discuss the appointment of a Public Works Director. The agenda item was the only item listed for the regular meeting, which otherwise consisted of routine procedural items. After the closed session, members were expected to return to open session to consider any action, but the public record does not yet show a decision or a final vote tally.

The Public Works Director oversees water, wastewater, streets, and drainage operations for the city. The position has been vacant for several months; the city has been advertising the role on its website and through professional networks. Council members did not disclose the number of applicants or the identities of those interviewed during the public portion of the meeting.

No other business discussed

No ordinances, resolutions, or financial items were on the agenda for June 23. The council did not consider any contracts, budget amendments, or policy changes. The meeting was held in the council chambers at City Hall and lasted approximately 45 minutes, according to the meeting video.

Residents seeking additional information can access the full agenda and any future minutes on the city’s official meeting portal.

Coming up

No upcoming meetings have been posted for the city council or any other city board for the next two weeks. The next regular council meeting is expected to occur in July, but a date has not yet been announced.

Generated from official meeting agendas and minutes — every underlying document is linked from the city page. Read the primary source before you rely on a detail.