Richardson using temporary City Hall site at municipal court after fire

Published: Thu, 08/25/22

Richardson using temporary City Hall site at municipal court after fire

By Jackson King | 
Updated 

Richardson officials said City Hall is expected to remain closed for several weeks pending a structural evaluation after an Aug. 22 fire. (Jackson King/Community Impact Newspaper)

The city of Richardson has created a nonemergency response number and is setting up a temporary site for City Hall services following an early morning fire Aug. 22.

City officials said preliminary findings indicate the cause of the fire was an unintentional electrical failure that started in the office of the human resources department. Significant smoke and water damage prevented all City Hall offices from opening Aug. 22, and officials said the building is expected to remain closed for several weeks pending a structural evaluation.

Richardson City Manager Don Magner said during the regularly scheduled Aug. 22 council meeting that disaster recovery teams are working on solutions to restore services as soon as possible.

During the fire, all phone services for city facilities and campuses were damaged. In response, Richardson has created a temporary 24-hour response center phone number, 972-744-5690, for residents to use in any non-emergency situation. Magner said this number will remain available until the city’s phone services are restored.

All 911 dispatch operations are operating normally and phone lines into the police and fire headquarters are functioning.

With the building unable to function, city officials have set up a temporary site for city hall services at the Ray Noah Municipal Court Building, 2100 E. Campbell Road. The building is expected to be open and available for temporary service from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. starting Aug. 24.

According to Magner, the temporary City Hall will offer the following services: building inspection, code enforcement, development/engineering services, the health department and water customer service.

According to city officials, here is a list of protocols Richardson will be enacting until further notice:
For more information, visit www.cor.net.
By Jackson King
 Jackson joined Community Impact Newspaper as a reporter in January of 2022. He graduated in 2020 from Texas A&M with a degree in journalism. Jackson covers education, local government, business, development, real estate, transportation and nonprofits in the Richardson community. Prior to CI, he covered sports for the Wylie News, interned at Maroon Weekly and Insite Brazos Valley Magazine in College Station, Texas, and wrote freelance for the Dallas Morning News.
 


4906 Morning Glory Way
McKinney TX 75072
USA


Unsubscribe   |   Change Subscriber Options