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On
June 16, 1919, a vote was held in Montcalm County,
Michigan on the question of adopting a County Road
System. The citizens of the county voted 1,653, in
favor, to 327, opposed. The Board of Supervisors
appointed three Commissioners: Bryant E. Avery,
Howard City; Ensign B. Stebbins, Carson City; and
John J. Bale Sr., Lakeview, as the first Road
Commission Board. Alfred L. Stearns acted as Clerk
of the Commission. The first meeting of the Board
of County Road Commissioners of the County of
Montcalm, was held at the Phelps Hotel in the City
of Greenville on July 29, 1919, for the purpose of
organizing. Mr. Avery was appointed as the first
Chairman.
Today the Board
of County Road Commissioners still remains a
three-member board; however in 1985, the Board
became elected rather than appointed. Each Board
member is elected to a six-year term. The current
Board members are: Dale J. Linton, Greenville;
Donald L. McCracken, Carson City; and Robert L.
Brundage, Stanton.
Mr.
Jesse S. Walker, a farmer and Township Overseer,
of the Township of Bloomer, was hired as the first
Road Superintendent.
The position of
Superintendent, as it was known in 1919, is now
Managing Director, which is held by Randy L.
Stearns, a resident of Ferris Township. Karen F.
Swan, a resident of Pine Township, is the Finance
Director and Clerk of the Board. The
Superintendent is Mark Christensen, a resident of
Sidney Township.
On
October 14, 1919, the Board of Supervisors adopted
the proposed County Trunk Line System as submitted
by the Road Commission. The system totaled
approximately 135 miles of roads. The minutes do
not describe the location and a map is not
available of the first County Road System. By the
close of the year of 1930, the Montcalm County
Road Commission had under its jurisdiction 188 1/2
miles of roads. The McNitt-Holbeck-Smith Act,
Public Act 130, required that the Road Commission
take over jurisdiction of the Township Roads over
a five-year period, 20 per cent each year, with
the first beginning March 1932. On that date the
first 20 per cent of the Township Roads became the
responsibility of the Road Commission. Each year
that followed another 20 per cent was transferred
until the road system consisted of approximately
1,600 miles of roads. In May, 1940, the Board of
County Road Commissioners and the Township Board
of Bloomer Township, met to discuss the building
of the roads in Bloomer Township. Bloomer Township
agreed to contribute money to the Road Commission
for Township road building. This is the first
record that can be found of the Townships and the
Road Commission entering into joint participation.
That same year the Road Commission voted to have
all the Township Boards in "to discuss the
problems of maintenance and improvements."
Today Montcalm
County Road Commission maintains 1,500 miles of
primary and local roads. The Road Commission also
maintains 160 miles of State Trunkline Roads as
the Road Commission is a contract county with the
Michigan
Department of Transportation. From a work
force that was over 100 hourly employees in the
mid 1950s, to the current staff of 39 hourly
employees, everyone at the Montcalm County Road
Commission is dedicated to providing the highest
quality roads and bridges for the traveling public
by using the most effective manner possible. What
all started back in May of 1940 when the Road
Commission and Bloomer Township entered into a
joint venture to build roads is still today a
major factor in how local road improvements are
funded throughout Montcalm County. Montcalm County
Road Commission has an excellent relationship with
all 20 townships within Montcalm County. Each
township plays a major role in the improvements
that are done on the local road system within
their townships.
In
October 1936 a report of the gas and weight tax
recorded in the minutes shows a total income of
$130,000, of which $40,220 was used to pay on
bonded debt; $24,780 paid to cities and villages
in the county, and the remaining $65,000 budgeted
as follows: $38,000 for road maintenance, $20,000
for purchase of new equipment, and $7,000 for the
general operating expenses.
Just as in 1936,
Montcalm County Road Commission's main source of
funding still comes from the gas and weight tax,
which we know as the MTF (Michigan Transportation
Fund). The Road Commission receives calls
throughout the year from concerned citizens about
how much their property taxes have been raised,
but they have not noticed any improvements on
their road. The Road Commission DOES NOT receive
revenue from property taxes. |