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CITY GOVERNMENT


cityofmountainhome.com/ waterdept.htm


Building Inspector


Building Inspector Greg


Ifland issues construction- related permits and provides plan review and inspections for building, plumbing, gas, mechanical and electrical construction in the city. He also issues business licenses and permits relating to ga- rage sales, dog tags and the city farmers’ market. The office works with the plan- ning commission, which recommends to the city council whether subdivision plats, rezonings, annexations or variances should be ap- proved. The planning com- mission’s jurisdiction extends 1 mile beyond the city limits. » 425-2550


Parks and Recreation Mountain Home has five


city parks that cover more than 200 acres: » Cooper Park, 1101


Spring St. » Hickory Park, 466 S.


Hickory St. » Clysta Willett Park,


1634 Rossi Road » Keller Park, 1832 Rossi


Road » Dr. Ray Stahl Soccer


Complex, 4667 AR Hwy. 5 S. Park facilities include a


youth center, pavilions, play- grounds, swimming pool, five softball and six baseball fields, five tennis courts, seven soccer fields, three basketball areas, horseshoes, a pioneer settlement, walk- ing trails and sand volleyball courts. Billy D. Austin is director


of the Parks and Recreation Department. » Office: 1101 Spring St. » 424-9311 » Website:


mountainhomeparks andrec.com


L.C. Sammons Youth Center


The L.C. Sammons Youth


Center offers recreational programs for youth 8-14 and has community partnerships with additional user groups. The youth center has a gym with four basketball goals, a climbing wall, a skating ramp area, an inflatable slide and jumper, ping pong, a billiards room with foosball, bumper pool and standard pool tables, a video game room with Wii bowling/gold and other games, a computer room for homework help and a meeting room for public and private use. Birthday party packages are available during regular operating hours and on Saturdays. The youth center is a hub


of information for recre- ational programs, including youth softball, youth soccer, Babe Ruth Baseball, Amer- ican Legion Baseball, youth basketball, swim team and


youth tennis clinics. Some adult sports also are offered through the youth center. Annual events at the


youth center include a Valen- tine’s Day dance, parents’ night out, Kidz In Motion, Small World play day, spring carnival, Movies in the Park, tennis clinic and fun day, History Day fall festival, family fun night, Trunk or Treat, and Friends of the Park appreciation celebra- tion and open house. Youth center membership


is $30 for youth, $35 for adults and $70 for families. During the school year, hours are 3-6 p.m. Monday- Friday and 11 a.m. until 6 p.m. Saturday. Summer hours are 8 a.m-5:30 p.m. The center does allow a 7:30 drop off time. The youth center is managed by Kelly Lewis. » 424-7275 » Website:


mountainhomeparks andrec.com


Big Flat City Officials Big Flat — Home to a


population of 104 residents, Big Flat is a community at the southern tip of Baxter County Big Flat is reached from


the north by AR Highway 341. The Push Mountain Road section of the highway winds for 45 miles along scenic mountainsides before reaching this city. It was paved in 1995. In the spring of 2012, the


city’s fire department re- ceived extrication equip- ment it had been able to purchase with a state grant. It was used very soon an-


14


swering an emergency, a motor vehicle accident, a city official said. The equip- ment also in known as the “jaws of life.” Every year, the communi-


ty has a homecoming cele- bration when former resi- dents come back to visit. The homecoming is scheduled Memorial Day each year. Big Flat’s mayor is Glenda


Wiseman, and the city’s re- corder/treasurer is Mike Treat. Wiseman, former recorder/treasurer, became mayor of Big Flat after long- time mayor Horace Dick- erson passed away after he


was re-elected in 2014. The city has no sales tax;


purchases made there have a county and state sales tax totaling 7.5 percent. The city offers water and trash ser- vices. To connect to the wa- ter system, a $75 deposit is required. Big Flat has two fire stations and a Class 9 rating from the Insurance Services Office. Big Flat’s roots go back to


the late 1860’s when Lewis Wallis opened the communi- ty’s first store in a small log building. Dr. W. B. Lack, a practicing physician, estab- lished the next store in the


mid-1870s and later sold it to Theo Ober, who had moved from Springfield, Mo. In about 1878, John T. Baker built a new, well-stocked store in Big Flat. Later he was appointed Big Flat’s first postmaster. The city was incorporated in 1939. The Big Flat City Council


meets at 6:30 p.m. the second Thursday of every month in City Hall, which is located at 9727 AR Highway 14 East. Meetings are open to the public. Call 448-5954 for more information.


Fact Book 2016


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