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CITY GOVERNMENT Cotter


CITY OFFICIALS


City Hall 115 McLean, P.O. Box 9 Cotter, AR 72626 Phone: 435-6326 Fax: 435-2438


Cotter City Council meets at 6 p.m. the fourth Thursday of each month at Cotter City Hall. The meetings are open to the public. Hours: 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday-Friday.


Mayor Peggy Hammack


Ward 1, Position 1 John C. Adams


Ward 2, Position 1 Roland Morris


Ward 3, Position 1 Bill Morris


COTTER— Asmall town known as


Trout Capital U.S.A., Cotter, popula- tion 971, is located on a peninsula surrounded by the White River. The town boasts Big Spring Park and the R.M. Ruthven Bridge. The park sits on the banks of the river and has an old-fashioned swimming hole. The park also is home to the Anglin-Tinnon Railroad Workers Memorial recalling Cotter’s railroading heritage. Peggy Hammack is mayor of


the city, elected to the position in 2010, and Anna Tillman-Floyd is city recorder/treasurer. Melissa Baskin is bookkeeper and Ronnie Smith is supervisor of public works. City Hall office hours are 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mon- day-Friday. Donald Rogers is chief of police, court clerk is Kay Laughry and Elizabeth Selvera is water clerk. Cotter’s Volunteer Fire Depart-


ment is led by Fire Chief David Guist. The department opened its new fire station on Harding Boulevard in 2009 and is continuing training, while also serving as first responders. Cotter’s railroad heritage is reflect-


ed in its name. Once called Lakes Ferry, the town was incorporated July 7, 1904, and renamed for William Cot- ter, railroad general manager. In Big Spring Park now, an etched, black


Recorder/Treasurer Andrea Kray


Ward 1, Position 2 Jim Ford White


Ward 2, Position 2 Jim Pilcher


Ward 3, Position 2 Wayne K. Alexander


granite sign, a bronze statue of a rail- road conductor, two vintage railroad cars, a gazebo and an information kiosk, connected by a walkway with old-fashioned globe lighting, all help recall the railroading era. The Ruthven Rainbow Arch


Bridge, dedicated in 1930 and the world’s largest Marsh Rainbow Arch Bridge, now carries local traffic. It was restored and reopened for traffic in 2004, and is on the National Register of Historic Places. The North Arkansas Youth Center


in Cotter, located at 412 Powell, is open 3-6:30 p.m. Monday-Friday and 1-6:30 p.m. Saturday; it is closed Sun- day and most holidays. The youth center charges $1per visit or $20 per year per student, $30 per year per adult and $40 per year for an entire family. Please call 435-6325 for more information. Cotter has a 2 percent city sales


tax, making the total city, county and state sales tax 9.5 percent. Water services are provided by the Cotter Water Department at City Hall. The cost to a property owner for obtaining water service is a $50 deposit, and cost to a renter is a $100 deposit, refundable or applied to the final bill. Call 435-6325 for information.


Roland Morris Jim Pilcher Peggy Hammack Andrea Kray John C. Adams Jim Ford White


Bill Morris


Wayne Alexander


16


Fact Book 2015


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