Casey City Council Approves $91,500 Investment for New Emergency Sirens
City of Casey City Council Meeting | March 16, 2026
Article Summary: The Casey City Council on Monday authorized a major public safety upgrade, approving the purchase of new municipal emergency warning sirens for over $91,000.
Casey Public Safety Key Points:
-
The council approved the purchase of new sirens from Table Rock Alerting Systems.
-
The total cost of the equipment will not exceed $91,541.00.
-
The expenditure was recommended by the Public Safety Committee and passed in a unanimous 4-0 vote by present council members.
The Casey City Council on Monday, March 16, 2026, voted to upgrade the city’s emergency alerting infrastructure by authorizing a substantial purchase of new warning sirens.
EMA Director David Craig and Alderman Jeremiah Hanley presented the item to the full council following a Public Safety Committee meeting held earlier that same day. According to the committee’s report, they recommended the city purchase the new sirens through Table Rock Alerting Systems.
Alderman Hanley offered a motion to specifically approve Estimate 1224 and Estimate 1225 from Table Rock Alerting Systems, with a total project cost not to exceed $91,541.00.
The motion was seconded by Alderman Lori Wilson. The purchase was approved on a 4-0 roll call vote, with Aldermen Tanner Brown, Hanley, Marcy Mumford, and Wilson voting in favor. Aldermen Steve Jenkins and Carlene Richardson were absent from the meeting.
Latest News Stories
Although 95% lower than Biden era, illegal entries, apprehension up in May
‘Half-baked’ Illinois social media tax poised to tee up court challenges
DHS thwarts Iranian terrorist threats at the northern border, World Cup ties
Minnesota man ordered to pay $2.5M in fraud case, faces no criminal charges
Everyday Economics: A new chair, a shorter statement, a Fed that stopped talking cuts
Illinois congressmen worry as DHS Secretary seeks to ‘protect election integrity’
Poll: 70% of Americans ‘concerned’ AI will take jobs
Lawmaker says Pritzker reacted too quickly to Grant Park cross burning
Sanders bill would give U.S. stake in AI companies; analyst calls idea ‘nutty’
Poll: Most Americans don’t trust AI for news
Poll: 6 in 10 voters say country headed in wrong direction
Trump shares look at Qatari aircraft for AF1