Coryell County Posts Jan. 29 Agenda, FY26 Budget, Jury Cancellations, Burn Ban
Coryell County posted its Commissioners' Court agendas and a suite of public notices, including jury cancellations, a suspended burn ban order, and the FY26 budget, important for courthouse business and public planning.

Coryell County has updated its website with a cluster of public notices that affect court operations, county planning and community services. The county published a Commissioners' Court agenda for Thursday, January 29th, 2026 and a separate agenda for Tuesday, February 3rd, 2026, along with jury cancellation notices, a budget listing and an order related to the burn ban.
The January 29 listing appears on the county site as "Commissioners' Court Agenda for Thursday, January 29th, 2026" and includes a meeting time noted as "Time: 8:30am" and a truncated location line reading "Location: Commissioners." The February meeting is shown as "Commissioners' Court Agenda for Tuesday, February 3rd, 2026." The posted agenda titles do not include itemized agendas in the fragments available on the site; residents who plan to attend should verify the meeting room and any agenda items with the county clerk before arriving.
Two jury panels have been cancelled, clearing residents of imminent service. The District Court notice states: "THE DISTRICT COURT JURY PANEL THAT WAS SCHEDULED FOR JANUARY 26, 2026, HAS BEEN CANCELLED. YOU ARE NO LONGER REQUIRED TO APPEAR AND YOU MAY DISCARD YOUR JURY SUMMONS AT THIS TIME." The County Court at Law notice reads: "THE COUNTY COURT AT LAW JURY THAT IS SCHEDULED FOR JANUARY 20, 2026, HAS BEEN CANCELLED. YOU ARE NO LONGER REQUIRED TO REPORT FOR JURY DUTY. [...]" Those messages relieve summoned jurors of reporting obligations for the affected dates, but the County Court at Law fragment ends with an ellipsis in the posting, suggesting additional text may exist.
Financial and planning documents also appear on the homepage. The county lists "Coryell County Approved Annual Operating Budget FY26" as a posted item, giving residents notice that the FY26 budget document is available for review. Other planning files and tools include a fully executed wildfire plan titled "Coryell County CWPP_Fully Executed.pdf", a "Transportation Safety Action Plan", and a "Notice of 2025 Tax Rates", as well as maps and an interactive county map for public use.
Emergency and environmental notices on the site include "Order Suspending Burn Ban Order CJ25 06" and a federal-style floodplain notice posted in both languages under the headline "COMBINED NOTICE OF FINDING OF NO SIGNIFICANT INPACT and NOTICE OF INTENT TO REQUEST RELEASE OF FUNDS and FINAL NOTICE AND PUBLIC EXPLANATION OF A PROPOSED ACTIVITY IN A FEDERAL FLOOD RISK MANAGEMENT STANDARD DESIGNATED FLOODPLAIN AND WETLANDS" and its Spanish counterpart "COMBINADO DE DETERMINACIÓN DE IMPACTO NO SIGNIFICATIVO y AVISO DE INTENCIÓN DE SOLICITAR LA LIBERACIÓN DE FONDOS y AVISO FINAL Y EXPLICACIÓN PÚBLICA DE UNA ACTIVIDAD PROPUESTA EN UNA LLANURA DE INUNDACIÓN Y HUMEDALES DESIGNADOS SEGÚN LA NORMA FEDERAL DE GESTIÓN DEL RIESGO DE INUNDACIÓN Coryell Co."
On the human services front, the District Attorney’s Office site page highlights the office therapy dog with clear public-facing language: "Winston is the Therapy Dog for the District Attorney’s Office." The page adds that "He works with the Victim Assistance Coordinator when they meet with victims." and that "His job is to be an emotional support to all victims who come to our offices daily." The office also notes funding for Winston: "Winston is supported by donations from the public and is not funded by any tax dollars. If you would like to make a Tax Deductible donation, you can send a check or money order to the Coryell County DA's Office."
For residents, the practical takeaways are straightforward: summoned jurors for the listed January dates need not report, officials have posted the FY26 budget and several planning documents for public review, and an order affecting the burn ban is on file under the title "Order Suspending Burn Ban Order CJ25 06." Those seeking more detail on agenda items, the full text of court notices or the burn ban order should contact county offices directly before attending meetings or responding to summons. The postings underline that local government activity is active at the start of the year and that routine courthouse and planning functions remain a community priority.
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