Government

Coryell County Sheriff's Office Website Shares Burn Ban, Hiring, and Election Notices

Scott Williams won a Coryell County runoff election as the sheriff's office posted a burn ban advisory, jailer hiring notices, and a jail food service RFP this week.

Marcus Williams2 min read
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Coryell County Sheriff's Office Website Shares Burn Ban, Hiring, and Election Notices
Source: coryellcountysheriff.com

Scott Williams won a local runoff election, according to a notice posted this week on the Coryell County Sheriff's Office website, which also published a burn ban advisory, open jailer positions, and a request for proposals for jail food service in a cluster of updates that touched nearly every corner of county operations.

The election result headline appeared in the department's Information/News & Updates section alongside the other administrative notices, signaling a resolution to a contested race with direct implications for law-enforcement leadership and policy direction in Coryell County. Certified results are available through the Coryell County Elections and Tax Office.

The burn ban notice directed residents to contact the sheriff's office before conducting any controlled burns on private property and to follow applicable court orders governing open burning. Dry conditions have made fire risk a persistent concern across Central Texas, and the county's open-burning rules carry legal weight: violations can result in enforcement action through the sheriff's office itself.

The recruitment notices called for applications to fill jailer positions at the department, which operates its main headquarters in Gatesville and maintains an annex in Copperas Cove. Staffing shortages in county jails have strained budgets across Texas, and Coryell County's ongoing hiring push reflects that pressure. The cost of housing detainees rises sharply when facilities rely on overtime or contract labor to meet minimum staffing thresholds.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

On the procurement side, the sheriff's office issued a Request for Proposals for jail food service vendors, inviting competitive bids to supply daily meals for detainees. The RFP process opens the contract to market competition and is often a lever county administrators use to control one of the most consistent line-item costs in a detention budget.

The department also posted an updated mission statement outlining community-policing priorities. Residents seeking details on any of the notices can contact the sheriff's office directly or visit the department's website for current postings.

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