Community counts
Supporting and strengthening the communities we serve.
Community grant program
We’ve partnered with LCRA’s Community Development Partnership Program, which helps volunteer fire departments, local governments, emergency responders and nonprofit organizations fund capital improvement projects in LCRA’s wholesale electric, water and transmission service areas.
Applications for the next round of grants will be accepted in July 2024. More information is available at lcra.org/cdpp.
Grants news
A $24,093 grant from the Lower Colorado River Authority and Bluebonnet Electric Cooperative will help pay for needed repairs and upgrades to a historic Chappell Hill library built in the early 1900s.
The grant, along with $7,000 in matching funds, will allow the Chappell Hill Historical Society to make exterior repairs to the Chappell Hill Circulating Library, as well as add an energy-efficient air conditioner and rainwater collection system. The project also will include painting the library and a popular adjacent gazebo, and landscaping.
“It will be a general re-do for the library, and we’re just so grateful for the grant,” said Dottie Schaer, a longtime volunteer with the historical society who helped organize the project.
The library houses about 3,500 historic or contemporary volumes.
Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the library was designed by architect J.W. Heartfield and was built in a Colonial Revival style. The building features a semi-circular portico supported by two Doric columns.
The Chappell Hill Circulating Library Association formed in 1893, and much of its initial collection was donated by the family of W.G. Foote Sr., a Methodist minister who was a professor at Chappell Hill's Soule University during the mid-19th century. In 1912, the year the library was built, its collection grew significantly when Chappell Hill Female College donated many of its books after the school closed.
Dottie Schaer and her husband, John, who sits on the historical society’s board of directors, say the project will help re-invigorate the library and draw more students, researchers and history buffs to Chappell Hill.
The gazebo on the property has been a popular spot for weddings, family photos and other events in the past, and the additional landscaping will make the site useful again.
“It’s a really nice gathering place,” Dottie Schaer said. “We want to make an area where people can come and relax and learn, too. Everybody’s very excited that we can bring this historic building, this beloved library, back to life.”
The community grant is one of five grants being awarded by Bluebonnet and the LCRA through LCRA’s Community Development Partnership Program, which helps volunteer fire departments, local governments, emergency responders and nonprofit organizations fund capital improvement projects in LCRA’s wholesale electric, water and transmission service areas. The program is part of LCRA’s effort to give back to the communities it serves. Bluebonnet Electric Cooperative is one of LCRA’s wholesale electric customers and is a partner in the grant program.
Applications for the next round of grants will be accepted in January. More information is available at lcra.org/cdpp.
The Delhi Community Center will be able to complete its building renovations by installing new windows and exterior siding thanks to a $25,000 grant from Bluebonnet Electric Cooperative and the Lower Colorado River Authority.
The Community Development Partnership Program grant, along with $15,000 in matching contributions, will allow the center in Delhi to replace broken windows and deteriorating vinyl siding.
“Now we can replace the broken pieces of the center’s exterior to prevent any damage from the elements to all the restorations we already completed inside the building,” said Rebecca McMullen, secretary of the Delhi Community Center Association. “The grant will help us keep a valuable piece of our history in use. This building has been a part of Delhi for a long time, and it still serves an important role as a place where we, as a community, come together to celebrate each other.”
The community center’s building was constructed in 1890 as a one-room schoolhouse. Later, a second room was added to the Delhi School, which remained in use until the public school consolidated with the McMahan School District closer to Lockhart in 1947.
“My husband’s family went to school in that very building – both of his parents, his aunts and his uncles,” McMullen said. “We put a lot of work into refurbishing the inside of the building and now we need the outside of it to match. The center has a historical marker out front, and we want visitors who stop to read it to see a building that reflects how much pride we take in our community.”
Double-paned windows that more resemble the building’s original windows will help save on utility bills and create a more attractive location for community events, including graduation and birthday parties, reunions, 50th anniversary celebrations and various organization meetings. The Delhi Community Center Association also hosts its annual fundraiser there.
“Every year, we throw a Christmas party for the whole community,” McMullen said. “Everyone in our community is so supportive and donates to keep the center going – including people who are new to the area, as well as those who have moved away but still own land here.”
The community grant is one of five grants being awarded by Bluebonnet and the LCRA through LCRA’s Community Development Partnership Program, which helps volunteer fire departments, local governments, emergency responders and nonprofit organizations fund capital improvement projects in LCRA’s wholesale electric, water and transmission service areas. The program is part of LCRA’s effort to give back to the communities it serves. Bluebonnet Electric Cooperative is one of LCRA’s wholesale electric customers and is a partner in the grant program.
Applications for the next round of grants will be accepted in January. More information is available at lcra.org/cdpp.
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