The City of Rowlett's Capital Improvement Program (CIP) lays out over $50 million in planned infrastructure and facility improvements over the next five years. Here's where the money is going and how it's funded.
What the CIP covers: The CIP is the city's long-range plan for major capital expenditures — things like road construction, park improvements, water/sewer infrastructure, and public facilities. These are separate from the annual operating budget.
Funding sources:
- 2019 General Obligation Bonds ($52M) — voter-approved. This is the largest single funding source. Bonds are repaid through the debt service portion of property taxes.
- Water/Sewer Revenue Bonds — repaid through utility rates, not property tax.
- Federal and state grants — TxDOT grants for road projects, FEMA mitigation grants.
- Developer contributions — impact fees and infrastructure built by developers as part of their projects.
Major projects by category:
Roads and transportation ($20M+):
- Chiesa Rd reconstruction ($8M) — the big one
- Lakeview Pkwy widening ($6M, partial TxDOT match)
- Various intersection improvements ($3M)
- Trail connections and sidewalk infill ($2M)
- Traffic signal upgrades citywide ($1.5M)
Water and sewer ($15M+):
- Water main replacement program ($6M)
- Lift station upgrades for south Rowlett growth ($4M)
- Water storage capacity additions ($3M)
- Sewer line rehabilitation ($2M)
Parks and recreation ($8M+):
- Community Park renovation ($3M) — new playground, pavilions, trail resurfacing
- Paddle Point Park improvements ($1.5M) — parking, kayak launch, restrooms
- Springfield Park upgrades ($1M)
- Trail system expansion and connections ($2M)
- Athletic field improvements ($1M)
Public facilities ($5M+):
- Fire station improvements ($2M)
- City Hall technology upgrades ($1M)
- Public Works facility expansion ($2M)
What's NOT in the CIP:
- Sapphire Bay is a private development with its own funding. The city's TIF district for Sapphire Bay is separate from the CIP.
- School facilities are GISD and RISD responsibility, not city.
- County road projects (like some portions of Miller Rd) are Dallas County's jurisdiction.
How to track progress: The city publishes CIP updates quarterly. They're available on the city website and summarized in the Rowlett city newsletter. If you want to see where bond money is being spent, this is the accountability document.
Sources:
- City of Rowlett — FY2026-2030 Capital Improvement Program
- 2019 Bond Program — project tracker on city website
- City of Rowlett Finance Department — annual financial report
I'd like to see more transparency on timeline vs actual completion. Several CIP projects have slipped from their original timelines. A public dashboard with green/yellow/red status indicators would help.