Dayton TX
4 CIVIL AND MUNICIPAL VOLUME 4, ISSUE 7 GrantWorks provides highly specialized grant administration, program management, and technical consulting services spanning the entire grant lifecycle, from project identification, selection, grant writing, and application development to program management and closeout. Our comprehensive grant management services support state and local governments in the areas of infrastructure, housing, community and economic development, broadband, transportation, environmental, coastal protection, and disaster recovery, mitigation, and resilience. Under the leadership of Founder and President Bruce Spitzengel, we continue to deliver quality expertise, encourage creativity and collaboration, and strive for continuous improvement. Our growing workforce of 400+ nationwide professionals has assisted over 600 government entities secure and manage over $8 billion in federal and state grant-funded projects. Over a span of 43+ years, we have successfully leveraged our proven people, processes, and tools to become one of the nation’s leading providers of grant services. Our agile decision-making process and continued efforts to remain innovative have resulted in new business ventures and national expansion for GrantWorks. As we continue our nationwide expansion, we remain committed to our mission to deliver sustainable, cost- effective solutions to support stronger, smarter, and more resilient communities. For more information, visit: www.grantworks.net DAY TON, TE XAS Located in the southeast corner of the Lonestar State, Dayton is a city of right at 10,000 residents, as Wadzeck revealed. “Well, we still consider ourselves a small town,” she said. “We’ve traditionally been a farming town, particularly rice-farming. As of the early 2000’s, we may have about three rice farmers left here. But at one time, it was full of rice farmers. And we have a lot of longtime, multigenerational families that live here and have lived here since the 1800’s. A lot of people know each other. A lot of people here are related. This is the kind of town where you can’t talk bad about anybody, because chances are, they’re related to somebody else that you’re talking about! It’s just a very wonderful, friendly town, full of friendly, friendly people. That’s why I chose to stay here.” She came to Dayton as a first-year schoolteacher, back in 1971. “I planned to be gone in two or three years,” Wadzeck recalled. “But I’ve lived here now for 52 years, so that tells you something about the people.” Besides farming, she continued, Dayton’s Houston is growing our way very quickly,” Wadzeck observed, adding that construction on a newmajor highway is now ongoing; a large loop around Houston.“It’s the catalyst for a lot of growth that’s occurring now, and there’s a lot more to come.”
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