Mead water district agenda weighs RV park moratorium, pump work, tank payment
Mead OK – A June 8 rural water agenda points to growth limits and utility upgrades, with possible action on a moratorium, pump work and a tank payment.
Bryan County Rural Water District 2‘s June 8, 2026 agenda puts two local pressures side by side: controlling new development and keeping water infrastructure ahead of demand. The Mead-based district is considering possible action on a moratorium covering RV parks, tiny homes and cabins, while also weighing pump work at Blue River Pump Station and a payment tied to the elevated storage tank project.
It matters that this is only an agenda, not a final decision. The board may discuss the items and could vote, but residents should treat the moratorium, pump work and tank payment as proposed until minutes or another notice says otherwise.
What is on the table
The development item would pause or limit certain projects: RV parks, tiny homes and cabins. For property owners, builders and nearby residents, that is the clearest sign the district is trying to match new connections with available water capacity.
Another item would let the board consider refurbishing pumps at Blue River Pump Station or buying new pumps. Pump work often shows up when a system is trying to maintain pressure, reliability or reserve capacity, so it is a practical sign the district is still managing operations closely.
The agenda also lists Pay App #7 for OWRB DR #5 / Landmark Structures / Water Storage Tank in the amount of $128,159.75. A separate item refers to the Landmark completion process for the Elevated Storage Tank Project before water utility connection. Read together, those line items suggest the district is still in the middle of a larger storage and distribution buildout.
Bryan County Rural Water District 2 says on its website that it is based in Mead, and Oklahoma DEQ places rural water districts within the state public water supply framework. For water customers in and near Mead, the next things to watch are the meeting minutes, any formal vote on the moratorium and whether the district posts follow-up details on the pump and storage-tank work.