A town can grow fast and still feel like home, but only if the people leading it make the hard choices early. We’re joined by Mayor Thomas Muir as he marks the end of 16 years in office, alongside Mayor Pro Tem Gary Bilyeu, who’s preparing to step into the role. Together, we talk about what the word “community” actually looks like on the ground in Sanger, Texas, and why that shared habit of showing up matters as change accelerates.
We get specific about the work most residents never see: municipal finance, reserves, bond ratings, and the slow flywheel of better budgets that create real options later. Thomas explains how a city moves from “paycheck to paycheck” to strategic flexibility, and why the blocking and tackling of local government still comes down to water, wastewater, electric reliability, police, fire, and streets. Gary adds how infrastructure readiness and a stronger commercial tax base can reduce pressure on homeowners while keeping growth manageable.
Then we zoom out to what comes next: a leadership transition built on transparency, the challenge of keeping a council cohesive, and the need for civic engagement that stays constructive, especially on social media. We also discuss the bigger legislative framework Texas cities operate under, including the ongoing property tax debate and what “local control” really means in practice. If you care about small-town growth, local politics, and how trust is built one meeting at a time, this conversation is for you.
Subscribe for more stories from local government, share this with a neighbor, and leave a review so more people can find the show.
You have been listening to The 266 Express, the official podcast of Sanger, TX. IF you have comments or suggestions, please send them to dgreen@sangertexas.org