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Latest public records across all tracked municipalities.
The Tredyffrin Township Board of Supervisors held a public meeting on December 2, 2024, to consider ordinances HR-484 and HR-485. Ordinance HR-484 proposes creating a new Public Arts Commission and Historic Resource Overlay District, while ordinance HR-485 authorizes acquisition of a 0.777-acre parcel at 595 Park Ridge Drive through a PEMA Hazard Mitigation Grant Program. The agenda also included routine township business such as approving infrastructure projects, escrow releases totaling over $700,000, and announcements regarding ongoing and upcoming stormwater projects, bridge repairs, and community events.
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The Planning Commission of the City and County of Honolulu held a meeting on January 6, 2021, at 1:36 p.m., with six commissioners present—Arthur D. Challacombe (chair), Steve S.C. Lim, Ken K. Hayashida, Gifford K.F. Chang, Aki Marceau, and Brian Lee—attending remotely or in person per COVID-19 protocols. The Commission approved the minutes of the August 19, 2020 and October 28, 2020 meetings by a 6-0-1 vote, with Commissioner Kamo abstaining. The Commission held a public hearing on a State Special Use Permit (2020/SUP-1) for Olomana School/Olomana Youth Center, located at 42-470 Kalanianaole Highway, Kailua, on a 2.516-acre site zoned AG-2 General Agricultural District; the permit would remove the facility's nonconforming status and allow structural improvements including interior classroom alterations, modular trailer relocation, construction of three future classroom facilities and a restroom facility, and related site improvements.
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This is the City and County of Honolulu's Comprehensive Annual Financial Report for fiscal year ended June 30, 2010, prepared by the Department of Budget and Fiscal Services under Acting Director Michael R. Hansen with Mayor Mufi Hannemann in the Executive Branch. The report contains government-wide financial statements including the Statement of Net Assets and Statement of Activities, fund financial statements for governmental, proprietary, and fiduciary funds, notes to financial statements, budgetary comparison schedules for the General Fund and Highway Fund, and supplementary information on nonmajor governmental funds and agency funds. The document was certified by the Government Finance Officers Association (GFOA) and includes management's discussion and analysis, an independent auditor's report, and schedules addressing post-retirement health care and life insurance benefits funding progress.
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The Revised Ordinances of Honolulu (ROH) is a compilation of all general and permanent laws enacted by the City and County of Honolulu, most recently recodified in 1990 and maintained by the City's Office of Council Services. The official version is published as a four-volume hardcopy set available at the Hawaii State Public Library, Hawaii Supreme Court Library, and Municipal Reference Center, with amendments incorporated through semi-annual loose-leaf supplements. An online version is accessible at www.honolulu.gov/ocs/roh and includes the full text, recently enacted ordinances, disposition tables, a subject index, and appendices, with email subscription available at roh.info@honolulu.gov. The hardcopy official version should be used for definitive legal references, as the online version is provided as a research convenience only and users are advised to confirm accuracy with the official print version.
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This is a table of contents and amendment history for the Honolulu City and County Land Use Ordinance (LUO), originally enacted in 1986 and revised as of February 6, 2024. The document lists over 70 amendments made between 1988 and 2007, covering topics including zoning regulations, parking standards, height restrictions, special districts (such as Waikiki and Chinatown), dwelling types (ohana dwellings, elderly housing), and sign regulations. The document serves as a comprehensive record of zoning and land use policy changes affecting the City and County of Honolulu.
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This Honolulu City Council ordinance (No. 25-2) amends Chapter 21 of the Revised Ordinances of Honolulu 2021 to restructure land use regulations by repealing the existing Article 5 ("Specific Use Development Standards") and replacing it with a new Article 5 titled "Use Regulations." The new Article 5 establishes a centralized framework for identifying permissible land uses in various zoning districts through Table 21-5.1, which specifies which uses are allowed outright, allowed with permits or special approval, or prohibited. The ordinance requires property owners to obtain necessary permits and director or council approvals before conducting uses that are not listed as permissible in Table 21-5.1, or to submit written applications to the director for uses not identified in the table, allowing the director to classify unlisted uses according to existing definitions or determine appropriate regulatory treatment.
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The National Association of the Deaf Board of Directors met January 13–15, 2018 in Honolulu, HI to conduct quarterly business including ratification of prior meeting minutes and review of organizational reports. President Melissa Draganac-Hawk chaired the meeting with 12 of 14 board members present, including representatives from four regions and appointed officers serving terms through 2018 or 2020. The board approved a 6-month revised budget as presented by Treasurer Philippe Montalette and discussed communication protocols for responding to incidents affecting the deaf community, recruitment of nominees for Handwave recognitions by region, and continuation of Region Reports in NADMag publication.
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The Honolulu Committee on Aging held a meeting on August 21, 2024, at 2:00 p.m. at Kapalama Hale with seven committee members present (one attending virtually) and staff from the Department of Community Services/Elderly Affairs Division. The committee approved the March 20, 2024 meeting minutes with corrections, including removing a duplicate name and updating department nomenclature. During public testimony, Donald Sakamoto requested sensitivity training for drivers in the On-The-Go pilot program to accommodate visually impaired, hearing impaired, and seniors with service animals. The committee discussed a Four-Year Plan Update with Five Area Plan Goals, beginning with increasing awareness of available resources and supports to age in place through an updated and redesigned Elderly Affairs Division Website.
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The Honolulu Fire Commission is a civilian oversight body whose commissioners are appointed by the Mayor and confirmed by the Honolulu City Council, serving without compensation. The Commission's mandated responsibilities include appointing and removing the Fire Chief, reviewing the annual budget and departmental operations, conducting at least annual performance evaluations of the Fire Chief, reviewing personnel actions for policy compliance, hearing citizen complaints, and submitting an annual report to the Mayor and Council. The current Commission consists of six appointed members—Butch Galdeira (Chair, term through 12/31/26), Debbi Eleneki (Vice Chair, through 12/31/29), Gerard Gibson (through 12/31/26), Dennis Morton (through 12/31/27), Gaison Ontai (through 12/31/29), and Arnold Wong (through 12/31/28)—plus one vacant seat. The Commission maintains public records of meeting agendas and minutes dating back to at least 2017.
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Bill 19 (2020) is a legislative budget ordinance for the City and County of Honolulu appropriating revenues for fiscal year July 1, 2020 to June 30, 2021. Total revenues appropriated across operating funds amount to $23,427,190, with the General Fund (GN) accounting for $23,293,190. The appropriations fund the General Government—Legislative function across five main entities: City Council (69.00 full-time equivalent positions, $8,021,817 total), Office of Council Services (26.00 FTE, $2,828,550), City Clerk (42.00 FTE, $4,825,286), City Auditor (13.00 FTE, $1,867,966), and provisional accounts including Retirement System Contribution—Employers Share ($2,541,963) and FICA Tax—Employers Share ($926,999). Additional special fund allocations include $12,000 each for Solid Waste and Housing Development, $50,000 for Bus Transportation, and $60,000 for Sewer.
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This 2024 report from Honolulu's Office of Council Services provides an analysis of the city's FY 2023 finances (ending June 30, 2023), comparing actual versus budgeted revenues and expenditures across operating and capital budgets. The report found that general fund revenues exceeded the March 2023 estimate by $4.5 million, though Emergency Ambulance Services revenues fell significantly short by $29.8 million, while Transient Accommodation Tax revenues exceeded estimates by $5.7 million. The largest departmental appropriation lapse occurred in the Department of Transportation Services' Transportation Mobility activity at $65.3 million.
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