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11 results for “enforcement”

  • City of Scranton Council Responses – July 7, 2026 | PDF

    Jul 7, 2026

    ·Scranton, PA
    Other

    This document contains responses from City of Scranton administration to questions raised by Council members at a June 30, 2026 meeting, prepared for July 7, 2026. Key responses include clarification that street vacation does not transfer title to abutting property owners, who must pursue separate legal action; DPW will resume refuse pickup at St. Lucy's Church's new location at 949 Scranton Street; knotwood at East Mountain Road and Yesu Drive was cut a second time on June 30 and is not obstructing line of sight; and Code Enforcement issued a Quality of Life citation to Robert McHale at 419 10th Avenue for a dangerous tree, with the owner qualifying for low-to-moderate income tree removal assistance through available funding. The document also references unresolved inquiries from Council President Schuster regarding nuisance property definitions and police reporting procedures, and from Vice President Flynn regarding code enforcement actions and structural review at 1021 Richmont Street.

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2026-1329: Communication was received from Councilor Flynn calling for Boston Police enforcement on main streets and commercial corridors for mopeds and e-bikes.

Jul 6, 2026

·Boston, MA
Proposal
Source
  • 2026-1339: Order for a hearing regarding housing voucher discrimination and fair housing civil rights enforcement in Boston.

    Jul 6, 2026

    ·Boston, MA
    Proposal
    Source
  • City of Scranton Council Responses – June 30, 2026 | PDF

    Jun 30, 2026

    ·Scranton, PA
    Other

    This document records City of Scranton Council responses to questions raised at the June 23, 2026 meeting. Councilman Sean McAndrew requested the Parks & Recreation Director attend a caucus in June for parks updates; the city committed to scheduling this meeting. McAndrew also asked the Nay Aug Park Manager to lock city parks at night, particularly to address youth activity at Weston Field, and the manager agreed to lock the Nay Aug courts. Additionally, McAndrew requested Police Chief Thomas Carroll attend a public caucus regarding camera placement in Pretzel Park, and the city confirmed it intends to address this camera request. A separate concern about hazardous trees at 417 10th Avenue was referred to Code Enforcement, with a scheduled site visit for June 30.

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  • CB 121254: An ordinance relating to rental agreement regulation; requiring disclosure of fees, prohibiting and limiting certain fees, requiring retention of compliance records, expanding investigation authority, and establishing new enforcement mechanisms; amending Section 7.24.020, 7.24.050, 7.24.060, 7.24.120, and 7.24.130 of, and adding new Sections 7.24.039, 7.24.040, 7.24.045, 7.24.170, 7.24.180, 7.24.190, 7.24.200, 7.24.210, 7.24.220, 7.24.230, and 7.24.240 to, the Seattle Municipal Code.

    Jun 27, 2026

    ·Seattle, WA
    Proposal
    Source
  • RS2026-2097: A resolution approving a Memorandum of Understanding entered into by and between the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department, the Metropolitan Transit Authority, and the Regional Transportation Authority, to formalize the operations of dedicated law enforcement services within the public transit system.

    Jun 26, 2026

    ·Nashville, TN
    Proposal
    Source
  • CB 121248: An ordinance relating to controlled substances; updating City policy for the enforcement of the crimes of knowing possession and use of controlled substances; amending Section 3.28.141 of the Seattle Municipal Code; and repealing Section 4 of Ordinance 126896.

    Jun 23, 2026

    ·Seattle, WA
    Proposal
    Source
  • 26-0941: A resolution approving a proposed Third Amendatory Agreement between the City and County of Denver and Linebarger Goggan Blair & Sampson, LLP to provide professional legal services and to serve as legal counsel to the City for collecting debts owed associated with parking and photo citation enforcement and litigation, citywide. Amends a contract with LINEBARGER GOGGAN BLAIR & SAMPSON, LLP to twelve months for a new end date of 8-31-2027 to provide professional legal services and to serve as legal counsel to the City for collecting debts owed associated with parking and photo citation enforcement and litigation. No change to contract capacity, citywide (ATTNY-202160108/ATTNY-202684405-03). The last regularly scheduled Council meeting within the 30-day review period is on 8-3-2026. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 6-30-2026.

    Jun 22, 2026

    ·Denver, CO
    Proposal
    Source
  • 2005-2026: To amend Chapter 2319 of the Columbus City Codes to repeal and replace Sections 2319.30 and 2319.31, to provide technical corrections; to enact new sections to strengthen the provisions and enforcement of Minor’s Curfew and parental responsibility; and to provide for delayed enforcement of certain penalty provisions until January 1, 2027; and to declare an emergency ($0.00)

    Jun 18, 2026

    ·Columbus, OH
    Proposal
    Source
  • June 17, 2026 Meeting Minutes

    Jun 17, 2026

    ·Hazleton, PA
    Minutes

    The City of Hazleton Government Study Commission met on June 17, 2026, at 5:07 PM with six of seven members present to advance charter development work. PEL Consultants presented and discussed draft Transition and Accountability, Conduct, and Ethics articles, with updated versions to follow, enabling PEL to proceed toward a completed charter draft. Solicitor Sean Logsdon reviewed proposed edits to the Contract Article for consideration at the next meeting. Public commenter David Dominguez raised questions about charter enforcement mechanisms, potential Police and Fire Board oversight structures, and orientation for newly elected officials. The Commission approved June 3 meeting minutes unanimously and adjourned at 7:31 PM, scheduling the next meeting for June 24, 2026, at 5:00 PM.

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    charter developmentgovernment conductethicspublic safety oversight
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  • City of Scranton Council Responses – June 16, 2026 | PDF

    Jun 16, 2026

    ·Scranton, PA
    Other

    The City of Scranton administration prepared responses to City Council questions from the June 9, 2026 meeting, dated June 16, 2026. Council President Tom Schuster raised five matters: the administration declined to meet separately with PA Ambulance before issuing a Request for Proposals, citing fairness concerns, and instead directed Fitch & Associates to prepare an RFP with input from City Administration. Regarding the Emergency Operations & Training Center, the administration clarified that the facility has two components—an Emergency Operations Center for Scranton city use and potential Lackawanna County backup, and a Training Center available for regional use with terms to be determined once the project advances and grant funding is secured. The administration did not provide specific salary projections for ARPA-funded staffers in 2027 and beyond, instead redirecting to another agenda item response. For a sunken pavement cut at N Main Avenue & Clearview Street, the city will file a complaint with PennDOT as that section is state-owned and maintained. Code Enforcement, the Scranton Police Department, and the Department of Public Works were asked to address unspecified issues at Frank Grippo & Son Auto Body at 1503 N Main Avenue.

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