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20 results for “city meetings” · other

  • 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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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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  • City of Scranton Council Responses | June 23, 2026

    Jun 23, 2026

    ·Scranton, PA
    Other

    This document contains written responses from City of Scranton administration to questions raised by Council President Tom Schuster at a June 16, 2026 council meeting. Regarding the problem property at 1708 Wayne Avenue, the city advised the homeowner it could be designated a nuisance based on police call volume, with tenants currently under eviction pending appeal; a rental inspection was begun on April 10 but the second reinspection remains unscheduled and the property has not yet passed. Police Department records show approximately eleven incidents at the property since January 1, 2026, while the Fire Department responded twice in 2026 for basement flooding. The administration clarified that the pending RFP being prepared is separate from the EMS Feasibility Study conducted by Fitch & Associates, which evaluated the current EMS system and made recommendations based on response performance and financial impact.

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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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  • City of Scranton Council Responses – June 8, 2026 | PDF

    Jun 8, 2026

    ·Scranton, PA
    Other

    The City of Scranton provided responses to questions raised by Council President Tom Schuster and Councilman Sean McAndrew at the June 2 Council meeting. Regarding the Weston Field Complex, the city confirmed the pool is operational and will open June 6–7, with daily operations beginning the weekend of June 13; the playground is fully funded through an ORLP grant, but equipment cannot be purchased until federal contracting is completed. For 421 Colfax Avenue, a condemned property with ongoing blight issues, the city's blight remediation teams were informed to assist with clearing overgrown grass and brush. On Weston Field security, gates have been temporarily unlocked to facilitate equipment delivery for the mini-pitch project but will be relocked upon completion. Regarding a potential creek obstruction near Sherman Avenue, a site visit on June 2 identified no major water conveyance issues, with recommendations for tree removal upstream from Jackson Street bridge and debris clearing.

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  • City of Scranton Council Responses – June 2, 2026 | PDF

    Jun 2, 2026

    ·Scranton, PA
    Other

    This document contains responses from City of Scranton officials to questions raised by Council members during a May 26, 2026 meeting, prepared June 2, 2026. Council President Tom Schuster inquired about the Hickory Street Bridge project, which requires replacement at an estimated cost of $5.7 million requested from PennDOT through the LLTS-MPO; the city also identified critical bridge replacements needed on South Washington Avenue over Roaring Brook and Poplar Street over the river, while PennDOT has recently funded replacements at Myrtle Street and Hollow Avenue bridges. Councilman Sean McAndrew asked about funding for the Fawnwood pipe project, which will be covered using remaining stormwater project funds, and requested the 2016 sales agreement between the City and PA American Water Company from the City Clerk's office. McAndrew also requested a breakdown of homeless initiatives funding; the 2026 Operating Budget allocates $31,000 designated for Code Blue operations during the 2026–2027 season.

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  • City of Scranton Council Responses – May 26, 2026 | PDF

    May 26, 2026

    ·Scranton, PA
    Other

    This document provides City Council responses to questions raised at the May 21, 2026 meeting. A $350K grant request for Engine 10 was not awarded, and the city will continue submitting future grant applications. Two easements for the Fawnwood Phase 1 project were secured with funding from the American Rescue Plan Act. A 12-month contract extension related to agenda item 5C carries a total cost of $32,760. Regarding the Fawnwood Stormwater Project pipe issue, the city confirmed it will redirect funding to complete the project according to original plans. A progress report from St. Cats & Dogs, requested at the May 5 meeting, was attached to the response.

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  • City of Scranton Council Responses – May 21, 2026 | PDF

    May 21, 2026

    ·Scranton, PA
    Other

    This document comprises written responses from city administration to Council President Tom Schuster's inquiries raised at the May 12, 2026 City Council meeting. The responses address six specific properties and issues: 903 Meadow Avenue (condemned property with hoarding concerns, health risk assessment underway); 1624 Lafayette Street (rental inspection scheduled for July 15 with access restrictions pending occupant authorization); 448 West Market Street (Code Enforcement conducted site assessment, citations and fines pending against property owner for debris cleanup); the 1700 block of Dickson Avenue (standing water drainage pending property ownership confirmation by Don King); and an alley between the 100 blocks of North Cameron and North Merrifield Avenues (swept on May 19). The document was prepared May 20, 2026, one day after the council meeting.

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  • Lincoln, NE City Council Meetings Schedule Week of May 18, 2026

    May 18, 2026

    ·Lincoln, NE
    Other
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  • City of Scranton Council Responses – May 12, 2026 | PDF

    May 12, 2026

    ·Scranton, PA
    Other

    This document records responses from City of Scranton administration to questions posed by council members during a May 5, 2026 meeting, prepared on May 11, 2026. Council President Tom Schuster inquired about a $58,000 line item increase plus an additional $5,000 increase for St. Cats & Dogs in the 2026 budget, requesting a progress report and status update on the organization's usage of the Ash Street property; the City stated it has requested an update from St. Cats & Dogs. Schuster also asked about the Davis Street Apartment project on the 3100 Block of Cedar Avenue, which holds a five-year planning commission approval; the city clarified that no permits or plans have been submitted and the project cannot move forward without passage of a one-way ordinance that the planning commission made a condition of approval. Council member Dr. Jessica Rothchild raised concerns about tree cutting on private property in the Upper East Mountain area and received clarification that the Shade Tree Commission only regulates city rights-of-way and city-owned properties, with no prohibition on private owners removing trees from their own property. Dr. Rothchild also commended the Robinson Park project and raised two maintenance issues: gravel from a drain area being kicked onto the playground equipment, and worn ground beneath swings creating a safety hazard.

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  • City of Scranton Council Responses – May 5, 2026 | PDF

    May 5, 2026

    ·Scranton, PA
    Other

    This document contains responses from City of Scranton administration to questions posed by City Council members at their April 28, 2026 meeting, compiled on May 5, 2026. The street sign project contracted to MAC Signs was completed in December 2025, and DPW continues routine traffic sign maintenance and replacement. DPW will address sidewalk conditions in the 1000 block of North Rebecca Avenue by reseeding grass and will coordinate with the Police Department on potential additional signage for traffic safety on Euclid Avenue at Main Avenue. For the concrete barriers at East Mountain Road across from the Salvation Army, the Blight Team under the Parks Director will remove trash and cut back overgrowth, pending confirmation of property ownership. Fire Chief John Judge agreed to meet with Councilmen Sean and Mark McAndrew in his office regarding ambulance service questions, with the option to hold a public caucus afterward if needed. The Good Neighbor gift card program will run again in May 2026.

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  • REGULAR MEETING OF THE CITY COUNCIL CITY OF JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI May 5, 2026

    May 5, 2026

    ·Jackson, MS
    Other
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  • REGULAR MEETING OF THE CITY COUNCIL CITY OF JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI May 5, 2026

    May 5, 2026

    ·Jackson, MS
    Other
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  • Events - City and County of Honolulu 21. Pearl City NB Regular Meeting

    Apr 28, 2026

    ·Honolulu, HI
    Other
    Source
  • MARCH 11, 2026 OFFICIAL GAZETTE, SPOKANE, WA 261 MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL

    Mar 11, 2026

    ·Spokane, WA
    Other

    The March 11, 2026 Official Gazette of Spokane, Washington contains notices and minutes from city council meetings. The document includes meeting minutes from the February 23, 2026 Agenda Review Session, during which the city council interviewed a candidate for the Salary Review Commission and received briefings on budget and emergency procurement ordinances. The minutes for the March 2, 2026 council meeting were deferred for publication in a later gazette issue.

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  • City of Eugene Public Meeting Calendar For the week of March 8, 2026

    Mar 8, 2026

    ·Eugene, OR
    Other
    Source
  • Responses to City Council – February 17, 2026 | PDF

    Feb 17, 2026

    ·Scranton, PA
    Other

    On February 17, 2026, the City of Scranton provided responses to questions raised by City Council members during the February 10 meeting. Key topics included the pending grant application for Engine 10 fire station upgrades on East Mountain, coordination with Pennsylvania American Water Company (PAWC) on aging water main infrastructure following a recent break in the Hill Section, and a request for documentation of purchases and services rendered under emergency declarations (invoices still being compiled). Additionally, responses addressed a 30-day extension signed February 9, 2026 for the Fidelity Bank building purchase, and clarification that questions regarding non-respondents to an HUP Test mailing were forwarded to the Lackawanna County Tax Assessment Office.

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    fire station upgradeswater infrastructureemergency declarationsproperty acquisition
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  • Responses to City Council – February 10, 2026 | PDF

    Feb 10, 2026

    ·Scranton, PA
    Other

    On February 10, 2026, the City Council received responses to questions from a February 3 meeting, primarily addressing pave cut inspections for the Green Ridge water company project and ARPA grant allocation. The city confirmed that Pennoni conducts weekly inspections of utility work, documents findings in reports tied to specific permits, and notifies utilities of deficiencies—with violations issued if issues are not timely addressed; temporary cold patch repairs are being used due to winter weather conditions preventing hot-mix asphalt installation. The administration also provided details on ARPA grant tracking through subrecipient check-ins and quarterly reports, and listed specific allocations to organizations including NeighborWorks (business façade, home buyer, and home rehabilitation programs totaling approximately $865,881) and United Neighborhood Centers (business façade and disaster relief totaling approximately $129,930).

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    water infrastructuregrant allocationroad maintenanceutility inspectionarpa funding
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  • CITY OF SPOKANE REGARDING CITY COUNCIL MEETINGS

    Feb 9, 2026

    ·Spokane, WA
    Other

    The City of Spokane distributed information regarding its February 9, 2026 City Council meetings, including an Agenda Review Session at 3:30 p.m. and a Legislative Session at 6:00 p.m., both held at City Hall and available for virtual participation via WebEx and live streaming. Public testimony sign-up opened February 6 at 5:00 p.m. and closed February 9 at 6:00 p.m. through an online form or in-person registration, with the open forum limited to matters relating to city affairs, legislative, fiscal, or regulatory purview as defined by council rules.

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    city council meetingspublic commentmeeting procedures
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  • City of Eugene Public Meeting Calendar For the week of February 1, 2026

    Feb 1, 2026

    ·Eugene, OR
    Other
    Source