30 results for “comprehensive plan”
30 results for “comprehensive plan”
The Hazleton City Council held a regular meeting on April 14, 2026, featuring a public hearing on the Greater Hazleton Area Thrive 2035 Multi-Municipal Comprehensive Plan and consideration of several ordinances and resolutions. Key items included first reading of Ordinance 2026-8 establishing a Residential Reserved Parking Permit Program, second reading of Ordinance 2026-7, and resolutions to approve the amended Fiscal Year 2026 Action Plan, award a bid for the Hazleton Streets Improvements Project—Phase 1, and request Department of Conservation and Natural Resources funds for the Columbus Court Community Park and Pagnotti Field Project—Phase 1.
AI summary
The Select Committee on the Comprehensive Plan held a meeting on April 6, 2026, to discuss and hold a public hearing on Council Bill 121173, which proposes significant amendments to Seattle's land use and zoning regulations in Chapter 23.32 of the Seattle Municipal Code. The ordinance would modify the Official Land Use Map across numerous pages and amend or repeal several sections of the municipal code related to zoning regulations. The committee, with six of nine members present, conducted the public hearing across multiple sessions throughout the day, beginning at 9:35 a.m. and continuing with recesses until at least 6:02 p.m.
AI summary
On April 6, 2026, the Seattle City Council's Select Committee on the Comprehensive Plan held a public hearing with two sessions (9:30 a.m. and 3 p.m.) to consider an ordinance relating to extensive amendments to Chapter 23.32 of the Seattle Municipal Code and the Official Land Use Map, involving zoning and land use regulations across numerous map pages and code sections. The meeting was open to public comment, with remote speakers accepted during Session I and in-person speakers during Session II, and the committee provided accessibility accommodations and language interpretation services upon request.
AI summary
The 2026 Adopted Budget for the City of Evanston, effective January 1, 2026, is a comprehensive 420-page document outlining all revenue sources, expenditures, and fund structures. The document includes updates to revenue and expenditure schedules, fund balance projections with explanations of significant changes, and corrected pension funding policy language. The budget encompasses multiple funds including the General Fund, Parks and Recreation, various Tax Increment Financing (TIF) districts, utility funds (Water, Sewer, Solid Waste), and special purpose funds such as the American Rescue Plan Act Fund and Reparations Fund.
AI summary
The Spokane Plan Commission held a meeting on October 22, 2025, in hybrid format at City Hall to address several planning matters. The agenda included a workshop on PlanSpokane 2046 covering review of alternatives and potential land use category changes, with a draft Environmental Impact Statement expected in December 2025, followed by hearings on the Capital Improvement Program (Z25-499COMP) and a Co-Living SMC Update. The meeting also included standard briefing items such as approval of previous minutes, city council and liaison reports, and public comment periods.
AI summary