29 results for “fee ordinance”
29 results for “fee ordinance”
This is an agenda for a special meeting of the Mayor and Borough Council of East Newark, New Jersey, scheduled for Wednesday, December 29, 2025, at 6:30 p.m. at 34 Sherman Avenue. The meeting includes three ordinances for hearing and final adoption: Ordinance 16-2025 addressing affordable housing compliance obligations, Ordinance 17-2025 creating affordable housing development fees in Chapter 32, and Ordinance 18-2025 adopting the Silvi Concrete Plant Redevelopment Plan. Five resolutions are scheduled, including Resolution 172-25 authorizing a redevelopment agreement with Penn Jersey Certified Concrete, Inc. (dba "Silvi Materials") for rehabilitation of properties at 800 and 246 Passaic Avenue, and Resolution 174-25 approving bill payments of $81,754.08 through December 29, 2025. Resolution 173-25 addresses amendments to employee handbook policies, and Resolution 175-25 concerns 2025 budget transfers.
AI summary
The Committee of the Whole for the City of Dearborn met on June 5, 2025, to consider nine agenda items including approval of previous meeting minutes and multiple ordinance proposals. The meeting addressed amendments to the Animals Chapter regarding dog licensing (Ordinance No. 25-1844); comprehensive zoning amendments affecting parking, site development standards, and multiple districts (Ordinance No. 25-1845); rezoning property at 100 N. Telegraph Road from Local Business to Community Business classification (Ordinance No. 25-1846); and several regulations governing short-term rentals, non-owner-occupied residential properties, hotel licensing fees, and hotel conduct standards (Ordinances No. 25-1847 through 25-1849). Most ordinances were recommended for tabling rather than immediate advancement.
AI summary
Charleston County presented its FY 2026 budget on May 22, 2025, with a scheduled three-reading approval process concluding June 10, 2025. The budget recommendations include approving county and special purpose district budgets, a fee ordinance amendment, and library budgets, while addressing economic uncertainties and inflation through maintaining existing services and supporting the county's strategic plan. Key proposals include 33 new positions across emergency services, housing, and planning functions, a General Fund appropriation increase of 4.2% to $365.5 million, and a debt service increase of 47.0% to $56.5 million, with the Northern Charleston Fire District millage rate increasing from 15.5 to 16.2 mills.
AI summary