16 results for “street lights”
16 results for “street lights”
The Parks and City Light Committee held a meeting on May 20, 2026, at 2:03 p.m., presided over by Councilmember Juarez with five members present (Juarez, Kettle, Rivera, Saka, and Strauss). The committee unanimously recommended passage of CB 121199, which authorizes the City Light Department to accept multiple Statutory Warranty Deeds and other property transfers for salmonid habitat protection in King and Skagit counties and ratifies Salmon Recovery Funding Board grants for acquisitions. The committee also unanimously recommended passage of CB 121204, authorizing the City Light General Manager to grant an easement to Puget Sound Energy with fair market value compensation, and recommended passage of CB 121205 (4–1, with Strauss abstaining) authorizing an easement grant to King County. A fourth ordinance (CB 121211) related to current use taxation for property at 4807 SW 54th Street was introduced but the document text is incomplete.
AI summary
On October 7, 2025, the Dearborn City Council held a regular meeting approving multiple resolutions including recognitions for community members and city employees, consent agenda items, and several contracts and expenditures. Key decisions included awarding a $135,000 bulk leaf pick-up contract to RSB Services, LLC; authorizing $571,402.42 in sole source agreements with DTE Electric for street light pole replacements across three districts; and approving a $35,000 contract with artist Two Eagles Marcus for a winter art installation. The council also granted a temporary food truck permit and approved various fleet and equipment expenditure authorizations.
AI summary
The Complete Streets Coalition met on July 25, 2024, to discuss membership recruitment, project funding allocations, and infrastructure improvements. The coalition addressed the loss of two members and discussed geographic diversity in recruitment, particularly from West Louisville, while also reviewing a memorandum of agreement signed by the Shelby Park Neighborhood Association and Louisville Metro Government regarding potential changes to the TARC transit network. With $7,500 in remaining funds from the sale of Bardstown Road lights, the coalition considered upgrades near a west-end school, including a new crosswalk and two speed humps to accommodate expanded school facilities and student safety.
AI summary