23 results for “zoning appeals” · agenda
- Agenda
23 results for “zoning appeals” · agenda
The City of Phoenix City Council held a formal meeting on March 25, 2026 at 2:30 PM in the City Council Chambers. The agenda document (revised March 24, 2026) contains 205 pages with 72 items, though specific details about items discussed or decisions made are not provided in this excerpt. The meeting offered multiple participation options including in-person attendance, virtual access via Webex, and phone call-in options, with Spanish language interpretation and registration available for public speakers.
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This is a City Council meeting agenda for the City of Arcadia scheduled for Tuesday, March 3, 2026, at 6:00 P.M. in the City Council Conference Room. The document outlines procedural information including accessibility accommodations, language translation services, and methods for public comment submission (in-person, website, or email), with specific time limits for speakers based on the number of participants. No substantive agenda items, budget figures, or policy decisions are detailed in this document.
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The Westtown Township Board of Supervisors regular meeting scheduled for Monday, March 2, 2026, at 7:30 PM will include departmental reports, approval of previous meeting minutes, and several new business items including authorization of development agreements for the Sarah Starkweather Elementary School project, consideration of a field use agreement with West Chester United Soccer Club/Penn Fusion Soccer Academy, and approval of change orders and payment applications for the Pleasant Grove Force Main Reconstruction and Pump Station projects. The agenda also includes a Good Stewardship Award presentation to the Church of Loving Shepherd, consideration of ordinance amendments related to swimming pools and hot tubs, and various community announcements regarding recreational activities and yard waste collection.
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This is a March 2, 2026 Jefferson City, Missouri City Council meeting agenda scheduled for 6:00 P.M. at the John G. Christy Municipal Building. The agenda includes a financial update presentation by Shiela Pearre, consideration of consent items including a surplus property sale to MoDOT and a police department UTV purchase, and introduction of eight bills covering parking and traffic amendments, a $50,000 air service guarantee agreement with Columbia Regional Airport, multiple subdivision and land use approvals, and a tax credit agreement for a conference center project.
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This is a preliminary agenda for the Knoxville Planning Commission meeting scheduled for April 9, 2026, at 1:30 P.M. in the Main Assembly Room at the City County Building. The agenda includes two final subdivision plats for review—The Highline at Washington Pike Phase 3 Unit 4 and Lonas Creek Subdivision—as well as a rezoning request for properties on Highland Avenue (Mohammad Reza Basiri), with procedural items including roll call, approval of the agenda and prior minutes, and consideration of postponements and withdrawals.
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The Jackson Township Board of Trustees held a meeting on February 10, 2026, featuring a work session addressing amphitheater event scheduling and the Fulton Street Lighting Project, followed by an executive session covering fire department personnel appointments and public works negotiations. The general session agenda included the swearing in of Deputy Chief Adam J. Gladysz, approval of liquor control licenses for two establishments, police department matters including cryptocurrency investigation agreements, and multiple public works items such as a 2026 resurfacing project advertisement, equipment purchases (Boss VBX and tow motor), and a safety center fire alarm system replacement.
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This document announces a Regular Meeting of Reading City Council scheduled for Monday, February 9, 2026, at 7:00 pm, available as a hybrid meeting via Zoom, Facebook, and local cable channel BCTV MAC Channel 99. The document outlines rules for public participation, requiring residents and taxpayers to pre-register by 4 pm on the meeting day through phone, email, or in-person sign-up, with speakers on agenda items limited to 5 minutes and non-agenda speakers to 3 minutes. Only registered residents or taxpayers are permitted to speak unless granted permission by the Council President or a majority of Council.
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The Board of Directors of Downtown Knoxville Alliance held meetings on November 17, 2025, and scheduled a January 26, 2026 meeting at 11:30 AM to address action items including FY 24-25 audit results, November and December financial reports, and committee reports. In the November meeting, the board unanimously approved the October financial report and allocated $30,500 in sponsorships across five cultural and community events, including $10,000 each to the East Tennessee History Center and Knoxville Museum of Art programming, plus $5,000 to fund an art wraps program continuation through the Knoxville History Project.
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The Jefferson City Council met on January 20, 2026, to address various agenda items including recognizing posthumous and service awards, approving a special exception permit for a conference center and hotel exceeding 100,000 square feet at 201 Madison Street and 210 Monroe Street, and making mayoral appointments to multiple boards and commissions. The consent agenda included approval of several contracts for wastewater management, yard waste removal, and transit software services, while pending bills addressed the creation of a Downtown Jefferson City Conference Center Community Improvement District.
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The January 8, 2026 Committee of the Whole meeting agenda includes recognition of retired city official Irene Darragh for 33 years of service, approval of previous meeting minutes, and introduction of two ordinances—one amending shopping cart regulations and another establishing a Dearborn Arts and Culture Commission. The agenda also addresses multiple purchasing and development items, including a $52,640 vehicle purchase, a $247,602 mural installation contract, a $394,500 green infrastructure design contract, and a request to vacate a public alley for redevelopment purposes.
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The Community Development Committee held a meeting on January 7, 2026, to review departmental updates and consider policy matters including annual reports on the Deanna Rose Children's Farmstead and Aquatics operations, a housing needs assessment overview, and action items including a bid tabulation for a Sustainable Medians Pilot Program and adoption of the 2024 Commercial Series of the International Building Codes and 2023 NFPA 70 National Electrical Code. The meeting included information items, discussion items, and action items presented by various city staff members and department managers.
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The Metropolitan Development Commission of Indianapolis-Marion County held a public hearing on January 7, 2026, where it approved several zoning petitions and policy resolutions. Key approvals included a Final Economic Revitalization Area Resolution recommending six years of personal property tax abatement for Waste Management of Indiana, LLC; hospital expansions totaling approximately 29,600 square feet for Community Health Network; and rezoning requests for residential and mixed-use developments. The commission also continued two rezoning petitions to later dates (February 4 and January 21, 2026) and approved a waiver allowing refiling of a petition for property at 8560 North College Avenue after its previous withdrawal.
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The Mayor and Borough Council of East Newark held a Sine Die and Reorganization meeting on January 7, 2026, to approve minutes from previous meetings, authorize payment of bills totaling $243,551.74 through December 31, 2025, and administer oaths of office to three councilmembers. The reorganization portion included approving 2026 operational resolutions covering meeting dates, official depositories, cash management, committee assignments, and various municipal appointments and agreements, including a shared services agreement with Paramus for vehicle maintenance and a lead service line replacement project.
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This is an agenda document for a December 17, 2025 Board of Public Works meeting to be held online and at the State House Governor's Reception Room in Annapolis, Maryland. The agenda covers multiple state departments and agencies including Agriculture, Housing and Community Development, Maryland Department of the Environment, Maryland Department of Transportation, Department of General Services, University System of Maryland, and Department of Natural Resources, with items addressing grants, capital improvements, real property transactions, and various procurement matters across 293 pages of supporting materials.
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The City Council meeting on April 6, 2026 will address multiple business licenses (mobile food vendors, massage therapy, hemp edibles, liquor permits), a public hearing on a tax abatement application, and bid opening for 2026 Street Reconstruction Projects. The agenda includes several resolutions to approve the 2026-2028 base pay structure, the Austin Bruins contract, budget adjustment number two, design services for the Sanitary Sewer Lining Project, and various funding transfers and change orders for ongoing capital projects. The meeting will also recognize Step Up Award recipients and allow public comment before adjourning.
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The Shelby County Plan Commission met on November 25, 2025, to consider RZ 25-15 and SD 25-14, applications to rezone 5.81 acres from Conservation Agricultural (A1) to Residential Estate (RE) District and to create a simple subdivision of a single-family building lot from a larger 71.74-acre parcel located at 9795 N 500 E in Morristown. The meeting also included approval of the 2026 Plan Commission Meeting Calendar, with the next regular meeting scheduled for December 23, 2025.
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The Columbus City Graphics Commission held a public hearing on October 21, 2025, to review zoning applications for sign variances and permits under the Columbus Graphics Code. Two applications were considered: one requesting variances to allow LED fuel pricing signage at a gas station located at 2725 W. Broad Street in a mixed-use district, and another seeking approval for a two-sided projecting sign at 595½ S. 3rd Street in a residential district with a requested height increase from 6 feet to 14 feet. The hearing took place at the Michael B. Coleman Government Center and was available for public viewing via the City of Columbus YouTube channel.
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The Metropolitan Planning Commission held a regular meeting agenda on September 25, 2025, at 4:00 pm in Nashville to guide growth and development toward a more sustainable community. The commission, chaired by Greg Adkins and comprising nine council-appointed members plus the Mayor's representative, makes final decisions on site plans and subdivisions while recommending actions on zone changes and other applications to the Metropolitan Council. Meeting materials were posted online and available in person, with public comments accepted through Tuesday prior to the meeting, and proceedings broadcast live on Metro Nashville Network and YouTube.
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The Board of Public Works held a meeting on August 6, 2025, at the State House in Annapolis to address a comprehensive agenda covering multiple state agencies and departments. The agenda included items from the Secretary's Action Agenda spanning agriculture, transportation, housing, environmental services, and other state departments, with a recommendation to approve funding for 28 grants under the Maryland Agricultural Cost-Share Program. The meeting was held both online and in person, with numerous capital projects, real property matters, and departmental approvals scheduled for discussion across multiple supplemental sections covering transportation, general services, procurement, and natural resources.
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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.
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This document contains the agendas for two meetings scheduled for June 17, 2025, in Tucson, Arizona. The Mayor and Council study session (2:00 PM) will address the opioid/fentanyl public health crisis, the Tucson Pima Collaboration to end Homelessness strategic plan, camping ordinance amendments related to Proposition 312, water conservation requirements, middle housing development code amendments, and state legislation on development regulations, with an estimated duration of 3 hours and 40 minutes. The Public Housing Authority Board of Commissioners will hold a separate meeting at 5:30 PM the same day at the same location.
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