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11 results for “administrative fund” · other

  • 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).

    AI summary

    water infrastructuregrant allocationroad maintenanceutility inspection
arpa funding
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  • official gazette may 4 2022

    May 4, 2022

    ·Spokane, WA
    Other

    On April 25, 2022, the Spokane City Council held a briefing and administrative session where they approved the May 2, 2022 advance agenda by a 6-1 vote and suspended council rules to add items to the agenda. The council also considered Special Budget Ordinance C36195, which would increase appropriations in the American Rescue Plan Fund by $750,000 for additional funding needs related to The Centre (content cut off in document). The document is the official gazette containing meeting minutes, hearing notices, ordinances, and job postings from the City of Spokane.

    AI summary

    budgetamerican rescue plancouncil meeting
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  • Oakland, CA Code of Ordinances -,) THE CHARTER OF THE CITY OF OAKLAND

    Oakland, CA
    Other

    This document is Oakland, California's City Charter, adopted by voters on November 5, 1968, ratified by the California Secretary of State, and effective January 28, 1969, with amendments through November 2014. The charter establishes the fundamental law governing municipal operations and is organized into twelve main articles covering powers and form of government, the City Council, the Mayor, city officers, the City Manager, administrative organization, the Port of Oakland, fiscal administration, personnel administration, franchises and licenses, elections, and general provisions. The charter also includes appendices addressing specialized funds and systems including the KIDS FIRST! Oakland Children's Fund, Police Relief and Pension Fund, Firemen's Relief and Pension Fund, Oakland Municipal Employees' Retirement System, Police and Fire Retirement System, and off-street vehicular parking regulations. The charter grants Oakland perpetual corporate succession and continuity of existing lawful ordinances, resolutions, and regulations not in conflict with its provisions.

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  • City Council Approves the City’s 976M Budget for FY 2026

    St. Petersburg, FL
    Other

    On October 6, 2025, the St. Petersburg City Council approved a $976.2 million budget for Fiscal Year 2026, which began October 1, 2025. The budget prioritizes infrastructure strengthening and climate resilience through Mayor Kenneth T. Welch's five Pillars For Progress, including the St. Pete Agile Resilience (SPAR) Program to address hurricane impacts and sea level rise, with $202 million allocated for capital improvements and $352.4 million for Public Works Administration. The budget also includes funding for housing initiatives, homelessness prevention, and community development programs aligned with the city's commitment to equitable development and neighborhood resilience.

    AI summary

    budgetinfrastructureclimate resiliencepublic workshousing
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  • Finance | Newark, NJ

    Newark, NJ
    Other

    The Newark Department of Finance oversees all fiscal operations and asset management for the city, including employee and vendor payments, revenue collection, tax billing, and financial reporting, under the leadership of the Director of Finance/Chief Financial Officer. The department comprises several divisions: the Director's Office maintains custody of city assets including cash, investments, and capital authorizations; the Employee's Retirement Systems manages pension enrollment and retiree payments; the Office of Tax Abatement and Special Taxes collects and enforces revenue from payroll taxes, parking, hotel occupancy, and business licenses and permits; Assessments determines real property and personal property taxability and maintains tax maps; Accounts and Control records financial transactions across all city funds; and Revenue Collections handles property tax billing and citywide revenue collection and reporting.

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    tax billingbudget managementrevenue collectionpension administrationfinancial reporting
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  • About - Bloomington Township Trustee - Indiana

    Bloomington, IN
    Other

    The Bloomington Township Trustee office, led by Trustee Efrat Rosser (elected 2022), provides relief, support, and community connection services to township residents in need through collaboration with local organizations. The office's mission emphasizes enhancing quality of life, accessibility, compassion, responsible stewardship of public funds, and preserving township history. Rosser brings 25 years of Monroe County residency and extensive local government and nonprofit leadership experience, including prior roles with the City of Bloomington Utilities and United Way of Monroe County.

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    poverty reliefcommunity servicestownship administration
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  • Huntsvillempo

    Huntsville, AL
    Other

    The TRiP 2045 document is a Long Range Transportation Plan prepared collaboratively by the City of Huntsville Area Planning Division and the Huntsville Area Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO), with federal funding from the Federal Highway Administration. The plan was developed in fulfillment of federal transportation planning requirements under the FAST Act and involves coordination among federal, state, and local government agencies. The document includes leadership from the MPO's governing board and a Technical Coordinating Committee composed of representatives from various local and regional transportation, planning, and infrastructure agencies.

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    transportation planninglong range planinfrastructuremetropolitan planningfederal funding
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  • Schuylkill County Zoning Ordinance - IIS Windows Server

    Pottsville, PA
    Other

    Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania adopted Zoning Ordinance Number 2010-1 on December 22, 2010, which was prepared by a Zoning Ordinance Committee, the County Planning Commission, and planning staff, with partial funding from a Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development Land Use Technical Assistance Program Grant. The ordinance establishes comprehensive zoning regulations covering administration, permits, enforcement, variances, appeals, and special exception use processes across the county's 160-page document.

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    zoningland usepermitsordinance
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  • Jacksonville.gov - Boards And Commissions

    Jacksonville, FL
    Other

    This document catalogs Jacksonville's boards and commissions organized by function. The city maintains 24 advisory boards including the Better Jacksonville Plan Project Administration Committee, Homelessness Initiatives Commission, and Mayor's LGBTQ+ Advisory Board, which provide advice and resident perspectives to the mayor and City Council. Eleven oversight bodies including the Art in Public Places Committee and Board of Library Trustees perform advisory functions and may allocate city funding within certain programs. Ten regulatory boards and commissions including the Jacksonville Ethics Commission, Planning Commission, and Jacksonville Historic Preservation Commission exercise regulatory authority to make rulings and impose penalties under the Ordinance Code. Board members are required to complete ethics training materials provided by the city.

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    boards and commissionsadvisory bodiesregulatory bodiesgovernment administration
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  • CITY OF JERSEY CITY

    Jersey City, NJ
    Other

    Mayor Steven M. Fulop introduced Jersey City's FY 2026 budget on April 18, 2025, proposing zero municipal tax rate increase for residents while maintaining full city services—marking the ninth of eleven budgets under his administration with tax increases of 2% or less. The budget includes $66 million in debt service paydown, $6 million for union contract settlements, new police and firefighter hires, full pension fund funding with cost-of-living adjustments, and investments in affordable housing and infrastructure, while managing challenges including rising insurance premiums and reduced federal and state grant funding. The municipal portion of average property tax bills has decreased to 35% from 48% over two years, with $1.6 billion in new ratables added to the tax rolls through economic development efforts.

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    budgettax increasepolice hiringinfrastructureaffordable housing
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  • Budget User's Guide Charleston County

    Charleston, SC
    Other

    Charleston County's Budget User's Guide explains the structure and contents of two budget documents: the Approved Budget Detail Book, which contains comprehensive capital listings, full-time equivalent (FTE) employee breakdowns by position and pay grade, and line item budgets; and the Approved Budget Narrative Book, which presents the operating budget through schedules and narratives highlighting major changes from the prior year. The Narrative Book is organized into sixteen sections covering Performance Measures, Overview, Schedules, six Deputy Administrator divisions (Community Services, Finance, General Services, Human Services, and Transportation & Public Works), and sections on Capital, Debt, Long Term Financial Plans, and Appendix. The guide indicates that the Narrative Book includes the County Administrator's Letter to Citizens addressing major policy issues and budget challenges, Budget Highlights that answer frequently asked questions about the total operating budget and tax increases, and a Performance Measures section that documents the County's Mission, Values, Initiatives (goals), and Notable Results. The Overview section provides fund analysis, descriptions of fund types, budget expenditures by fund, financial policies, and revenue assumptions.

    AI summary

    budget planningcounty budgetfinancial management
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