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30 results for “animal control”

  • City of Stamford, Connecticut – April 7, 2026 16:35 Board of Representatives

    Apr 7, 2026

    ·Stamford, CT
    Agenda

    The Stamford, Connecticut Board of Representatives scheduled FY 2026-2027 department budget presentations beginning March 5, 2026, with sessions covering capital budget overview, administration, operations, planning and management office, and various municipal departments including vehicle maintenance, solid waste, road maintenance, and traffic enforcement. The presentations were to be held at City Hall's Democratic Caucus Room or via remote access through Microsoft Teams or Zoom, with Mayor Caroline Simmons leading the initial fiscal committee meeting and various department representatives presenting their respective budget allocations.

    AI summary

    budget presentationsfiscal planningroad maintenancesolid wastetraffic enforcement
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  • CITY OF WORCESTER Tuesday, March 24, 2026 AGENDA OF THE CITY COUNCIL

    Mar 24, 2026

    ·Worcester, MA
    Agenda

    The Worcester City Council meeting scheduled for April 14, 2026, includes approval of minutes from the March 24, 2026 meeting and consideration of a petition by Worcester Mill LLC, represented by Mark A. Borenstein, Esq., requesting discontinuance of certain portions of Mill Street and abandonment of the city's right-of-way and easement rights, which has been referred to the Planning Board. The meeting will be held at 6:30 P.M. in the Esther Howland (South) Chamber at City Hall and will allow both in-person and remote participation via Zoom.

    AI summary

    street discontinuanceproperty rightsplanning board
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  • CITY COUNCIL REGULAR MEETING AGENDA Tuesday, March 3, 2026, 6:00 P.M.

    Mar 3, 2026

    ·Los Angeles, CA
    Agenda

    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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  • AGENDA Westtown Township Board of Supervisors Regular Meeting

    Mar 2, 2026

    ·West Chester, PA
    Agenda

    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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  • NOTICE OF MEETING AND CITY COUNCIL AGENDAi MONDAY, MARCH 2, 2026 – 6:00 P.M.

    Mar 2, 2026

    ·Kansas City, MO
    Agenda

    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.

    AI summary

    city council meetingpublic hearingsfinancial updatepublic safetyreal estate
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  • Tulsa Metropolitan Area Planning Commission

    Feb 18, 2026

    ·Tulsa, OK
    Agenda

    The Tulsa Metropolitan Area Planning Commission held its meeting No. 2955 on February 18, 2026, to review planning and zoning matters for the City of Tulsa and surrounding Tulsa County areas. The agenda included approval of previous meeting minutes, a rezoning request (Case Z-7848) from Matthew Ward to rezone property west of Charles Page Boulevard and South 49th West Avenue from CS to RM-2, and a plat review for property at the southwest corner of 41st Street South and South 145th East Avenue. The public was invited to attend and submit comments or exhibits, with instructions provided for both in-city and county-area submissions.

    AI summary

    zoningrezoning requestplat review
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  • Minutes from the February 10, 2026 Work Session

    Feb 10, 2026

    ·Hazleton, PA
    Minutes

    Hazleton City Council held a work session on February 10, 2026, to discuss a proposed Feral and Stray Cat Neutering Program. Barbara Conway presented a contract with No Nonsense Neutering for 50 feral/stray cats at $40 per cat for a total commitment of $750 with no upfront costs, with the city receiving a bill at month's end after residents use numbered vouchers at the Wilkes-Barre/Plains office. Council discussed implementation logistics, potential pricing increases for future batches of cats, departmental responsibility, and whether a 501-C3 organization could apply for grant funding, with Mayor Cusat requesting more time to review the program before proceeding.

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  • CITY OF SPOKANE REGARDING CITY COUNCIL MEETINGS

    Feb 9, 2026

    ·Spokane, WA
    Other

    The City of Spokane scheduled City Council meetings for February 9, 2026, including an Agenda Review Session at 3:30 p.m. and a Legislative Session at 6:00 p.m., held in City Council Chambers at City Hall with virtual participation available via WebEx and live streaming on Channel 5 and online platforms. Members of the public may provide testimony during the meetings by signing up online between February 6-9, 2026, or in person on February 9 starting at 8:00 a.m., with testimony limited to matters related to city affairs, operations, and services.

    AI summary

    city council meetingspublic testimonygovernment operations
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  • 1 REGULAR MEETING MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 2026

    Feb 9, 2026

    ·Lansford, PA
    Agenda

    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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  • BOARD OF DIRECTORS’ MEETING AGENDA JANUARY 26, 2026, 11:30 AM I. Welcome

    Jan 26, 2026

    ·Knoxville, TN
    Agenda

    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.

    AI summary

    financial reportsbudget allocationcultural fundingaudit resultscommunity sponsorships
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  • January 8, 2026 - Committee of the Whole Meeting Agenda

    Jan 8, 2026

    ·Dearborn, MI
    Agenda

    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.

    AI summary

    arts and culturegreen infrastructurevehicle purchasepublic alley vacationshopping cart regulations
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  • REGULAR MEETING OF THE MAYOR AND BOROUGH COUNCIL

    Dec 10, 2025

    ·Newark, NJ
    Agenda

    The Borough of East Newark Mayor and Council held a regular meeting on December 10, 2025, where they approved multiple resolutions on the consent agenda, including payment of bills totaling $626,558.60 and awarding a Meals on Wheels contract to Legacy Hospitality & Entertainment Group, LLC. The council also designated a $1,197,000 Bond Anticipation Note as a qualified tax-exempt obligation, approved shared services agreements with the Town of Guttenberg and Hudson County, and authorized several emergency budget appropriations for police, fire, liability insurance, health insurance, and municipal court operations. Additionally, the council made staffing changes to the Joint Planning/Zoning Board and received departmental reports from various municipal departments for November 2025.

    AI summary

    budget appropriationsbond financingshared servicesmeals on wheelspolice operations
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  • 1 REGULAR MEETING OF THE COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF DEARBORN November 18, 2025

    Nov 18, 2025

    ·Dearborn, MI
    Minutes

    On November 18, 2025, the Dearborn City Council held a regular meeting with all seven councilmembers present, during which they unanimously adopted four resolutions recognizing community contributions and mourning a passing: Council Citations for teacher Sandi Smith (52-year career), community member Mustapha Hawily, and Dr. Mohammad Ibrahim (for saving a resident's life), and condolences for the death of James R. Stokes. The Council also approved all items on the Consent Agenda and began consideration of a petition by Mourad Ahmed to vacate an 18-foot public alley adjacent to his property on Colson Avenue.

    AI summary

    council resolutionspublic recognitioncommunity service
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  • 1 REGULAR MEETING OF THE COUNCIL November 18, 2025 AGENDA 1. ROLL CALL 2.

    Nov 18, 2025

    ·Dearborn, MI
    Minutes

    The Dearborn City Council held a regular meeting on November 18, 2025, during which it unanimously passed several resolutions recognizing community members and city employees for their contributions and service. The council approved a consent agenda that included multiple expenditures and grants, including a $25,000 Michigan Economic Development Corporation grant for the WDDDA, a $44,998 contract for security camera installation at parking decks, a $40,938 contract for an audio-visual system at the Department of Public Works, and a $150,000 purchase of emergency supply kit items. The agenda also included routine matters such as roll call, invocation, and public comment, along with a resolution to vacate a public alley for property owner Mourad Ahmed.

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  • COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA OFFICE OF THE BUDGET DATE: November 12, 2025

    Nov 12, 2025

    ·Lansford, PA
    Budget

    On November 12, 2025, Pennsylvania Governor signed Act 1-A, the General Appropriation Act of 2025, establishing total appropriations of $103.747 billion across multiple funds. The General Fund received $98.45 billion in total appropriations ($49.42 billion in state funds and $49.03 billion in federal funds), while the remaining $5.3 billion was distributed across specialized funds including transportation, water infrastructure, public health, and tourism initiatives. The notification provides expenditure symbol numbers and allocations by department, with supplemental adjustments to the 2024-25 budget included in the total.

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  • COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA OFFICE OF THE BUDGET DATE: November 12, 2025

    Nov 12, 2025

    ·Pottsville, PA
    Budget

    On November 12, 2025, Governor of Pennsylvania signed Act 1-A, the General Appropriation Act of 2025. Total appropriations across all funds amount to $103,747,176,000, with the General Fund comprising $98,451,842,000 in state and federal funds. The document outlines expenditure allocations across multiple dedicated funds including the State Lottery Fund, Motor License Fund, PENNVEST water infrastructure funds, and various other specialized accounts, with complete appropriation details and expenditure symbols provided for implementation.

    AI summary

    budgetappropriationswater infrastructurestate fundinglottery fund
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  • COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA OFFICE OF THE BUDGET DATE: November 12, 2025

    Nov 12, 2025

    ·Pottstown, PA
    Budget

    On November 12, 2025, Pennsylvania Governor signed Act 1-A, the General Appropriation Act of 2025, authorizing total appropriations of $103.7 billion across all funds, including $98.5 billion in General Fund appropriations (comprising $49.4 billion in state funds and $49 billion in federal funds). The notification specifies expenditure symbols, amounts, and character codes for all approved appropriations across multiple fund categories including the State Lottery Fund, Motor License Fund, PENNVEST Water and Drinking Water Revolving Funds, and various other designated funds, with 2024-25 supplemental appropriations also included.

    AI summary

    budget appropriationstate fundswater infrastructurefund allocationgeneral appropriation
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  • Moore Township 2026 BUDGET Proposed: November 10, 2025

    Nov 10, 2025

    ·Moore Township, XX
    Budget

    Moore Township adopted its 2026 budget on December 19, 2025 (Resolution 2025-28), with a total fund equity of $11.1 million as of January 1, which includes a beginning balance of $6.6 million and projected fund transfers of $4.5 million. The budget encompasses multiple funds including the General Fund, Highway Aid Fund, Land Preservation Referendum Fund, and Enterprise Fund, with major revenue sources including real property taxes ($2.1 million), Act 511 local taxes ($2.9 million), and intergovernmental revenue ($851,700). The budget reflects planned expenditures across general operations, highway maintenance, land preservation, recreation programs, and capital improvements.

    AI summary

    budgetproperty taxhighway maintenanceland preservationcapital improvements
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  • Moore Township 2026 BUDGET Proposed: November 10, 2025

    Nov 10, 2025

    ·Moore Township, PA
    Budget

    Moore Township adopted its 2026 budget on December 19, 2025 (Resolution 2025-28), with a total fund equity of $11,104,500 as of January 1, 2026, supported by a beginning balance of $6,617,600 and other assets/fund transfers of $4,486,900. Revenue sources include real property taxes of $2,105,000, Local Enabling Act taxes of $2,945,800, intergovernmental revenue of $851,700, and various other revenues from licenses, permits, fines, charges for services, and miscellaneous sources. The budget allocates resources across multiple funds including the General Fund, Highway Aid Fund, Land Preservation Referendum Fund, Recreation Funds, and Capital Improvement Reserve Fund.

    AI summary

    budgetproperty taxesfund allocation
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  • METROPOLITAN PLANNING COMMISSION DRAFT MINUTES October 23, 2025

    Oct 23, 2025

    ·Nashville, TN
    Minutes

    The Metropolitan Planning Commission held a regular meeting on October 23, 2025, at 4:00 pm in Nashville with nine of ten commissioners present, including Chair Greg Adkins and Vice-Chair Jessica Farr. The Commission guides growth and development in Nashville and Davidson County with a focus on sustainable community development, neighborhood preservation, and infrastructure efficiency. The document establishes procedural information about the Commission's operations, meeting schedule, decision-making authority on planning applications, and public participation options, including live streaming and online access to agendas and staff reports.

    AI summary

    metropolitan planningland usedevelopment reviewpublic participationinfrastructure planning
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  • September 16, 2025 The Des Moines ...

    Sep 16, 2025

    ·Des Moines, IA
    Minutes

    On September 16, 2025, the Des Moines County Board of Supervisors met in regular session with all three members present, holding the meeting both in-person and via electronic streaming. Department heads reported on routine operations, including jail population at 78 inmates, ongoing road maintenance challenges due to dry weather, and several subdivisions in development. The board unanimously approved payroll reimbursement claims of $564.25, accounts payable claims of $407,688.69, and Resolution #2025-048 approving the Final Plat for Hawkeye Ridge Subdivision, which had been reviewed and recommended by multiple county departments.

    AI summary

    road maintenancesubdivision developmentcounty budget
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  • WORCESTER TOWNSHIP BOARD OF SUPERVISORS BUSINESS MEETING MINUTES

    Aug 20, 2025

    ·Worcester, MA
    Minutes

    At its June 18, 2025 business meeting, the Worcester Township Board of Supervisors unanimously approved the consent agenda including May 2025 financial reports and a bill payment of $314,883.00, and authorized advertisement of two zoning ordinance amendments addressing accessory structures and childcare centers in commercial districts. The board awarded the 2025 road program bid to Heidelberg Materials Northeast LLC for $1,029,395.60 and approved the Westrum preliminary land development plan for a 45-townhome age-targeted housing project on Trooper and Germantown Pike in a 2-1 vote, with Supervisor Betz opposing due to concerns about zoning precedent and resident impact. The board also unanimously approved the Windy Hill preliminary/final subdivision plan for two residential lots and authorized DEP planning module authorization for the same project.

    AI summary

    zoning ordinanceroad programland developmentsubdivisionfinancial reports
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  • City Council Meeting Minutes July 14, 2025 Approved August 11, 2025 1 Minutes

    Jul 14, 2025

    ·Coatesville, PA
    Minutes

    The Coatesville City Council held a regular meeting on July 14, 2025, where all seven council members were present. The council approved the June 23 minutes and accounts payables unanimously. Lisa Doan-Harley, chair of the Historical Commission, presented on the successful July 26 Town Tours and Village Walks event, which attracted 105 participants from the region and surrounding areas, and discussed plans for future tours and recruitment of new commission members.

    AI summary

    historical preservationcommunity eventspublic meetings
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  • 2025-06-05 MHTC Meeting.pdf

    Jun 5, 2025

    ·Kansas City, MO
    Agenda

    The Missouri Highways and Transportation Commission held an open meeting on June 5, 2025, in Kirksville to consider commission minutes, review committee reports, hear presentations from the City of Kirksville and regional economic development groups, and address transportation projects including bid considerations and the FY 2026 budget. The agenda included public presentations on local infrastructure needs, updates from MoDOT's Northeast District, and commission action items on transportation improvement bids and the department's fiscal year 2026 budget, with specific budget figures not detailed in the agenda document itself.

    AI summary

    transportation projectshighway infrastructurebudgeteconomic developmentcommission meeting
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  • 1 COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE June 5, 2025 AGENDA 1. PUBLIC COMMENT 2.

    Jun 5, 2025

    ·Dearborn, MI
    Agenda

    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

    zoning amendmentsshort-term rentalsdog licensingparking standardshotel licensing
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  • Tulsa Metropolitan Area Planning Commission Wednesday, June 4, 2025

    Jun 4, 2025

    ·Tulsa, OK
    Minutes

    The Tulsa Metropolitan Area Planning Commission held its 2938th meeting on June 4, 2025, with ten members present. The Commission approved minutes from the previous meeting and moved a PUD-182-8 minor amendment to its consent agenda, which would reduce required side setbacks from 5 feet to 0 feet to allow the conversion of an existing duplex into a townhouse through lot splitting at the northwest corner of East 75th Street and South Atlanta Avenue in City Council District 2. The applicant will be required to provide building plans certifying adequate fire protection between the two dwelling units prior to completing the lot split.

    AI summary

    zoningplanned unit developmentlot splitting
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  • Combined Agenda/Regular Meeting May 7, 2025 Minutes Page 1

    May 7, 2025

    ·Moore Township, XX
    Minutes

    The Monroe Township Council held a combined agenda and regular meeting on May 7, 2025, which included procedural items such as roll call and the reading of the Sunshine Law notice of adequate public notification. The meeting featured multiple proclamations recognizing observances including Military Appreciation Month, National Police Week, and Emergency Medical Services Week, along with presentations honoring a middle school student for a heroic act and students from various schools who exemplified character pillars through the Human Relations Commission Annual Ceremony awards.

    AI summary

    meeting minutesproclamationspublic notice
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  • AMBLER BOROUGH COUNCIL REGULAR MEETING AGENDA April 15, 2025 7:00 p.m. I.

    Apr 15, 2025

    ·Ambler, PA
    Agenda

    Ambler Borough Council held a regular meeting on April 15, 2025, with an agenda covering departmental reports from police, fire, EMS, and public works, as well as committee reports and several motions. Key items included approval of March 2025 bills totaling $1,454,104.22, authorization to proceed with Race Street EV Charger Replacement and T2 Systems e-ticketing projects, advertising of Zoning Ordinance No. 1145, and appointment of Melissa Coleman to the Human Relations Commission. The meeting minutes from March 18, 2025 document prior council activities, including approval of February bills ($554,755.78) and public comments regarding sewer odor issues being addressed by management.

    AI summary

    budget approvalzoning ordinancepublic workselectric vehicle infrastructurehuman relations
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  • WESTTOWN TOWNSHIP PLANNING COMMISSION MEETING AGENDA

    Feb 5, 2025

    ·West Chester, PA
    Agenda

    The Westtown Township Planning Commission meeting agenda for February 5, 2025 includes consideration of two Zoning Hearing Board applications: one from Madalyn and James Valensky seeking variances for an inground swimming pool at 1132 Kolbe Lane (hearing scheduled March 20), and another from Maureen, David, and Mark Hellberg requesting a special exception to construct an accessory dwelling unit at 120 Hidden Pond Way (hearing also scheduled March 20). The agenda also covers discussions on proposed zoning regulation amendments addressing land application of biosolids (sewage sludge) and environmental impact assessment reporting requirements.

    AI summary

    zoning variancesaccessory dwelling unitzoning amendmentsbiosolidsenvironmental impact
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  • Tulsa Metropolitan Area Planning Commission Wednesday, February 5, 2025

    Feb 5, 2025

    ·Tulsa, OK
    Minutes

    The Tulsa Metropolitan Area Planning Commission held its meeting No. 2930 on February 5, 2025, with nine members present. The commission approved minutes from the previous meeting and considered a minor PUD amendment (PUD-530-3) for a property at East 19th Street South and South Lewis Avenue to increase allowable signage from one to two identification signs and raise the maximum freestanding sign height from 10 feet to 28 feet to accommodate a YWCA sign on an existing clock tower structure. The proposed amendment would align the development standards more closely with underlying OL zoning requirements and requires additional approval from the Tulsa Preservation Commission due to the site's location within a historic preservation overlay.

    AI summary

    zoninghistoric preservationsignage regulationsplanned unit development
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