Town Crier
Request a township
All typesagendaminutesproposalbudgetother
All time30 days90 days1 year

30 results for “application procedures”

  • PC Bylaw Amendments: Request: Policy and Procedure Amendments to 7.1.2, 7.1.3, 11.3.4, 11.3.5, 11.4.6, & 11.4.8 Project Name: Planning Commission Policy and Procedure Amendments Location: Applicant: Representative: Jurisdiction: Louisville Metro Council District: Case Manager: Julia Williams, AICP, Assistant Director

    May 15, 2026

    ·Louisville, KY
    Proposal
    Source
  • HOUSTON PLANNING COMMISSION AGENDA Thursday, March 5, 2026 2:30 p.m. MEMBERS

    Mar 5, 2026

    ·Houston, TX
    Agenda

    This document is the agenda for the Houston Planning Commission meeting scheduled for Thursday, March 5, 2026 at 2:30 p.m. The agenda lists 19 voting members including Chair Lisa M. Clark and Vice Chair M. Sonny Garza, plus three county representatives (from Fort Bend, Harris, and Montgomery counties), three alternate members, and four ex-officio members with Secretary Vonn Tran. The document outlines meeting procedural rules including provisions for public participation, such as speakers signing up at the chamber entrance, written comments submitted via email at least 24 hours in advance being included in the agenda, and time allocations varying by item type (two minutes for applicants' opening presentations, two minutes for specially called hearings and variances, one minute for consent agenda items). Speakers with translators receive double the allocated time, and elected officials are exempt from time limits.

AI summary

View PDFSource
  • HOUSTON PLANNING COMMISSION AGENDA Thursday, December 4, 2025 2:30 p.m.

    Dec 4, 2025

    ·Houston, TX
    Agenda

    This document is the agenda for the Houston Planning Commission meeting scheduled for Thursday, December 4, 2025, at 2:30 p.m., listing 18 voting members chaired by Lisa M. Clark, plus alternate and ex-officio members. The agenda includes established meeting policies outlining public participation procedures, including sign-up requirements at the chamber entrance, a 24-hour advance email deadline for written comments to Speakercomments.pc@houstontx.gov, and tiered speaking time allocations ranging from one minute for consent agenda items to two minutes for specially called hearings and variances, with applicants receiving two minutes for opening statements plus a two-minute rebuttal. The Commission may reorder agenda items to consider special requests and variances first, followed by replats requiring public hearing, with contested consent items moved to the end.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • HOUSTON PLANNING COMMISSION AGENDA Thursday, November 13, 2025 2:30 p.m.

    Nov 13, 2025

    ·Houston, TX
    Agenda

    This document is the agenda and procedural rules for the Houston Planning Commission meeting scheduled for Thursday, November 13, 2025 at 2:30 p.m. The agenda lists 18 voting members including Chair Lisa M. Clark and Vice Chair M. Sonny Garza, plus three county officials (from Fort Bend, Harris, and Montgomery counties), three alternate members, and four ex-officio members. The document establishes public participation procedures including sign-up requirements, speaker time limits of two minutes for applicants' opening presentations and rebuttals, one to two minutes for other speakers depending on item type, and written comment submission via email at least 24 hours in advance to Speakercomments.pc@houstontx.gov. The Commission may reorder agenda items to address special requests and variances first, followed by replats with public hearings, then consent agenda items.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • 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
    View PDFSource
  • HOUSTON PLANNING COMMISSION AGENDA Thursday, October 2, 2025 2:30 p.m. MEMBERS

    Oct 2, 2025

    ·Houston, TX
    Agenda

    This document is the Houston Planning Commission meeting agenda for October 2, 2025 at 2:30 p.m., which lists 15 named members including Chair Lisa M. Clark and Vice Chair M. Sonny Garza, along with three county representatives, four alternate members, and four ex-officio members with Secretary Vonn Tran. The agenda details meeting procedures and public participation rules, including that applicants receive two minutes for opening statements and two-minute rebuttals, speakers on specially called hearings and variances receive two minutes each, consent agenda speakers receive one minute, and written comments submitted to Speakercomments.pc@houstontx.gov at least 24 hours in advance will be included in the public comments section.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • 2025-1926: Ordinance amending and supplementing the Pittsburgh Code of Ordinances, Title IX, Zoning, Article VIII, Review and Enforcement, Chapter 922, Development Review Procedures, Section 922.01, General Requirements for All Procedures, by requiring that the Zoning Administrator act to determine the completeness of all applications filed under the Zoning Code within thirty (30) days of receipt. (Sent to the Planning Commission for a Report & Recommendation 6/18/25) (Report & Recommendation received on 12/17/25)

    Jun 9, 2025

    ·Pittsburgh, PA
    Proposal
    Source
  • REGULAR MEETING AGENDA TUESDAY – APRIL 15, 2025

    Apr 15, 2025

    ·Tampa, FL
    Agenda

    The Board of Trustees of the General Employees' Retirement Fund held a regular meeting on April 15, 2025, at the City of Tampa's Hanna City Center to review pension fund operations and investment performance. The agenda included presentations from three investment managers (Marathon International, Redwheel Emerging Markets, and WCM Focused Growth International), a market and performance review as of March 31, 2025 with liquidity recommendations from consultant Elizabeth Bowen, and administrative matters including retirement applications, disability procedures, and monthly invoices including a $42,500 payment to Asset Consulting Group.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • CB 120725: AN ORDINANCE relating to the Cedar River Watershed; authorizing five years of ecological thinning, in accordance with the Cedar River Watershed Habitat Conservation Plan and Forest Management Plan, in Sections 13, 19, 20, and 21, Township 22, North, Range 7, East, W.M., Sections 1, 3, 4, 8, and 17, Township 22, North, Range 8, East, W.M., Section 3, Township 21, North, Range 8, East, Section 11, Township 21, North, Range 9, East, Sections 30 and 32, Township 22, North, Range 10, East, and Sections 4, 9, and 11, Township 21, North, Range 10, East, W.M.; declaring the logs resulting from ecological thinning to be surplus to the City’s needs; authorizing the sale of such logs pursuant to applicable City contracting and surplus property sale procedures; and directing deposit of the proceeds therefrom to the Water Fund for the purposes of the Habitat Conservation Plan and Forest Management Plan implementation.

    Nov 7, 2023

    ·Seattle, WA
    Proposal
    Source
  • 23-1617: A bill for an ordinance amending the 1963 Retirement Plan with regard to definitions, retirement benefits, Internal Revenue Code qualification requirements, disability retirement application; actuarial matters. Amends Article XII of Chapter 18 of the Denver Revised Municipal Code to clarify procedures and legal requirements, remove obsolete language, and ensure uniformity of the terms of the city employee retirement plan, citywide. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 10-31-2023.

    Oct 24, 2023

    ·Denver, CO
    Proposal
    Source
  • CB 120674: AN ORDINANCE relating to land use and zoning; amending Section 23.76.029 of the Seattle Municipal Code to allow applicants for or holders of certain Master Use Permits approved for issuance between March 1, 2020 and December 31, 2026 to have their Master Use Permits expire in six years; and making other minor amendments to the procedure for expiration and renewal of Master Use Permits.

    Aug 8, 2023

    ·Seattle, WA
    Proposal
    Source
  • METROPOLITAN PLANNING COMMISSION MINUTES October 13, 2022

    Oct 13, 2022

    ·Nashville, TN
    Minutes

    The Metropolitan Planning Commission held a regular meeting on October 13, 2022, at 4:00 pm at the Metro Nashville Public School Admin Building with seven commissioners present. The meeting included standard administrative procedures and public notice requirements for planning applications and decisions on site plans, subdivisions, zone changes, and related matters. The Commission makes final decisions on site plan and subdivision applications while making recommendations to the Metropolitan Council on other applications, including zone changes and overlay districts.

    AI summary

    zoningsite plansubdivisionplanning commission
    View PDFSource
  • ST. PETERSBURG CITY COUNCIL Meeting of December 7, 2017 TO:

    Dec 7, 2017

    ·St. Petersburg, FL
    Proposal

    On December 7, 2017, the St. Petersburg City Council considered a proposed ordinance to amend Chapter 25 of the city code to regulate small wireless facilities in public rights-of-way, in compliance with Florida's Advanced Wireless Infrastructure Deployment Act effective July 1, 2017. The ordinance would add definitions, create a registration process for wireless providers, amend permit application procedures for construction in the right-of-way, and establish design standards for small wireless facilities. The administration recommended a first reading on December 7, 2017, with a public hearing and final adoption vote scheduled for December 14, 2017.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • MAYOR AND COUNCIL REGULAR MEETING NOTICE & AGENDA

    Tucson, AZ
    Agenda

    The City of Tucson's Mayor and Council operates under a council-manager form of government where elected officials set policy and an appointed City Manager executes it. Regular council meetings are held the first four Tuesdays of each month at City Hall, featuring a structured agenda that includes presentations, liquor license applications, public comment periods (up to three minutes for general matters, five minutes for public hearings), consent items, and other business. The document outlines meeting procedures, including provisions for remote participation, accessibility accommodations for persons with disabilities, Spanish-language interpretation, and the adoption of ordinances and resolutions, which take effect either immediately with an emergency clause and five council votes or thirty days after passage.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • San Diego County Zoning Ordinance

    San Diego, CA
    Proposal

    Ordinance No. 10095, adopted by the San Diego County Board of Supervisors on December 8, 2010, amended the county's Zoning Ordinance to update and clarify various sections covering applicability, definitions, civic and commercial use regulations, animals, temporary uses, accessory uses, and procedures. The Board determined the amendments were necessary for public health, safety, convenience, and welfare, and reorganized the ordinance into two main parts: Basic Provisions (covering general provisions, definitions, and use classifications for residential, civic, commercial, industrial, agricultural, and extractive uses) and Use Regulations (detailing specific regulations for each zoning district). The ordinance restructured the Table of Contents to provide clearer organization of the numerous zoning districts and use types throughout the county.

    AI summary

    zoningland use regulationscounty ordinance
    View PDFSource
  • HAZLE TOWNSHIP LUZERNE COUNTY PENNSYLVANIA 2003 ZONING ORDINANCE

    Hazleton, PA
    Other

    Hazle Township's 2003 Zoning Ordinance, as amended through October 2016, establishes comprehensive land use regulations for the township in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania. The ordinance defines nine zoning districts (R-1 and R-2 residential, B-1 and B-2 commercial, I-1 and I-2 industrial, M-1 mining, C-1 conservation, and BP business park), along with a healthcare overlay district, and includes regulations for accessory structures, setbacks, special exceptions, and planned residential developments. The document serves as the primary tool for managing growth and development while addressing community development objectives through dimensional requirements, use restrictions, and procedural standards for development applications.

    AI summary

    zoningland useresidential districtscommercial industrialdevelopment regulations
    View PDFSource
  • Client Challenge

    Carbondale, PA
    Other

    This document outlines the procedure for Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests to Carbondale Township, requiring all requests to be submitted in writing either by email to supervisor@carbondaletownship.org or by mail to the Township Supervisor at 217 East Main Street, Carbondale, IL 62901. Requesters must specify the types of documents and records sought, relevant dates or time periods when applicable, and provide complete contact information including name, mailing address, email, and phone number. The procedures ensure compliance with Illinois FOIA requirements for public access to Township documents and records.

    AI summary

    foia requestspublic recordsgovernment transparency
    Source
  • 1 CHARTER TOWNSHIP OF LANSING 3209 West Michigan Avenue Lansing, MI 48917

    Lansing, MI
    Proposal

    This document is an application form for Administrative Site Plan Review issued by Charter Township of Lansing, Michigan, establishing the procedures and fee structure for property development applications. The filing requirements include a $300 administrative review fee plus consultant fees based on actual township costs, with an escrow deposit of five times the review fee required if applicable. The form outlines required applicant information, property details, ownership documentation, and site specifications including parking, building area, landscaping, and open space requirements.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • Knoxville-Knox County Planning | KnoxPlanning.org

    Knoxville, TN
    Other

    This document establishes the administrative rules and procedures of the Knoxville-Knox County Planning Commission, located at 400 Main Street, Suite 403, Knoxville, TN 37902, as amended through December 11, 2025. The rules govern public notice requirements through newspaper advertisement, signage, mail, and the planning website; application procedures for rezoning, special use permits, subdivisions, and street or subdivision name changes; and the handling of sequential applications and supplemental information. The document also defines land divisions excluded from regulation, including partitions among owners and divisions of land into tracts of five or more acres that are not subdivisions, and addresses staff recommendations and appeals processes.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • Meetings and Minutes – SLCCRA

    Salt Lake City, UT
    Other

    This document describes the meeting structure and public participation procedures for the Salt Lake City Community Reinvestment Agency (CRA). The Board of Directors meets on the second Tuesday of each month as the policy-making body, the Reinvestment Advisory Committee meets on the first Wednesday of each month to provide advisory input, and the Finance Committee meets as needed to review loan applications, tax increment reimbursement agreements, and land write-downs. All meetings are held at City Hall (451 S. State Street) with virtual attendance options, and agendas are posted at least 24 hours in advance. Upcoming meetings include Board meetings on November 18 and December 9, and RAC meetings on December 3 (with the November 5 RAC meeting cancelled). Meeting materials, recordings, and minutes are archived with the Salt Lake City Recorder's Office.

    AI summary

    Source
  • HAZLE TOWNSHIP ZONING HEARING BOARD OF APPEALS PO BOX 506, HARLEIGH, PA. 18225

    Hazleton, PA
    Agenda

    The Hazle Township Zoning Hearing Board of Appeals met on October 4, 2021, to consider three zoning variance applications: a Capasso land use appeal, a Hazleton Logistics request for two variances including a 36-foot access driveway width (versus the 25-foot maximum) and 490 off-street parking spaces (versus 897 required) for property on Cando Expressway, and a Service Electric Cablevision request to add a third driveway for a drive-thru window operation. The agenda document provides the procedural framework for voting on motions to grant or deny the applications, with public comment periods included.

    AI summary

    zoning varianceland use appealdriveway access
    View PDFSource
  • UNIFIED LAND USE ORDINANCE #2016-01

    Boise, ID
    Proposal

    Unified Land Use Ordinance #2016-01 was adopted on October 20, 2015, establishing comprehensive regulations for land use and development. The 155-page ordinance covers general regulations including title, purpose, scope, and definitions; administrative procedures governing the roles of the administrator, planning and zoning commission, and board of county commissioners; and application procedures, fees, variances, and related processes. The document serves as the primary regulatory framework for land use decisions and development standards within the jurisdiction.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • Basic Accounting for Townships and Districts

    Toledo, OH
    Other

    This document is a training presentation on basic accounting procedures for township fiscal officers in Ohio, presented by Justin W. Sloan in January 2024. The course covers fundamental accounting concepts including the budgetary process, revenues, expenditures, purchase orders, and bank reconciliations, with an emphasis on incorporating fund accounting principles into practical application. Key topics include the tax budget process prescribed by the Ohio Revised Code, which begins with the fiscal officer preparing a budget presented to the Board of Trustees by June 1st and adopted by July 15th, along with related certificates and appropriation resolutions required for township financial management.

    AI summary

    accountingbudgetfiscal managementrevenueexpenditure
    View PDFSource
  • Meeting Dates and Deadlines - City of Orlando

    Orlando, FL
    Other

    The City of Orlando Municipal Planning Board released its 2026 meeting schedule with important procedural changes, including a notice that beginning December 16, 2025, virtual participation will no longer be available and all board meetings will be in-person only (though online viewing remains available). The document provides a comprehensive calendar of application deadlines, sufficiency review dates, Technical Review Committee meetings, Municipal Planning Board meetings, appeal deadlines, and City Council meetings throughout 2026 and into early 2027, with specific guidance that applicants submit all materials several days before stated deadlines to allow time for processing and review.

    AI summary

    Source
  • Table of Contents Page 1 of 295 JERSEY CITY CHAPTER 345

    Jersey City, NJ
    Other
    zoningland developmentsite plan reviewsubdivisionapplication procedures
    View PDFSource
  • COMPLIANCE AUDIT ____________ Wilkes-Barre Township Police Pension Plan

    Wilkes-Barre, PA
    Budget

    A compliance audit of the Wilkes-Barre Township Police Pension Plan was conducted for the period January 1, 2018 to December 31, 2021, pursuant to the Municipal Pension Plan Funding Standard and Recovery Act. The audit, completed in August 2022, evaluated whether the pension plan was administered in compliance with applicable state laws, regulations, contracts, administrative procedures, and local ordinances. The audit methodology included verification of state aid deposits, examination of employer and employee contributions, and confirmation that annual financial requirements and minimum municipal obligations were properly calculated and deposited.

    AI summary

    police pensionpension compliancemunicipal budgetemployee contributions
    View PDFSource
  • Right to Know Request | Lower Paxton Township, PA

    Harrisburg, PA
    Other

    Lower Paxton Township adopted Resolution 2026-01 to amend and restate its Right-to-Know Policy, establishing procedures for public records requests in compliance with Pennsylvania Act 3 of 2008. The policy defines public records broadly to include documents in any format and establishes that all records in Township possession are presumed public unless specifically exempt under Pennsylvania law, attorney-client privilege, or other applicable restrictions. Written records requests must be submitted to the Township Manager Michael H. Gossert (or designee) and can be accessed Monday through Friday between 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., with a form available online or at the Municipal Center.

    AI summary

    Source
  • Jim Thorpe Area School District - - carbon County, Pennsylvania

    Jim Thorpe, PA
    Other

    The Pennsylvania Department of the Auditor General conducted a performance audit of Jim Thorpe Area School District covering October 2009 through March 2012, finding the district complied with applicable state laws, contracts, grant requirements, and administrative procedures in all significant respects. The audit identified three findings including errors in pupil membership reporting that resulted in subsidy underpayment, a possible conflict of interest, and outdated memoranda of understanding with local law enforcement, along with one unrelated observation. The auditor general recommended implementing measures to improve operations and facilitate compliance with legal and administrative requirements.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • rules and procedures of york city council rule no. 1

    York, PA
    Other

    Rule No. 1 of York City Council's rules and procedures establishes the City Council as the legislative body responsible for setting city policy through ordinances, resolutions, and budget adoption. The rule outlines the Council's authority under the City Charter and Codified Ordinances to determine its own rules, order of business, and meeting procedures, which must comply with applicable open meetings laws. The document defines key terms including "Liaison" (Council members formally appointed as representatives to specific city departments), "Committee Meetings/Work Sessions" (informal public meetings for informational purposes without formal legislative votes), and establishes guidelines for public comment, while specifying that four affirmative Council votes can suspend these rules during meetings.

    AI summary

    city councillegislative proceduresopen meetingspublic commentordinances
    View PDFSource
  • Louisville Metro Records Retention Schedule

    Louisville, KY
    Other

    This document is the Records Retention Schedule for Louisville Metro, a comprehensive guide prepared by the Local Records Branch and approved by the State Libraries, Archives, and Records Commission that defines how various categories of public records should be managed and retained. The schedule establishes key definitions and protocols including designations for permanent records (P), confidential records (C), and vital records (V), as well as procedures for record destruction requiring completion of destruction certificates and approval from the Department for Libraries and Archives. The document emphasizes that local government officials are responsible for understanding and enforcing applicable confidentiality laws and maintaining vital records protection plans for emergency preparedness.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource