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

30 results for “budget and finance” · other

  • 1 Council Committee Assignments Last Updated: February 11, 2026

    Feb 11, 2026

    ·Los Angeles, CA
    Other

    This document outlines the committee structure and assignments for a local government council, last updated March 25, 2026. It lists 11 committees across various policy areas including arts and parks, budget and finance, civil rights and equity, economic development, energy and environment, housing and homelessness, and public safety, with designated chair and vice chair members, meeting times and locations, and assigned legislative assistants. The committees meet on a regular schedule throughout the month, with most meeting bi-weekly on designated days of the week.

    AI summary

    council committeesbudget and financepublic safetyhousing and homelessnesseconomic development
View PDFSource
  • CHARLES MODICA INDEPENDENT BUDGET ANALYST December 3, 2025

    Dec 3, 2025

    ·San Diego, CA
    Other

    The Independent Budget Analyst's office published an educational guide on December 3, 2025, explaining San Diego's FY 2026 Adopted Budget and the city's budget process to the public. The 40-page document covers the adopted budget overview and highlights, the structure of the city's operating and general funds, budget development procedures, roles of key stakeholders, and financial policies guiding budget decisions. The guide includes sections on city council structure, contact information for relevant offices, frequently asked questions, and a glossary to help residents understand how the city forecasts revenues and expenditures annually.

    AI summary

    budget processadopted budgetgeneral fundmunicipal finance
    View PDFSource
  • Budget Committee | Eugene, OR Website

    Eugene, OR
    Other

    The Eugene Budget Committee is a standing committee composed of eight City Council members and eight appointed citizen members that reviews the City's proposed operating and capital budgets annually and makes recommendations to the City Council for final approval. The committee operates under Oregon's Local Budget Law and Oregon Administrative Rules, and also reviews the biennial Capital Improvement Program, financial management goals and policies, and long-range financial plans. A citizen subcommittee meets separately in the fall to review performance measures and service profiles for City services. Public comment is solicited at most Budget Committee meetings, with speakers typically allowed three minutes, and a formal public hearing is held before budget approval. Citizens may provide testimony in writing to the Finance Division at 500 E 4th Avenue, Suite 303, Eugene, OR 97401, or via online form.

    AI summary

    budget reviewcapital improvementfinancial planning
    Source
  • Budget Administration

    Allentown, PA
    Other

    The Budget Administration program guides departments in creating the City's annual budget, manages budget transfers and ordinance-based changes throughout the year, and oversees administration of the City's finances including pensions, borrowing, and debt structuring. The program ensures departments and the public receive timely and accurate financial information. Contact information is provided for pension questions, budget questions, and NIZ reporting, all accessible through phone (610) 437-7500 or designated email addresses.

    AI summary

    Source
  • penn township, westmoreland county - eCode360

    Lansford, PA
    Other

    Penn Township, Westmoreland County held a Caucus Meeting on June 11, 2025, to address several administrative and infrastructure matters. Key action items included ratifying a disaster declaration for June 6 flooding, considering participation in a watershed planning committee, and approving the DeStefano Consolidation Plan for a minor subdivision in the Neighborhood Commercial zoning district. The township also discussed personnel changes, including accepting Finance Director Colleen Gain's resignation and appointing Mary Perez as Township Treasurer, along with approving a $50,967.90 contract for the 2025 Traffic Line Painting Project to Parking Lot Painting Company and various sewage and infrastructure resolutions.

    AI summary

    zoninginfrastructuredisaster managementpersonnelbudget
    View PDFSource
  • FOLLOWING THE MONEY: Understanding Los Angeles County’s Finances and Impacting

    Los Angeles, CA
    Other

    This 2012 curriculum document from Advancement Project, supported by the California Community Foundation, is designed to help advocates understand and analyze Los Angeles County's budget and finances to advance equity in public spending. The material addresses what the organization identifies as significant discrepancies between public fund allocation and the needs of low-income communities and communities of color, with the goal of increasing transparency, accountability, and equitable use of public dollars. The curriculum is structured in five parts covering financial documents, fiscal research, the budgeting process, budget analysis, and power analysis, drawing on Advancement Project's experience winning increased funding for schools and other critical programs through public finance analysis.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • Budget Information Center | State College, PA - Official Website

    State College, PA
    Other
    budgetcapital improvementpublic finance
    Source
  • 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.

    AI summary

    tax billingbudget managementrevenue collectionpension administrationfinancial reporting
    Source
  • Budget Status Reports | Portland, ME - Official Website

    Portland, ME
    Other
    budget statusfinancial reportstax ratesmunicipal finance
    Source
  • Finance & Budget Committee | City of Evanston

    Evanston, IL
    Other
    Source
  • Boise County Clerk, Auditor, Recorders Office

    Boise, ID
    Other

    This webpage describes the Boise County Clerk, Auditor, and Recorder's office, led by Mary T. Prisco, and outlines the statutory duties and responsibilities of the position under Idaho Code. The page provides links to budget documents including Boise County's Fiscal Year 2026 Budget (Resolutions 2025-44 and 2025-45) and East Boise County Area Development's Fiscal Year 2025 Budget, as well as the county's financial policy. The office is responsible for auditing county finances, recording legal documents such as deeds, mortgages, marriage certificates, and liens, and maintaining various county records and indexes.

    AI summary

    county budgetfinancial managementpublic recordsgovernment administration
    Source
  • Budget and Finance

    Fort Collins, CO
    Other
    Source
  • Budget and Finance City of Fort Collins

    Fort Collins, CO
    Other
    View PDFSource
  • Finance Committee | Portland, ME - Official Website

    Portland, ME
    Other
    finance committeemunicipal governmentbudget
    Source
  • Norfolk County, Virginia Public Records Lookup | NorfolkRecords.org

    Norfolk, VA
    Other

    Norfolk County, Virginia operates as an independent city and maintains public records under Virginia's Freedom of Information Act (§ 2.2-3700 et seq.), with all records defined as writings, papers, maps, photographs, and other documentary materials prepared or retained by public bodies in conducting public business. The city adheres to Virginia's open records framework, requiring all public bodies to respond to records requests within five working days of receipt under § 2.2-3704. Public records available include court filings (maintained by Norfolk Circuit Court Clerk and General District Court serving the 4th Judicial District), property records (deeds, mortgages, assessments via the Circuit Court Clerk and City Assessor), vital records (managed by Virginia Department of Health and Circuit Court Clerk), business licenses and permits (held by Commissioner of the Revenue and State Corporation Commission), tax records (maintained by City Treasurer and Commissioner of the Revenue), election data (Norfolk City Registrar), meeting minutes and agendas (City Clerk), budgets and audits (Department of Finance), law enforcement records (Police Department), and zoning permits (Department of Planning and Community Development). Public bodies must provide access during regular office hours without requiring requesters to state a reason for seeking records, except in limited circumstances.

    AI summary

    public recordsfreedom of informationzoning permitstax recordsproperty records
    Source
  • Office of Management and Budget | Newark, NJ

    Newark, NJ
    Other

    The Office of Management and Budget is Newark's central financial planning and management agency, led by Budget Director Darlene Tate, located at 920 Mayor Kenneth A. Gibson Boulevard, Room 109. The office provides state-of-the-art management and financial planning resources to support city operations. Contact information includes phone number 973-733-3840 and email access through the city's website.

    AI summary

    budget planningfinancial managementcity operationsmunicipal finance
    Source
  • PART I: THE CHARTER OF THE CITY OF FORT WORTH Chapter I.

    Fort Worth, TX
    Other

    This document is the table of contents and introductory sections of the Fort Worth City Charter, originally adopted by voters on December 11, 1924, with amendments through November 8, 1983. The charter establishes Fort Worth as a municipal corporation in Tarrant County, Texas, and outlines its organizational structure across 28 chapters covering city council, departments (police, fire, public works, finance, etc.), budgeting, taxation, and administrative procedures. The document indicates the charter has been amended multiple times between 1928 and 1983, with subsequent amendments noted in individual sections.

    AI summary

    city chartermunicipal governmentbudget and financepublic safetyadministrative procedures
    View PDFSource
  • Budget & Management | City of Cleveland Ohio

    Cleveland, OH
    Other

    The Division of Budget and Management in Cleveland's Department of Finance prepares, implements, and monitors annual operating budgets and financial plans to fund City services. The General Fund Operating Budget, funded primarily by a 2.5% City Income Tax on all workers in Cleveland, supports Safety Forces (Police, Fire, and EMS), Waste and Recycling Pick Up, City Parks, and Neighborhood Resource and Recreation Centers. Enterprise Funds operate as self-supporting services including Water, Water Pollution Control, Cleveland Public Power, the Airport, Cemeteries, Golf Courses, City Parking Facilities, Public Auditorium, and West Side Market. The City also funds capital improvements and infrastructure through debt, restricted funds, and grants, including Community Development Block Grants (CDBG) from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development that must support projects eliminating blight and assisting low- and moderate-income residents in housing, public improvements, and land use areas. Budget documents are available for fiscal years 2023 through 2026, along with an interactive budget portal and comprehensive financial reports.

    AI summary

    municipal budgetpublic safetywater infrastructurecommunity developmentcity services
    Source
  • Finance | Portland, ME - Official Website

    Portland, ME
    Other

    The City of Portland, Maine received $46,290,625 in American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funding in two equal tranches (May 2021 and May 2022) to address COVID-19 pandemic impacts and replace lost revenues. The Finance Department oversees multiple functions including budget management, capital improvement planning, the Finance Committee's budget review process, municipal purchasing, and treasury services such as tax collection and vehicle registration. This webpage serves as a navigation hub providing access to Portland's financial documents, policies, and related government services.

    AI summary

    Source
  • About the City Budget Information Series on the City of Madison Budget

    Madison, WI
    Other

    This informational series provides an overview of the City of Madison's budget structure and processes. The document explains that Madison maintains two separate budgets—a capital budget funding long-term infrastructure projects (roads, housing, building improvements) financed primarily through borrowing, and an operating budget supporting daily city services (police, fire, libraries, sanitation) funded mainly through property taxes. The series is designed as a public education tool covering budget fundamentals, the city's structural deficit, financial policies, and revenue options, with all budget phases publicly available on the city website.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • FISCAL YEAR 2025 ANNUAL JOINT REVIEW BOARD MEETING

    Springfield, IL
    Other

    The Fiscal Year 2025 Annual Joint Review Board Meeting covered financing and project activities across ten Tax Increment Financing (TIF) districts in Springfield, including downtown redevelopment, low-income housing, and infrastructure improvements. The city allocated approximately $3.5 million in FY25 across multiple districts, with notable investments including $1.4 million in annual property tax rebates to the Sangamon County Treasurer, $1.2 million for low-income housing renovations in the Far East district, and various commercial and residential redevelopment projects. The meeting outlined ongoing commitments totaling millions of dollars across downtown improvements, housing initiatives, and community development centers, with approximately $4.2 million estimated to be available for new downtown projects in FY27.

    AI summary

    tax increment financingredevelopmenthousingbudget allocationinfrastructure
    View PDFSource
  • Finances & Budget

    Huntsville, AL
    Other
    Source
  • 2024 YEAR IN REVIEW CITY OF DEARBORN MAYOR ABDULLAH H. HAMMOUD

    Dearborn, MI
    Other

    This 2024 annual report from the City of Dearborn, covering the fiscal year ending June 30, 2024, highlights Mayor Abdullah H. Hammoud's administration's accomplishments in modernizing city operations, including a new city website, implementation of public health protections against air pollution, improved road safety, and revitalization of commercial districts. The report emphasizes expansion of parks and recreation amenities, enhanced public transparency through performance dashboards, improved multilingual communication services, and technology-driven city service improvements, all maintained within a balanced budget. The document covers departmental activities across assessing, communications, economic development, finance, fire, library, police, public works, and other city services.

    AI summary

    budgetpublic healthroad safetyeconomic developmentparks and recreation
    View PDFSource
  • Finance Department | Greenville, SC - Official Website

    Greenville, SC
    Other

    NULL This document is a website navigation and informational page for the Greenville, SC Finance Department that describes available resources and services without providing specific budgets, dollar amounts, programs with details, votes, dates, or quantitative metrics. It lists categories of information (Annual Financial Reports, Annual Operating Budget, Capital Improvement Program, etc.) but does not contain the comparable facts needed for meaningful cross-document analysis.

    AI summary

    Source
  • Board of Review Meeting Documents 2025 | City of Dearborn

    Dearborn, MI
    Other

    The City of Dearborn's Board of Review is a four-member body appointed by the Mayor (two members), City Council (one member), and City Finance Director (one member) that meets annually in March and as needed at the Dearborn Administrative Center. Current board members include Chairperson Irene Darragh and four other members with terms extending through 2026–2029, with the most recent appointment made in January 2026. The document provides organizational structure and meeting logistics but does not detail specific agenda items, decisions, or budget figures from actual board meetings.

    AI summary

    board of reviewmunicipal governanceadministrative appointments
    Source
  • Finance & Budget

    Pittsburgh, PA
    Other
    Source
  • Tn

    Nashville, TN
    Other

    This presentation by the Tennessee Division of Local Government Finance introduces new budget and debt manuals for local governments, approved by the State Funding Board in June 2021 pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-3-305. The Debt Manual provides guidance on forms, procedures, and uniform processes for various types of local government debt issuance (bonds, notes, lease financings, and loan agreements) across multiple entity types, and outlines oversight requirements at federal and state levels, including comptroller pre-approval for lease financings effective January 1, 2022.

    AI summary

    budgetdebt managementlocal government financebond issuancecompliance
    View PDFSource
  • Budget Finance - Council Committees

    Los Angeles, CA
    Other
    Source
  • Budget and Finance Basics Yunji Kim Assistant Professor/Extension Specialist

    Madison, WI
    Other

    This document is an educational presentation on budget and finance basics for town officials, delivered by Yunji Kim of UW-Madison at the 2019 Spring Town Officials Workshop. The presentation covers why budgets matter, budget constraints in Wisconsin, and budget components, with particular focus on Wisconsin's levy limit regulations that have restricted local government property tax increases since 2005 to the percentage change in net new construction or 0% annually. The material explains that towns can exceed the levy limit through specific procedures—towns under 3,000 population via town board resolution and town meeting, and larger towns via town board resolution and referendum—with non-compliance resulting in dollar-for-dollar reductions in state aid, and notes that such overrides remain rare with only 19 approved between 2006 and 2017.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • Legislative Budget and Finance Committee

    State College, PA
    Other

    The Legislative Budget and Finance Committee conducted a study pursuant to Senate Resolution 2011-147 examining the need for public community college programs in rural Pennsylvania, completed in December 2011. The committee found that while Pennsylvania's 14 local independent public community colleges play an important role in workforce development and economic growth, they are not geographically, programmatically, or financially accessible to residents of rural communities. The report recommends that the Commonwealth consider various approaches used by other states to strategically place public community colleges statewide to ensure equitable access to publicly supported postsecondary education.

    AI summary

    community college fundingrural education accessworkforce developmentpostsecondary education
    View PDFSource