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

29 results for “budget reporting” · other

  • City of Scranton Council Responses – May 12, 2026 | PDF

    May 12, 2026

    ·Scranton, PA
    Other

    This document records responses from City of Scranton administration to questions posed by council members during a May 5, 2026 meeting, prepared on May 11, 2026. Council President Tom Schuster inquired about a $58,000 line item increase plus an additional $5,000 increase for St. Cats & Dogs in the 2026 budget, requesting a progress report and status update on the organization's usage of the Ash Street property; the City stated it has requested an update from St. Cats & Dogs. Schuster also asked about the Davis Street Apartment project on the 3100 Block of Cedar Avenue, which holds a five-year planning commission approval; the city clarified that no permits or plans have been submitted and the project cannot move forward without passage of a one-way ordinance that the planning commission made a condition of approval. Council member Dr. Jessica Rothchild raised concerns about tree cutting on private property in the Upper East Mountain area and received clarification that the Shade Tree Commission only regulates city rights-of-way and city-owned properties, with no prohibition on private owners removing trees from their own property. Dr. Rothchild also commended the Robinson Park project and raised two maintenance issues: gravel from a drain area being kicked onto the playground equipment, and worn ground beneath swings creating a safety hazard.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • Legislative process | City of Lexington, Kentucky

    Lexington, KY
    Other

    The Lexington-Fayette Urban County Council, composed of a vice mayor, two at-large members, and 12 district representatives, follows a five-step legislative process to write, revise, and adopt resolutions and ordinances for Fayette County. Resolutions are temporary or diplomatic in character, while ordinances establish permanent rules and are codified in the Code of Ordinances, appropriate funds, or are required by law. Items originate in one of four committees (Budget, Finance and Economic Development; Environmental Quality and Public Works; General Government and Planning; Social Services and Public Safety), where they are researched and discussed by committee members who vote to pass or fail them. Passed items are reported out to the full council at a work session, typically about one month later, where all councilmembers discuss and vote on them. If an item passes work session, it advances to first reading at the next scheduled Thursday council meeting, followed by a second reading at a subsequent meeting; the council may vote to suspend rules and combine both readings immediately.

    AI summary

    Source
  • Baltimore County, Maryland Public Records Lookup | BaltimoreRecords.us

    Baltimore, MD
    Other

    Baltimore County maintains public records pursuant to Maryland's Public Information Act § 4-101, which establishes presumptive public access to government documents created or received by county agencies. The county's records span ten categories: court records (civil, criminal, traffic, and family cases from the Circuit Court), property records (deeds, mortgages, liens, plats, and tax assessments), vital records (birth certificates from 1939-present, death certificates, marriage licenses, and divorce decrees), business records (licenses, permits, and fictitious business registrations), tax records, voting records from the Board of Elections, government proceedings (Council meeting minutes, agendas, and video recordings), financial documents (budgets, expenditure reports, and statements), law enforcement records (with restrictions), and land use records (zoning maps, building permits, and development plans). The Baltimore County Circuit Court Clerk's Office maintains court and land records, while the State Department of Assessments and Taxation and Maryland Department of Health Division of Vital Records hold respective property and vital records. Baltimore County complies with Maryland's Open Meetings Act and operates a public information portal and dedicated request process to provide digital access to commonly requested documents.

    AI summary

    public recordsproperty recordsvital recordszoningbudget
    Source
  • MADISON PEOPLE'S BUDGET CITY OF MADISON 2021 PRESENTED BY FREEDOM, INC.

    Madison, WI
    Other

    The Madison People's Budget is a 2021 initiative by Freedom, Inc. designed to give Madison residents direct input into municipal budget allocation, with particular emphasis on voices from low to no-income Black, Southeast Asian, disabled, queer, trans, and gender non-conforming communities. The project gathered data from over 1,500 Madison residents through surveys and focus groups to identify community budgeting priorities, with the goal of creating a budget that reflects community needs rather than government decisions made with minimal public input. The report frames budgets as moral documents and advocates for resource allocation that addresses systemic disparities including police violence, housing affordability, food insecurity, and economic displacement.

    AI summary

    community budgetingbudget allocationpolice accountabilityhousing affordabilityfood security
    View PDFSource
  • 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
  • Pa

    Carbondale, PA
    Other

    NULL The document is a search results page from the Pennsylvania government website showing links to various P3 (Public-Private Partnership) Board meeting presentations and reports from different state agencies. It contains no substantive content—only navigation elements, agency names, and document titles without actual meeting details, decisions, budget figures, or specific project information. The fragmented text does not provide sufficient factual information to produce a meaningful summary.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • Budget Status Reports | Portland, ME - Official Website

    Portland, ME
    Other
    budget statusfinancial reportstax ratesmunicipal finance
    Source
  • Houston City Council - Committees and Agendas - Budget and Fiscal Affairs Committee

    Houston, TX
    Other

    The Houston City Council's Budget and Fiscal Affairs Committee, chaired by Council Member Sallie Alcorn, reviews monthly financial reports and oversees matters related to the city's annual budget, debt model, and financial policies. Meeting agendas from 2025 and 2026 show the committee addressed topics including quarterly overtime reports, audit plans, the five-year financial forecast, capital improvement plans, stormwater fund spending, property tax updates, and disaster preparedness funding. The committee frequently holds joint meetings with other city councils committees and produces reports and recommendations for the Mayor on fiscal matters.

    AI summary

    budgetfinancial planningproperty taxcapital improvementsstormwater infrastructure
    Source
  • Data Transparency | City of Boise

    Boise, ID
    Other

    The City of Boise operates a comprehensive data transparency platform providing public access to city government information and financial records. Resources include the OpenBook budget transparency tool with revenue and spending data, monthly and quarterly financial reports, public records requests, police data dashboards, internal audit reports, purchasing bids, building permits, and a newly launched Housing Data Portal. The platform also provides access to City Council meeting agendas, minutes, and videos to support open and transparent local government.

    AI summary

    Source
  • 220 East Morris Avenue #200 South Salt Lake City, UT 84115-3200

    Salt Lake City, UT
    Other

    The City of South Salt Lake issued a Request for Proposal for annual audit services covering fiscal year ending June 30, 2019. The city reported total revenue of approximately $37.6 million across all funds and component units for fiscal year 2018, organized through General, Capital Improvements, Debt Service, three Enterprise Funds, and an Internal Service Fund, plus the Redevelopment Agency component unit. The audit must comply with generally accepted auditing standards, AICPA guidelines, Government Auditing Standards, and OMB Uniform Guidance (2 CFR 200) for federal compliance testing. Deliverables include a Comprehensive Annual Financial Report in pdf and twenty printed copies, with completion and City Council presentation required by December 20, 2019, and the same deadline applies to subsequent years of the engagement.

    AI summary

    financial auditmunicipal financebudget reporting
    View PDFSource
  • ANNUAL REPORT OF THE Town of Stamford VERMONT

    Stamford, CT
    Other

    The Town of Stamford, Vermont's Annual Report for the year ending December 31, 2022 provides a comprehensive overview of municipal operations, including town officers, voting information, vital records, and financial statements. The report covers revenue and expenses, tax information, delinquent taxes, and various departmental reports including the fire department, library, cemetery, and school operations. The document serves as an official record of the town's governance, budget allocations, and service delivery across municipal departments and facilities.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • Budget Office

    San Jose, CA
    Other

    The City of San José Budget Office, serving a population of approximately 997,368 with 6,600 government employees, is responsible for developing and monitoring the city's operating and capital budgets. The office prepares key documents including budget requests, five-year forecasts, revenue projections, and bi-monthly financial reports, while also compiling performance measure data used throughout the annual budget process. The document lists leadership including Budget Director Jim Shannon and notes recent compliance achievements for the Actsoft Workforce Manager for Government system, which received Department of Homeland Security authorization in September 2024 and passed multiple security audits.

    AI summary

    budgetfinancial planninggovernment operationsperformance metricsrevenue projections
    View PDFSource
  • Budget, Financial Documents & Policies | Portland, ME - Official Website

    Portland, ME
    Other
    budgetfinancial reportstax rates
    Source
  • Annual Report 2024 For Fiscal Year Ending December 31 • Published June 2025

    Scranton, PA
    Other

    The Township of Langley's 2024 Annual Report covers fiscal performance for the year ending December 31, 2024, published in June 2025. Key highlights include the identification of an additional $3.5 million in annual savings through budget efficiencies, maintaining the lowest property tax rates in Metro Vancouver while continuing infrastructure investments in roads, parks, and public facilities. The township expanded public safety services by adding firefighters and RCMP officers, achieved a 3 percent decline in the Crime Severity Index for the fourth consecutive year, and made progress on major capital projects including the 208 Street corridor improvements.

    AI summary

    budget efficiencyproperty taxroad infrastructurepublic safetycrime prevention
    View PDFSource
  • Annual Reports and Budgets | Stamford, CT

    Stamford, CT
    Other
    Source
  • Worcester County, Massachusetts Public Records Lookup | WorcesterRecords.us

    Worcester, MA
    Other

    This document describes Worcester County, Massachusetts's public records system and compliance framework rather than summarizing a specific budget, policy decision, or government action. It defines categories of accessible public records (court records, property deeds, vital records, business licenses, tax records, election data, meeting minutes, financial documents, law enforcement reports, and zoning records) and identifies custodian agencies including the Worcester City Clerk's Office, Worcester Registry of Deeds, and Massachusetts Trial Court system. Worcester County operates under Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 66, § 10, which requires records custodians to provide requested documents within 10 business days, and the county complies with state open meeting laws under Chapter 30A, §§ 18-25. The document does not contain specific budget figures, named initiatives, votes, dates, or quantitative metrics beyond the 10-business-day response requirement.

    AI summary

    Source
  • Public Records Requests | City of Worcester

    Worcester, MA
    Other

    On June 3, 2016, Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker signed An Act to Improve Public Records into law, with most provisions taking effect January 1, 2017. The City of Worcester provides public records requests through a Public Records Portal and requires Records Access Officers to deliver records in electronic format within 10 business days, with provisions for extensions and administrative appeals through the Massachusetts Supervisor of Records. The city has designated Michael Manning (Law Department) and Lisa Poske (Worcester Retirement) as Records Access Officers and maintains an open data portal called "Informing Worcester" with commonly requested records including budgets, permits, incident reports, and property records.

    AI summary

    public recordsrecords managementopen datagovernment transparency
    Source
  • Annual Report 2024 For Fiscal Year Ending December 31 • Published June 2025

    Carlisle, PA
    Other

    The Township of Langley's 2024 Annual Report documents the municipality's achievements during the fiscal year ending December 31, 2024, published in June 2025. Key highlights include the identification of an additional $3.5 million in annual budget savings while maintaining the lowest property tax rates in Metro Vancouver, continued investments in public safety with expanded firefighter, RCMP officer, and bylaw staff levels, and progress on major capital infrastructure projects including the 208 Street corridor improvement. The report demonstrates a commitment to closing infrastructure gaps and managing cost pressures while supporting continued community growth across the Township's various neighborhoods including Aldergrove, Fort Langley, Murrayville, Walnut Grove, and Willoughby-Willowbrook.

    AI summary

    budget savingsproperty taxpublic safetyinfrastructure projectscommunity growth
    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
  • SPUR REPORT MAY 2025 Balancing Oakland’s Budget Sound Fiscal Policy Structural

    Oakland, CA
    Other

    This SPUR report from May 2025 analyzes Oakland's structural budget deficit and proposes nine recommendations to achieve fiscal solvency and economic growth. The report identifies a decades-long imbalance where revenue growth has not kept pace with rising pension, healthcare, insurance, and operational costs, exacerbated by post-pandemic challenges including labor shortages, decreased tax revenues from real estate, tourism, and retail sales, and a 78% disapproval rating of city government according to an Oakland Budget Advisory Commission survey. The analysis notes that Oakland's fiscal crisis mirrors broader challenges in comparable California cities including San Francisco and San José, and occurred against a backdrop of governance disruption following the former mayor's recall in November 2024 and subsequent federal indictment.

    AI summary

    budget deficitfiscal policypension coststax revenueeconomic growth
    View PDFSource
  • 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
  • Budget Advisory Commission Agendas, Minutes, and Reports | City of Oakland, CA

    Oakland, CA
    Other
    Source
  • Financial Publications | Greenville, SC - Official Website

    Greenville, SC
    Other
    financial reportsbudgetcapital improvementgovernment transparency
    Source
  • Independent Auditor’s Report Board of Supervisors Fairview Township

    York, PA
    Other

    Brown Plus CPA (formerly Brown Schultz Sheridan Fritz CPA's) has completed annual audits of Fairview Township and its various departments and authorities for 2024, including audits of the township general fund, EMS, Fire Department, DCED Fairview Township Authority, West Shore Recreation, and Liquid Fuels, with originals available at the Township Office during business hours. The document provides a comprehensive listing of completed audits spanning from 2013 through 2024 across multiple township departments, authorities, and related entities, though no specific financial figures or policy decisions are detailed.

    AI summary

    financial audittownship governancebudget review
    View PDFSource
  • I-1 I. Introduction

    Honolulu, HI
    Other

    This is an introduction to the City and County of Honolulu's annual budget report covering revenues and expenditures, which includes an overview of fiscal trends, analysis of prior year revenues and expenditures, and mid-year status of current fiscal year budget items drawn from audited financial reports and budget ordinances. The report notes that FY 2002 financial statements were incomplete at the time of publication, requiring reliance on unaudited information for that fiscal year. The document provides historical and comparative context for evaluating the city's proposed budget, including comparisons of city spending to other jurisdictions and examinations of operational versus capital budget spending.

    AI summary

    budgetfiscal planningrevenue expenditurefinancial reporting
    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
  • Property Taxes Dear Ms. Rosenson:

    Stamford, CT
    Other

    This document consists of two letters from Stamford residents to city officials opposing proposed property tax increases, dated April 15, 2020. Andy Dimitri reports that his property taxes have increased 25% since moving to Stamford in late 2013 and urges the city to reduce expenses rather than raise revenues, warning that continued increases will accelerate population loss from Connecticut. A second correspondent similarly calls for reducing the mill rate, arguing that residents are already financially stressed due to business closures and job losses during the economic crisis, and requesting that the city reduce expenditures to match the fiscal constraints residents are facing.

    AI summary

    property taxtax increasemunicipal budgetfiscal policy
    View PDFSource
  • Washington State Archives, Digital Archives - Title Info: Spokane City Council, Minutes, 1898; 2011-2025

    Spokane, WA
    Other

    The Washington State Archives Digital Archives holds 1,442 records of Spokane City Council minutes spanning from January 4, 1898 through December 23, 1898, and City Council Agenda Packets from 2011 to present. These official records document council proceedings and may include dates, council members present, departmental reports, budget approvals, and other city business. The records are open for research and indexed by date. The collection is maintained by the Eastern Regional Archives of the Washington State Archives and can be accessed through their Digital Archives platform.

    AI summary

    Source