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30 results for “bylaws”

  • 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.

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    city council meetingpublic hearingsfinancial updatepublic safetyreal estate
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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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  • NOTICE OF MEETING AND CITY COUNCIL AGENDA

    Jan 20, 2026

    ·Kansas City, MO
    Agenda

    The Jefferson City Council met on January 20, 2026, to address various agenda items including recognizing posthumous and service awards, approving a special exception permit for a conference center and hotel exceeding 100,000 square feet at 201 Madison Street and 210 Monroe Street, and making mayoral appointments to multiple boards and commissions. The consent agenda included approval of several contracts for wastewater management, yard waste removal, and transit software services, while pending bills addressed the creation of a Downtown Jefferson City Conference Center Community Improvement District.

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    zoninghotel developmentwastewater managementspecial permitscommunity improvement district
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  • Wind Gap Municipal Authority AGENDA December 17, 2025 1 | P a g e

    Dec 17, 2025

    ·Wind Gap, PA
    Agenda

    The Wind Gap Municipal Authority held a meeting on December 17, 2025, with a scheduled roll call at 6:30 PM to address approval of November minutes, financial reports including general fund expenditures and GK Pump Station invoices, and action items including a benefits review and finalization of the 2026 budget. Key discussion topics included new business development at Wind Gap Plaza and a possible warehouse at the old Converter Accessories building, along with ongoing matters such as sewer main issues on Seventh Street, ordinances regarding grease traps and sump pumps, and grant application options. The next meeting is scheduled for January 28, 2026, at the Wind Gap Borough Meeting Room.

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    budgetsewer infrastructurebusiness development
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  • WIND GAP MUNICIPAL AUTHORITY MEETING MINUTES NOVEMBER 19, 2025 Page | 1

    Nov 19, 2025

    ·Wind Gap, PA
    Minutes

    The Wind Gap Municipal Authority Board met on November 19, 2025, and approved several financial expenditures including $52,399.37 in general fund invoices, $166.72 in pump station invoices, and $607.50 in feasibility escrow invoices. The board approved two significant projects: a $6,240 root treatment service from Dukes covering 3,000 linear feet of sewer lines and a $297,725.50 sewer line lining project on West Center Street from Musson Brothers, expected to be completed in January or February 2026.

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    sewer infrastructurebudgetcapital projects
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  • August 19, 2025 Meeting Minutes

    Aug 19, 2025

    ·Hazleton, PA
    Minutes

    The City of Hazleton Government Study Commission met on August 19, 2025, to review municipal governance structures and plan outreach efforts. The Commission approved updated bylaws, formed subcommittees to contact mayors and council members from Pennsylvania municipalities operating under Home Rule Charters, and planned to survey city department heads using a standardized questionnaire process designed to encourage candid responses. The outreach initiative is expected to continue through Halloween, and the Commission appointed a Public Relations Contact to handle external inquiries.

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  • August 5, 2025 Meeting Minutes

    Aug 5, 2025

    ·Hazleton, PA
    Minutes

    The City of Hazleton Government Study Commission met on August 5, 2025, to advance its review of the city's governmental structure with support from Pennsylvania Economy League consultants. The Commission approved previous meeting minutes and invoices, reviewed its purpose and bylaws, and adopted a nine-month timeline to study the Optional Third-Class City Plan B and comparable Home Rule Charters in other municipalities through interviews and sub-committees. If voters approve a charter change following the Commission's recommendation, an additional nine months would be allocated for charter drafting.

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  • July 15, 2025 Meeting Minutes

    Jul 15, 2025

    ·Hazleton, PA
    Minutes

    The City of Hazleton Government Study Commission met on July 15, 2025, to advance its review of municipal governance options. The Commission unanimously approved previous meeting minutes, engaged PEL as a consultant to provide guidance on Home Rule processes, and retained Karpowich Law Firm as legal counsel. City Solicitor Sean Logsdon presented an overview of Optional Plans A and B for Home Rule governance, discussed committee structure and bylaws development, and reviewed compliance requirements under the Sunshine Act and Right-to-Know Law to ensure transparency and public accountability.

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    municipal governancehome rulegovernment studytransparencypublic accountability
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  • CARROLL TOWNSHIP BOARD OF SUPERVISORS MEETING MINUTES JULY 14, 2025

    Jul 14, 2025

    ·Carlisle, PA
    Minutes

    On July 14, 2025, Carroll Township's Board of Supervisors approved several items including authorization for a license plate reader system at the U.S. Route 15/Spring Lane Road/Ore Bank Road intersection at a cost of $7,500 annually over five years, and approval of the Treasurer's Report showing an open bill list of $212,730.01 through July 9, 2025. The board tabled discussion of a 2026-2029 Police Services Agreement with Franklintown Borough until an August 4 work session. The meeting also included review of June 2025 fire and police reports.

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    public safetyroad infrastructurebudgetpolice services
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  • CARROLL TOWNSHIP BOARD OF SUPERVISORS MEETING MINUTES JUNE 09, 2025

    Jun 9, 2025

    ·Carlisle, PA
    Minutes

    On June 9, 2025, the Carroll Township Board of Supervisors approved the Treasurer's Report showing $224,198.44 in bills through June 3, 2025, and ratified the May 2025 bill list. The board also received reports on police and fire services, including that Cadet Christopher Migatulski will graduate from the Police Academy on June 23, 2025, and that five new police vehicles have been received with equipment installation underway. Previous meeting minutes from May 5 and May 12 were approved as submitted.

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  • 860.522.2217 | 350 Church St. 3rd Fl., Hartford, CT 06103 | crcog.org

    Apr 26, 2025

    ·Hartford, CT
    Other

    The Central Region Council of Governments (CRCOG) Policy Board held a hybrid meeting on April 23, 2025, with representatives from 34 member towns and guest speakers from Connecticut Department of Transportation and congressional offices. The meeting covered executive director reports on project and committee updates, and included a legislative update highlighting House Bill 6831 regarding transit-oriented development funding for towns and House Bill 7112 concerning sewer infrastructure and lot size restrictions, with encouragement for board members to engage with legislators on CRCOG's suggested changes to these bills.

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  • Minutes of the Special Town Meeting December 7, 2024 1 SPECIAL TOWN MEETING –

    Dec 7, 2024

    ·Wilmington, DE
    Minutes

    On December 7, 2024, the Town of Wilmington held a special town meeting with a quorum present, during which Town Moderator Jonathan Eaton called the meeting to order and the board voted to dispense with reading the full warrant. The primary article addressed was Article 1, which proposed amending the Town's Zoning By-law to create a new MBTA Communities Multi-family Overlay District (MOD) covering approximately 65 acres. This overlay district is designed to allow multifamily housing and mixed-use development as-of-right in accordance with Massachusetts General Law Chapter 40A, with four designated sub-districts: Main Street Mixed Use, Burlington Avenue, Deming Way, and West Street, while maintaining underlying zoning provisions for non-specified uses.

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  • -1- Minutes of the Annual Town Meeting May 4, 2024

    May 4, 2024

    ·Wilmington, DE
    Minutes

    The Wilmington Annual Town Meeting convened on May 4, 2024, with a quorum present, where Moderator Jonathan Eaton opened proceedings with recognitions of the Minutemen, military service members, and six long-time volunteer town officials. The meeting adopted a consent agenda process to expedite voting on routine and non-controversial articles, including approvals for building committee reports, compensating balance agreements, MS4 compliance funding of $75,000, and other miscellaneous articles. The warrant reading was dispensed with by unanimous vote, and the Moderator noted that all articles were pre-approved by the Finance Committee and Planning Board unless otherwise indicated.

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    town meetingbudgetmunicipal operations
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  • April 11, 2024 Planning Commission Meeting Agenda

    Apr 11, 2024

    ·Knoxville, TN
    Agenda

    This April 11, 2024 Planning Commission meeting agenda includes routine procedural items such as roll call and approval of minutes, followed by consideration of four subdivision proposals in Knox County. The agenda covers two final subdivisions with variance requests (Sparks Meadow Subdivision and Brogdon Place Properties) and two final subdivisions without variance requests (Emory Green Subdivision and Meadows at Hickory Creek), with no street name changes scheduled for discussion. The meeting was held at 1:30 P.M. in the Main Assembly Room of the City County Building, with provisions for public comment and consent item voting.

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    subdivision approvalzoning varianceplanning commission
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  • Minutes of the Meeting of July 18, 2023 ...

    Jul 18, 2023

    ·San Diego, CA
    Minutes

    The Clairemont Community Planning Group held a meeting on July 18, 2023, at the Cathy Hopper Clairemont Friendship Center, but a quorum was not established with only 5 of 10 members present. Public comment focused on concerns about a proposed development at 3417 Idlewild Way involving large homes and accessory dwelling units, with residents questioning environmental impacts, infrastructure planning, and preservation of canyon lands previously protected by a tax assessment. Committee members reported on local projects including the Mt Etna affordable housing project under construction, the operational "Beach Bug" shuttle service, an upcoming Aldi market opening on Balboa Avenue, and ongoing Pure Water construction in the UTC area.

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    zoningaffordable housingwater infrastructuredevelopmentpublic comment
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  • 2022 ZONING ORDINANCE

    May 7, 2022

    ·Kingston, PA
    Proposal

    Kingston Borough's 2022 Zoning Ordinance is a comprehensive draft document prepared by professional planning consultants that establishes zoning regulations for the municipality in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania. The ordinance covers general provisions, definitions, and general regulations including requirements for accessory structures, setbacks, fences, utilities, stormwater management, and zoning districts. The document spans 217 pages and includes detailed sections on compliance, land development approval, yard requirements, visibility standards, and special use regulations such as those for manufactured homes, recreational vehicles, and renewable energy systems.

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    zoningland developmentstormwater managementrenewable energymanufactured homes
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  • Resolution Establishing the CAPS Electronic Meetings Policy This Resolution adopts an Electronic Meetings Policy according to the Indiana legislature’s statute enacted in the wake of the Covid-19 disaster emergency allowing for electronic meetings in certain circumstances. This policy establishes the procedures that apply to electronic participation in meetings by CAPS members, city staff, and the public. Resolution 21-01, passed 6/24/2021

    Jun 24, 2021

    ·Bloomington, IN
    Proposal
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  • Charleston Land Reuse Agency January 14, 2020 2:00 pm ...

    Jan 14, 2020

    ·Charleston, WV
    Minutes

    The Charleston Land Reuse Agency held its January 14, 2020 meeting with all board members present, during which it approved prior meeting minutes and heard reports on agency operations and initiatives. The board discussed the Far Westside Flats' Neighborhood Reinvestment Overlay District zoning plan, which had engaged approximately 1,180 community members through certified letters and door-to-door outreach, with approval scheduled for the Municipal Planning Commission on February 5th and subsequent city approval steps in late February or early March. The agency also addressed insurance coverage, with Janet Buckley presenting a recommendation for a state Board of Risk and Insurance Management policy at an annual premium of $2,700 with a $675 deposit, after three private insurers declined to offer coverage, and the board noted a current fund balance of $37,586.53.

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  • Town of Bristol Zoning Regulations Adopted by Town Vote March 7, 2017

    Mar 7, 2017

    ·Bristol, PA
    Other

    On March 7, 2017, the Town of Bristol adopted comprehensive zoning regulations through a town vote. The regulations establish multiple zoning districts including Village Business, Residential Office Commercial, Village Mixed, Recreational, Commercial, High Density Residential, Village Residential, and Rural Agricultural zones, with standards and requirements for each district. The new regulations repeal former zoning bylaws and include provisions for interpretation, amendments, and enforcement across the town's designated zoning map.

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    zoningzoning districtsland use regulations
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  • Massachusetts law about town meetings | Mass.gov

    Boston, MA
    Other

    This page from the Massachusetts Court System's Law Library provides an informational guide to Massachusetts town meeting law, including relevant statutes, court cases, and procedural resources. Key legal references include Massachusetts Constitution Amendment LXXXIX (distinguishing cities and towns), General Laws chapters 39 and 43A (municipal government), and the 2023 case Barron v. Kolenda, which established that towns cannot restrict participants from being "rude" at meetings. The resource directs users to procedural guides like Robert's Rules of Order and Town Meeting Time, as well as individual town meeting guides and citizens' petition procedures.

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  • COUNTY OF MONROE, PENNSYLVANIA ANNUAL FINANCIAL REPORT

    Minersville, PA
    Budget

    The County of Monroe, Pennsylvania's Annual Financial Report for the year ended December 31, 2023 presents audited financial statements covering governmental activities, business-type activities, and component units. The independent auditor's report indicates that the financial statements fairly present the county's financial position as of December 31, 2023, in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. The report includes comprehensive financial statements, management's discussion and analysis, pension plan information, and budgetary comparisons across multiple funds and activities.

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  • OKLAHOMA STATUTES TITLE 19. COUNTIES AND COUNTY OFFICERS

    Oklahoma City, OK
    Other

    This document is a table of contents for Oklahoma Statutes Title 19, which outlines the legal framework governing counties and county officers in Oklahoma. It covers topics including county powers and property management, board of commissioners authority, legal proceedings, county government structure, home rule charter procedures, and election processes. The content is a statutory reference document rather than a record of specific discussions, decisions, or budget allocations from a particular meeting.

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  • CITY OF TOLEDO, OHIO 2022 Annual Information Statement

    Toledo, OH
    Budget

    The City of Toledo, Ohio's 2022 Annual Information Statement serves as a disclosure document for the issuance of municipal bonds and notes, dated September 29, 2022. The statement provides information on the city's government structure, employees, and economic development activities, with sections covering industry, commerce, healthcare, automotive sectors, and recent downtown development projects. Inquiries regarding the statement should be directed to Melanie Campbell, Interim Director of Finance, at (419) 245-1647 or via email.

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    municipal bondsbudgeteconomic developmentdowntown developmentcity finance
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  • C.L. “BUTCH” OTTER GOVERNOR Trent Clark Chair B. J. Swanson Vice Chair

    Boise, ID
    Minutes

    The Idaho Workforce Development Council held a full-day meeting on April 5, 2018, in Meridian, where Vice Chair B.J. Swanson led discussions on Idaho's urban-rural labor market divide. A presentation highlighted that urban Idaho is experiencing economic growth while rural Idaho faces demographic challenges and a "tipping point," with rural workers dealing with counterintuitively high costs of living despite lower wages. Council members discussed workforce migration patterns, commuting trends, and the difficulty rural areas face in retaining younger workers, particularly millennials, due to economic pressures.

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    workforce developmentrural economic developmentlabor marketdemographic challengeseconomic growth
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  • Pennsylvania Chiefs of Police Association

    Kingston, PA
    Minutes

    The Pennsylvania Law Enforcement Accreditation Commission held a regular meeting on July 23, 2024, in Erie, PA, where members approved accreditation status for 16 law enforcement agencies for an additional three years, including the Pennsylvania State Police, Pennsylvania Capitol Police, and various municipal and county departments. The meeting included representatives from multiple agencies seeking or maintaining accreditation and followed approval of minutes from the previous April meeting. Several commission members abstained from voting on agencies with which they had affiliations.

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    law enforcement accreditationpolice agenciespublic safetypennsylvania state police
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  • Council met in regular session on Tuesda

    Hazleton, PA
    Minutes

    Hazleton City Council held a regular meeting on November 10, 2020 via Zoom teleconference, during which attorney Ray Rinaldi presented a major development proposal for the old Pagnotti Mining site. The Hazleton Creek Commerce Center project represents approximately $500 million in capital investment and would include commercial buildings of one million square feet or more, with the developer requesting a 10-year LERTA (Local Economic Revitalization Tax Assistance) exemption while maintaining current tax collections on the existing property. The project is projected to generate $3.5 million to $6 million annually in tax revenue for the city, school district, and county once the exemption period ends, with land development review hearings scheduled for December.

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  • 1 MINUTES OF A SPECIAL MEETING OF THE HOUSING AUTHORITY OF THE CITY OF RALEIGH

    Raleigh, NC
    Minutes

    The Housing Authority of the City of Raleigh Board of Commissioners held a special meeting on July 24, 2025, with seven of nine commissioners present, along with staff, legal representatives, and community partners. The board approved consent agenda items including charge-off of delinquent resident accounts for June 2025, an occupancy report as of July 18, and minutes from the June 26 regular meeting. During public comments, resident Paula Coppola raised concerns about maintenance issues at Walnut Terrace, including trash collection, tree trimming obstructing windows, and air quality problems related to nearby fire station emissions and mold.

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    housing authoritypublic housingmaintenance issuesresident concernsproperty management
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  • COUNTY OF MONROE, PENNSYLVANIA ANNUAL FINANCIAL REPORT

    Pocono Township, PA
    Budget

    Monroe County, Pennsylvania's Annual Financial Report for the year ended December 31, 2023 presents audited financial statements covering governmental activities, business-type activities, and component units. The independent auditor's report confirms that the financial statements fairly present the county's financial position and changes in financial position in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. The report includes comprehensive financial statements across multiple fund types, management's discussion and analysis, notes to the financial statements, and required supplementary information on pension liabilities and budgetary comparisons.

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  • 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.

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    zoningland useresidential districtscommercial industrialdevelopment regulations
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  • capital and operating budget

    Salt Lake City, UT
    Budget

    Salt Lake City's Fiscal Year 2021-22 Capital and Operating Budget totals just under $350 million in the General Fund, maintaining current and expanded staffing levels without cuts despite 2020 revenue shortfalls addressed through fund balance reserves. The budget incorporates federal investments from President Biden's American Rescue Plan and increased bond capacity, providing the city with expanded resources for infrastructure, emergency services, utilities, parks, and other municipal services. The document serves as a comprehensive budget guide covering departmental allocations, capital improvement projects, financial policies, and staffing plans across all city agencies.

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    budgetcapital improvementsinfrastructurestaffingmunicipal services
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