5 results for “climate recovery”
5 results for “climate recovery”
The Eugene City Council met on September 10, 2018, with eight councilors present to discuss city business. The public forum included 21 speakers addressing homelessness, a Ninth Circuit Court decision regarding camping bans, public shelter needs, and the Climate Recovery Ordinance, with council members acknowledging the Boise decision's impact on Eugene's policies and expressing intent to provide safe sleeping locations for unhoused individuals. The meeting proceeded to consent calendar items including approval of prior meeting minutes and a resolution for land annexation.
AI summary
The City of St. Petersburg will hold its annual Budget Open House on April 14, 2025, at 6 p.m. in Council Chambers to gather public input on the Fiscal Year 2026 budget priorities. The 2026 budget will emphasize resilience in response to back-to-back hurricanes in 2024, with city departments tying budget proposals to resilience efforts related to climate impacts including flooding and sea-level rise. Residents can participate in person, virtually via Zoom, or watch live on St. Pete TV, with each speaker given three minutes to address the mayor and city officials.
AI summary
The City of St. Petersburg is holding an annual Budget Open House on April 13, 2026, at 6 p.m. in City Hall Council Chambers to gather public input on Fiscal Year 2027 budget priorities. The meeting will include remarks from Mayor Kenneth T. Welch and City Council, with residents given three minutes each to share their budget priorities, with a continued focus on community resilience and recovery from climate-related impacts including flooding and sea-level rise from recent hurricanes. Residents can participate in person, virtually via Zoom, or by watching live on St. Pete TV.
AI summary
This is the Mayor's proposed operating budget for Lincoln for fiscal year 2021-2022, presented as a pandemic recovery and renewal document. The budget emphasizes restoration and strategic investment in three initiatives: Lincoln Forward, One Lincoln, and Resilient Lincoln, which focus on economic opportunity, equity, and climate resilience. Lincoln's city government receives 16% of property tax revenue ($639.60 on a $200,000 property), with the remaining 84% ($3,386.37) going to other taxing entities. The budget document includes revenue sources (sales tax, property tax, occupation tax, and fees) and expenditure categories (police, fire, parks and recreation, libraries, debt service, capital improvements, and other departments), though specific dollar amounts and percentages for individual line items are referenced in charts but not detailed in the provided text.
AI summary