30 results for “code of ethics” · agenda
30 results for “code of ethics” · agenda
This April 9, 2026 Committee of the Whole meeting agenda included five unanimous resolutions recognizing community contributions and designating observances: honoring Hype Athletics' 25 years of community support, proclaiming March 2026 as Social Work Month, April 2026 as National Arab American Heritage Month, April 2026 as Autism Acceptance Month, and offering condolences to the family of Ganelle Shooshanian. The meeting also addressed economic development initiatives including approval of a Brownfield Plan for 15625 Lundy Parkway, establishment of a 12-month weatherization and energy efficiency pilot program with Jefferson East, Inc., a noise ordinance waiver for Downtown Dearborn Movie Nights in Peace Park East, and an ordinance amendment regarding the Parking Advisory Commission.
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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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The Board of Directors of Downtown Knoxville Alliance held meetings on November 17, 2025, and scheduled a January 26, 2026 meeting at 11:30 AM to address action items including FY 24-25 audit results, November and December financial reports, and committee reports. In the November meeting, the board unanimously approved the October financial report and allocated $30,500 in sponsorships across five cultural and community events, including $10,000 each to the East Tennessee History Center and Knoxville Museum of Art programming, plus $5,000 to fund an art wraps program continuation through the Knoxville History Project.
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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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The Evanston Joint Review Board met on December 11, 2025, to conduct its statutorily required annual review of Tax Increment Financing (TIF) district reports for fiscal year 2024. The agenda included approval of 2024 meeting minutes, review of annual reports for five active TIF districts (Howard Ridge, West Evanston, Dempster Dodge, Chicago Main, and Five Fifths), and board discussion. The meeting was held virtually via Google Meet and involved representatives from the City of Evanston, Oakton College, Evanston Township High School District 202, Evanston School District 65, and the Evanston Public Library.
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The Cincinnati Board of Health held a meeting on September 24, 2024, with an agenda including approval of minutes, discussion of food license fees for 2025-2026, a COVID-19 update, finance and personnel action votes, and elections of officers. The board voted to elect Ms. Ashlee Young as Board Chair and Dr. Jennifer Forrester as Board Vice-Chair, and approved a contract with Talbert Services, Incorporated. The next meeting is scheduled for October 22, 2024.
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The City of Madison Board of Assessors held a meeting on August 14, 2024, to discuss and approve assessed value recommendations for properties with objections to their 2024 assessments. The board reviewed recommendations from three appraisers (A. Van Berkel, D. Middleton, and I. Sullivan) across multiple parcels, with assessed values ranging from approximately $212,200 to $863,900, with most recommendations resulting in either minor adjustments or no changes to current valuations. The meeting included standard procedural items such as roll call, approval of previous minutes, public comment, and disclosure requirements.
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The City of Spokane notified the public that City Council has resumed in-person meetings at City Hall, with virtual participation available via WebEx and live streaming on Channel 5 and online platforms for the week of September 25, 2023. Public testimony sign-up for the Monday legislative session runs from 5:00-6:00 p.m., with a three-minute time limit for comments on legislative items and two minutes for open forum remarks. The document outlines public decorum rules for council meetings, including prohibitions on clapping, cheering, booing, and outbursts, and specifies that open forum discussions must relate to city affairs and not pending agenda items or election initiatives.
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The City of Madison Board of Assessors held a meeting on September 21, 2022, to discuss objections to 2022 property assessments. The board reviewed personal property assessed value recommendations from appraiser K. Seifert for multiple commercial properties and businesses, with adjustments ranging from minor changes to significant reductions—for example, Exact Sciences Corporation's assessment was recommended to decrease from $3,241,800 to $2,940,700, while several new businesses received initial assessments ranging from $3,000 to $20,000. The meeting included standard procedural items such as roll call, approval of previous minutes, public comment, and ethics disclosures.
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The Madison Board of Assessors met on August 17, 2022, to discuss and approve assessed value recommendations for properties with objections to their 2022 property assessments. The board reviewed recommendations from four appraisers covering approximately 18 properties, with assessed values ranging from approximately $173,100 to $8,640,000, with several properties receiving downward reassessments from their current valuations. Notable large property reductions included Schroeder Road Apartments LLC (reduced from $8,640,000 to $7,261,000) and 134 Fair Oaks LLC (reduced from $6,955,000 to $6,062,000).
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This document is a meeting agenda for the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission dated December 6, 2013, held at the West Virginia Regional Technology Park in South Charleston. The meeting covered multiple agenda items including approval of financial aid reports, enrollment data, capital project priorities, and updates on institutional strategic initiatives related to access, success, and impact. The agenda included discussions on a Fall 2013 enrollment report, a comprehensive financial aid report, proposals to approve capital projects at West Virginia State University and Concord University, and reviews of institutional programs and textbook policies.
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The California Board of Occupational Therapy held a two-day meeting on March 9-10, 2017, at San Jose State University to discuss multiple regulatory and policy matters. The agenda included consideration of continuing competency tools, potential legislation to license athletic trainers, professional development requirements for renewal, and the addition of mandatory ethics courses. The board also scheduled a closed session to deliberate on disciplinary matters and held open sessions allowing public comment on non-agenda items.
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On February 10, 2026, the Washington County Board of Commissioners held an open session meeting covering several items including the Commission on Aging's FY2027 budget presentation, a Community Development Block Grant update, and approval of sole source contracts for cyber security monitoring (Darktrace) and emergency medical equipment (Lifepak35 monitors). The agenda also included consideration of grant applications and awards for family services, a rural health blood program, a budget adjustment for Clear Spring EMS transition, and adoption of a county artificial intelligence policy, followed by a closed session to discuss personnel matters and economic development proposals.
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This document is a notice for a Tampa City Council Regular Agenda meeting scheduled for Thursday, April 16, 2026, at 9:00 AM in Old City Hall (315 E. Kennedy Blvd.). The meeting will be open to the public both in-person and via livestream on cable TV (Spectrum Channel 640, Frontier Channel 15) and internet (tampa.gov/livestream), with provisions for remote public comment and hearing participation through pre-registration at least 24 hours in advance. The document outlines accessibility options for citizens, including ADA accommodations and technical support for remote participation via communications media technology.
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The Industrial Development Board of the City of Chattanooga scheduled a monthly meeting for November 3, 2025, to address several key items including a public hearing on the Northgate Mall Infrastructure Project's Economic Impact Plan, a quarterly update on wastewater infrastructure work, and approval of the RiverCity Company PILOT termination. The board also planned to authorize the purchase of CivicServe Software for $44,000 to manage economic development incentives and address other business matters including TIF audit reporting and pending property claims.
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The Des Moines City Council held a regular meeting agenda for October 9, 2025, which included multiple items for council action and discussion. Key agenda items included a 2025/2026 mid-biennium budget review presentation by the Finance Director, approval of payment vouchers totaling approximately $1.18 million, and consideration of a Hemstad Consulting contract for $93,500. The meeting also featured unfinished business regarding a management agreement with NWS Holdings (Perfect Game) for Steven J. Underwood Fields, a public safety sales tax discussion, and new business including an OpenGov Asset Management Software purchase and a telecommunications franchise agreement with Forged Fiber 37, LLC.
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The Hartford Subcommittee of Connecticut's Municipal Accountability Review Board held a virtual meeting on March 23, 2023, to review and approve a bond refunding resolution designed to improve the city's financial condition. The subcommittee approved a draft MARB resolution regarding Hartford's bond refunding, which was scheduled for presentation to the Hartford City Council and the Full MARB. An upcoming April 27, 2023 meeting was also scheduled to address the Mayor's FY 2024 Recommended Budget, Hartford's 5-Year Plan, and related budget mitigation measures.
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The Tredyffrin Township Board of Supervisors held a public meeting agenda for March 16, 2026, at 7:00 PM that included acknowledgment of Conestoga High School students who won the PennDOT Innovations Challenge and announcements regarding a New York City bus trip, traffic safety reminders, and stormwater inspection deadlines. The business agenda included approval of the 2025 Subdivision and Land Development Activities Report, authorization to update the Township's Comprehensive Plan, approval of water rescue equipment purchase for the fire department, and various grants and projects including hazard mitigation, traffic signal upgrades, pedestrian enhancements, and park bathroom facilities. The board also scheduled public hearings for April 20, 2026, to consider amendments to the Township's ordinances and home rule charter.
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The Evanston City Council held a regular meeting on July 15, 2019, to address several agenda items including approval of prior meeting minutes, consideration of an inclining block water rate structure to adjust rates based on consumption levels, and approval of Resolution 76-R-19 authorizing a Local Public Agency Funding Agreement with the Illinois Department of Transportation for the Central Street Bridge Replacement project. The bridge project agreement establishes maximum federal grant funding at 80% of right-of-way purchase costs (up to $560,000), with the City of Evanston committing to fund the remaining 20% ($140,000) from its 2019 General Obligation Bonds Capital Improvement Fund.
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The Tennessee Higher Education Commission held a Fall Quarterly Meeting scheduled for November 12, 2025, in Nashville to address strategic initiatives including institutional mission profiles, academic policy revisions, the 2025-2035 Strategic Higher Education Master Plan, campus master plans for three community colleges, and fiscal recommendations including FY2026-27 operating state appropriations, tuition and fee policies, and capital projects. The meeting agenda also included an Outcomes-Based Funding Formula update and consideration of a new Master of Science program in Industrial and Systems Engineering at Tennessee Technological University. An Access, Academics, and Student Success Committee meeting was scheduled for the same day to address chair elections and academic program matters.
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The Local Finance Board scheduled an electronic meeting for Wednesday, August 13, 2025, at 9:00 AM to review multiple local government financing applications. The agenda included fifteen items spanning fire district project financing ($1.7M–$700K), municipal bond ordinances and refunding bonds ranging from $2.6M to $8.3M, and county improvement authority projects totaling over $630M, including a $250M Bergen County loan program and $113M Rowan University project financing. Additional agenda items covered rental assistance demonstration project financing, municipal parking authority dissolution, county improvement authority creation, and redevelopment area bonds.
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The Oakland Civil Service Board held a regular meeting on December 18, 2025, with five board members present. The agenda included approval of the November and December meeting minutes, secretary updates, and consent calendar items approving nine provisional appointments to various city positions including Project Manager II, Data Analyst, Public Information Officer III, and multiple Contract Compliance Officer roles. The meeting was held at City Hall and available via Zoom and telephone for public viewing.
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