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5 results for “collection development” · minutes

  • MINUTES HARRISBURG PLANNING COMMISSION REGULAR MEETING January 7, 2026

    Jan 7, 2026

    ·Harrisburg, PA
    Minutes

    The Harrisburg Planning Commission held a regular meeting on January 7, 2026, where six members approved the November 5, 2025 meeting minutes unanimously. The Commission reviewed a Special Exception Application from Jarred Neal with Halden Horizons Group, LLC for 100 North 13th Street to consolidate parcels and convert the property into a twelve-unit multifamily dwelling with off-street parking in a Residential Medium-Density zone. The Planning Commission staff recommended approval with conditions, including subsequent filing of a Lot Consolidation & Land Development Plan, submission of a Certificate of Appropriateness for the parking area in the Summit Terrace Architectural Conservation Overlay District, and coordination with the Department of Public Works and Capital Region Water regarding refuse collection.

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    zoningmultifamily housingland developmentspecial exception
parking
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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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  • TOURIST DEVELOPMENT COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES

    Jacksonville, FL
    Minutes

    The Tourist Development Council held a virtual meeting on October 15, 2020, to review the fiscal year ending September 30, 2020. Bed tax collections totaled $6,303,825, representing a 26.68% decline compared to the previous year, with September revenue down 36.24% due to COVID-19 impacts; the council approved prior meeting minutes and reviewed account balances totaling approximately $3.2 million in carryover funds and $1.37 million in the Development Account. Council members discussed reallocating the $2 million in expenditure savings from the prior fiscal year, with plans to evaluate reallocation proposals at the February meeting after December's full fiscal close-out and further revenue trend analysis.

    AI summary

    bed taxtourism fundingbudget allocationcovid-19 impact
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  • COUNCIL MINUTES The City Council of the City of Raleigh ...

    Raleigh, NC
    Minutes

    The Raleigh City Council met on September 19, 2023, and adopted a resolution consenting to the Wake County Housing Authority's issuance of bonds to finance the rehabilitation of seven affordable housing developments, five of which are located within Raleigh: Avonlea, Jeffries Ridge, Madison Glen, Ripley Station, and Tryon Grove. These five Raleigh properties collectively provide 292 units of affordable housing for households earning no more than 60% of the area median income and had previously received gap financing from the City. The consent agenda and the housing authority resolution were both approved unanimously on 8-0 votes.

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    affordable housingbond financinghousing authority
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  • 1 BOROUGH OF WIND GAP 545 East West Street WIND GAP, PA 18091 610-863-7288

    Wind Gap, PA
    Minutes

    The Borough of Wind Gap Council held a meeting on May 22, 2018, to discuss several infrastructure matters including the dedication of East First Street as a Borough street (requiring coordination with the developer and PennDOT regarding liquid fuels collection) and deteriorated curbing on Alpha and Fairview Avenues that may require property owner notification and repairs before a planned paving project. The meeting included five councilmen, the Mayor, Borough Solicitor, Borough Engineer, and Borough Administrator, with discussion of procedures for road acceptance, curb assessment criteria, and an incomplete agenda item regarding fire company cost recoupment.

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    road infrastructurestreet maintenancepublic worksfire company costs
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