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16 results for “community center repairs”

  • 3333-2025: To authorize the Director of Recreation and Parks Department to enter into contract with Waibel Energy Systems, Inc. for the Woodward Park Community Center HVAC Repair 2025 Project; to authorize the expenditure of $64,500.00 from the Recreation and Parks Operating Fund; and to declare an emergency. ($64,500.00)

    Nov 26, 2025

    ·Columbus, OH
    Proposal
    Source
  • 1 REGULAR MEETING OF THE COUNCIL September 23, 2025 AGENDA 1. ROLL CALL 2.

    Sep 23, 2025

    ·Dearborn, MI
    Minutes

    This September 23, 2025 council meeting agenda includes ceremonial resolutions honoring Pastor Colleen Nieman's retirement, recognizing Ali Mroueh's service, and offering condolences to the family of Sarah Ahmad Mochawrab. The consent agenda authorizes several contracts and expenditures totaling over $572,000, including concrete repair at the Ford Community & Performing Arts Center ($214,602), holiday lighting installation ($60,000), asphalt resurfacing for city parking lots ($200,000), electrical work at Peace Park West ($63,150), and a new Senior Attorney Administrative position in the Law Department with an approximate annual cost of $135,000.

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municipal contractsbudget expenditureinfrastructure maintenancestaff hiring
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  • 2025-0109: On the message and order, referred on December 4, 2024, Docket #0109, authorizing the City of Boston to accept and expend the amount of Five Million Dollars ($5,000,000.00) in the form of a grant for the Nazzaro Community Center Renovation grant, awarded by the United States Department of Treasury, passed through the MA Executive Office of Economic Development, to be administered by Property Management. The grant will fund repairs and capital improvements to maintain current functionality and programming at the Nazzaro Community Center, the committee submitted a report recommending the order ought to pass. The report was accepted; the order was passed.

    Nov 29, 2024

    ·Boston, MA
    Proposal
    Source
  • 2024-1628: Order for a hearing to address the final repairs needed for the pool at the Condon Community Center and School to reopen.

    Oct 28, 2024

    ·Boston, MA
    Proposal
    Source
  • 2024-0686: Resolution further amending Resolution No. 647 of 2020, effective December 23, 2020, as amended, entitled “Resolution adopting and approving the 2021 Capital Budget and the 2021 Community Development Block Grant Program, and the 2021 through 2026 Capital Improvement Program” by reducing FACILITY IMPROVEMENTS - RECREATION AND SENIOR CENTERS by Five Hundred Thousand Dollars ($500,000.00), reducing STEP REPAIR AND REPLACEMENT by Five Hundred Sixty Thousand Two Hundred Twenty-Five Dollars and Forty-Eight Cents ($560,225.48), increasing STREET RESURFACING by One Hundred Ten Thousand Three Hundred Fifty-Eight Dollars and Seventy-One Cents ($110,358.71), and by increasing FACILITY IMPROVEMENTS - CITY FACILITIES by Two Million One Hundred Thirty-Two Thousand Four Hundred Ninety-Three Dollars and Ninety-Seven Cents ($2,132,493.97).

    Jul 5, 2024

    ·Pittsburgh, PA
    Proposal
    Source
  • 2024-0687: Resolution further amending Resolution No. 886 of 2021, effective December 27, 2021, as amended, entitled “Resolution adopting and approving the 2022 Capital Budget and the 2022 Community Development Block Grant Program, and the 2022 through 2027 Capital Improvement Program” by increasing FACILITY IMPROVEMENTS - RECREATION AND SENIOR CENTERS by One Million Six Hundred Twenty-Nine Thousand Four Hundred Seventy-Six Dollars ($1,629,476.00), reducing STEP REPAIR AND REPLACEMENT by One Million Four Hundred Thousand Dollars ($1,400,000.00), increasing STREET RESURFACING by One Hundred Thirty-Two Thousand Four Hundred Ninety-Three Dollars and Seventy-Seven Cents ($132,493.77), and decreasing FACILITY IMPROVEMENTS - CITY FACILITIES by Three Hundred Sixty-One Thousand Nine Hundred Sixty-Nine Dollars and Seventy-Seven Cents ($361,969.77).

    Jul 5, 2024

    ·Pittsburgh, PA
    Proposal
    Source
  • 2024-0689: Resolution further amending Resolution No. 857 of 2023, effective December 27, 2023, as amended, entitled "Resolution adopting and approving the 2024 Capital Budget, the proposed 2024 Community Development Program, and the 2024 through 2029 Capital Improvement Program" by reducing FACILITY IMPROVEMENTS - RECREATION AND SENIOR CENTERS by One Million Nine Hundred Ninety-Two Thousand Eight Hundred Seventy-Nine Dollars and Sixty-Four Cents ($1,992,879.64), increasing STEP REPAIR AND REPLACEMENT by One Million Nine Hundred Sixty Thousand Two Hundred Twenty-Five Dollars and Forty-Eight Cents ($1,960,225.48), and increasing STREET RESURFACING by Thirty-Two Thousand Six Hundred Fifty-Four Dollars and Sixteen Cents ($32,654.16).

    Jul 5, 2024

    ·Pittsburgh, PA
    Proposal
    Source
  • 2024-0429: WHEREAS, Community Day School is a center of community and education, uniting the hearts and minds of the next generation. The school honors Jewish teachings and values, nurturing passion, identity, and integrity in its students so that they may repair the world through tolerance and growth; and,

    Apr 26, 2024

    ·Pittsburgh, PA
    Proposal
    Source
  • CIF101922MP08: APPROPRIATING $41,345 FROM DISTRICT 8 CAPITAL INFRASTRUCTURE FUNDS TO METRO PARKS FOR DOUGLASS COMMUNITY CENTER STUCCO REPAIR AND PAINTING.

    Oct 10, 2022

    ·Louisville, KY
    Proposal
    Source
  • Did you know that Carroll Township is the only township in

    Carlisle, PA
    Other

    Carroll Township, Perry County does not levy a real estate tax on residents, instead funding services through earned income tax (1.70%), fire tax (0.034 mills), per capita tax ($5.00), and real estate transfer tax (1.0%). The Spring 2023 newsletter announced a Spring Cleanup event scheduled for May 13, 2023, accepting tires, metal, and bulk trash with specific limits and fees, and noted that the Community Center is undergoing repairs funded by COVID relief funds, with furnaces installed and roof replaced, pending water system permitting.

    AI summary

    earned income taxfire taxcommunity center repairswaste managementcovid relief funding
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  • CAPITAL BUDGET 2026 passed 2-9-26

    Akron, OH
    Budget

    On February 9, 2026, the Akron City Council passed the 2026 Capital Investment and Community Development Program. Key allocations include $6.5 million for road resurfacing covering approximately 52 centerline miles, $1 million for the sidewalk program to address repair requests, and ongoing investments in major infrastructure projects including renovation work on the Stubbs Justice Center police headquarters. The budget prioritizes public safety, transportation, water and sewer systems, parks and recreation, and economic development initiatives.

    AI summary

    capital budgetroad resurfacinginfrastructurepublic safetywater sewer
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  • Equity and Empowerment Commission Reparations Recommendations - Wealth and Opportunity Gaps

    Evanston, IL
    Other

    The Equity and Empowerment Commission submitted reparations recommendations to the Evanston City Council on September 9, 2019, responding to a June 2019 request from Alderman Rue Simmons to address historical wealth and opportunity gaps affecting African American residents. The Commission held community meetings on July 11 and July 13, 2019, where attendees identified five priority categories (History/Culture, Finance, Education, Institutions/Systems, and Power Structure) and generated specific policy recommendations. Proposed actions include housing initiatives such as property tax relief for long-time African American property owners, down payment assistance for income-qualified home purchasers, and housing repair assistance, plus economic development measures including repurposing the Gibbs-Morrison Center for African American entrepreneur co-working space. The Commission recommended that the City Council receive the report and direct the City Manager to conduct additional research and data collection to determine feasibility, noting that implementation decisions were beyond the scope of the commission's current work.

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  • City of Wilkes-Barre

    Wilkes-Barre, PA
    Budget

    Mayor George C. Brown's 2025 budget address for the City of Wilkes-Barre identifies two major fiscal challenges: the potential loss of approximately $750,000 in annual real estate tax revenue from Commonwealth Health Wilkes-Barre General Hospital and an over 11% increase in employee healthcare costs. To offset these challenges, the administration expects increased construction and building permit revenue from major development projects including the Wright Center expansion, Meyers High School renovation into apartments and retail, the First National Bank Building purchase, and Sphere International's mixed-use development, along with anticipated increases in Earned Income Tax. The budget emphasizes cost-cutting measures in overtime and contract work, continued staffing priorities for Fire, Police, and DPW departments, infrastructure improvements including $1.1 million in Solomon's Creek flood protection and $1.5 million for Brookside Levee protection, and quality-of-life initiatives such as community policing programs and street repairs.

    AI summary

    budgettax revenueinfrastructurepublic safetyflood protection
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  • Local Reparations - Kamm Howard

    Evanston, IL
    Other

    This document outlines a framework for local reparations initiatives presented at an Evanston Town Hall on May 21, 2020, by Kamm Howard. It traces the evolution of reparations work from pre-2018 resolutions supporting HR 40 through 2018–2020 implementation in New York, Evanston, Chicago, Vermont, Pennsylvania, Illinois, and California. The framework defines reparations broadly as any resources targeted toward repair or healing of current injuries from past harms related to enslavement, Jim Crow, or post-Jim Crow discrimination against Black communities. It establishes three minimum guidelines from NAARC: initiatives must be determined by the injured community, resources must be administered or approved by that community, and policy must specifically target past harms. The document compares three models—HR 40, Evanston, and M. Williamson—and categorizes reparative initiatives into full repair (cessation, restitution, compensation, satisfaction, rehabilitation) and benefits (direct and collective), with specific examples from Evanston (business grants, affordable housing, STEM center, co-ops) and Chicago (vocational training, proportionate representation in city contracts, apology consistent with international norms).

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  • Equity and Empowerment Commission - Recommendations on Actions to Address Wealth and Opportunity Gaps

    Evanston, IL
    Other

    The Equity & Empowerment Commission submitted recommendations to the Evanston City Council on September 9, 2019, requesting authorization for a feasibility study on reparations addressing wealth and opportunity gaps for African-American residents. The recommendations span three areas: housing (property tax relief, repair assistance, down payment assistance, and rental assistance for African-American property owners and renters); economic development (repurposing the Gibbs-Morrison Center for African-American entrepreneurs, workforce training, and low-interest business loans); and livability benefits (community engagement and equitable access to assets). The Commission developed these recommendations following community meetings held July 11th and 13th, 2019, where attendees identified five priority categories (History/Culture, Finance, Education, Institutions/Systems, and Power/Structure) and provided input on addressing Evanston's historical institutional racism and discrimination.

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  • ·3660 ~gQ~J?~~W~s-REGULAR Minutes of Meeting

    Eugene, OR
    Minutes

    The Auburn Township Board of Trustees met on May 6, 2024, to approve previous meeting minutes and address township business. Key items included a 4th of July parade and picnic hosted by Boy Scout Troop 101 at the fire station, fire department statistics showing 300 year-to-date calls in 2024, and approval of $85,206.31 in payments ($58,312.51 in electronic payments and $26,893.80 in warrants). Notable actions included postponing a decision on water damage repairs at Adam Hall Community Center, scheduling the Fire Department clam bake for September 21, 2024, and addressing staffing needs following employee retirements, while also seeking an ethics opinion regarding a potential conflict of interest with a fiscal office assistant candidate.

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    fire departmentpublic eventscommunity centerbudget paymentsstaffing
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