17 results for “community standards” · proposal
17 results for “community standards” · proposal
Mar 26, 2026
Ordinance No. 2024-07 repeals Ordinance No. 2010-8 and establishes Moore Township's Right-to-Know policy in compliance with Pennsylvania state law (65 P.S. § 67.101 et seq.). The Township designates Stephen Nowroski as Open Records Officer and Jason Harhart as alternate, both reachable at the Municipal Building, 2491 Community Drive, Bath, PA 18014 (610-759-9449). Public records are available for inspection during normal business hours (8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.) except on Township-designated holidays, with requests required in writing on the Township's form or the Pennsylvania Office of Open Records Standard Right-to-Know Request Form. Fees are set at $0.25 per page for black and white copies up to 1,000 pages, $0.20 per page thereafter, $0.50 per color copy, $5.00 per certified record, and actual production cost for specialized documents; the Open Records Officer must respond within five business days or may extend up to 30 additional days upon notifier notification.
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Columbia Charter Township in Jackson County, Michigan proposed a Short-Term Rental Ordinance designed to regulate short-term rental properties while preserving the township's residential, lake living, and agricultural character. The ordinance addresses community concerns about noise, disorderly conduct, overcrowding, traffic, parking, and potential loss of neighborhood character, while recognizing that short-term rentals provide community benefits through expanded lodging options and owner revenue. The ordinance applies to the rental of entire dwelling units on a short-term basis throughout the township outside Village of Brooklyn limits, and excludes owner-occupied rentals, bed and breakfasts, hotels, motels, marinas, and senior care facilities, with all requirements intended to supplement existing zoning ordinance requirements.
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The City of Fort Collins proposes Ordinance No. 187, 2025, to appropriate $9.5 million from the Community Capital Improvement Project Fund to finance the design and construction of the Southeast Community Center, a LEED Gold certified recreation facility in southeast Fort Collins, along with an Art in Public Places program. The project builds on over 11 years of planning, including a 2013 feasibility study and voter approval in April 2015 of a ¼-cent CCIP sales tax and November 2023 approval of a ½-cent 2050 sales tax earmarked for recreation and pool facilities. The city secured $2 million in state grant funding from the Colorado Department of Local Affairs Climate Resilience Challenge program in November 2025 to support LEED Gold construction standards. The facility will be jointly developed through an intergovernmental agreement with the Poudre School District and Poudre River Public Library District, with construction to occur on PSD land pursuant to a purchase and sale agreement executed in April 2024. Staff recommends adoption of the ordinance on First Reading.
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