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14 results for “county ordinance” · budget

  • 1 CHARLESTON COUNTY FY 2026 BUDGET Thursday, May 22, 2025 Budget Schedule

    May 22, 2025

    ·Charleston, WV
    Budget

    Charleston County presented its FY 2026 budget on May 22, 2025, with a scheduled three-reading approval process concluding June 10, 2025. The budget recommendations include approving county and special purpose district budgets, a fee ordinance amendment, and library budgets, while addressing economic uncertainties and inflation through maintaining existing services and supporting the county's strategic plan. Key proposals include 33 new positions across emergency services, housing, and planning functions, a General Fund appropriation increase of 4.2% to $365.5 million, and a debt service increase of 47.0% to $56.5 million, with the Northern Charleston Fire District millage rate increasing from 15.5 to 16.2 mills.

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  • 22-1246: A bill for an ordinance approving a proposed Second Amendatory Agreement to the Intergovernmental Agreement between the City and County of Denver and Urban Drainage and Flood Control District d/b/a Mile High Flood District to support the final design of drainage and flood control improvements as part of the Globeville Levee Project in Council District 9. Amends an intergovernmental agreement with Urban Drainage and Flood Control District, doing business as Mile High Flood District (MHFD), by adding $2,650,000 in MHFD funds and $3,718,816.59 in City Wastewater Enterprise funds for a total addition of $6,368,816.59 and a new agreement total of $13,468,816.59 to support the final design of drainage and flood control improvements as part of the Globeville Levee Project in Council District 9. No change to agreement duration (DOTI- 202054890/ 202264701). The last regularly scheduled Council meeting within the 30-day review period is on 11-7-2022. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 10-4-2022.

    Sep 26, 2022

    ·Denver, CO
    Budget
    Source
  • 22-1167: A bill for an ordinance approving an intergovernmental agreement between the City and County of Denver and Colorado Department of Human Services, Office of Economic Security, Amends an intergovernmental agreement with the Colorado Department of Human Services - Office of Economic Security to continue implementing the Disability Navigator Program to cover costs to assist persons with disabilities. Amends an intergovernmental agreement with the Colorado Department of Human Services - Office of Economic Security by adding $642,010.82 for a new total of $1,284,021.64 and one year for a new end date of 6-30-23 to continue implementing the Disability Navigator Program to cover costs to assist persons with disabilities to navigate the application and/or appeal process for federal disability benefits under the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program, citywide (SOCSV-202160615-00/ SOCSV-202160615-02). The last regularly scheduled Council meeting within the 30-day review period is on 10-31-2022. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 9-28-2022.

    Sep 19, 2022

    ·Denver, CO
    Budget
    Source
  • 22-0643: A bill for an ordinance authorizing expenditures in the General Government Special Revenue Fund based on a letter of intent from the United States Department of Homeland Security to fund the City and County of Denver for the “2022 Securing the Cities” program. Appropriates 50% of a grant award, or $475,000, through FY2022, based on the Letter of Intent from the United States Department of Homeland Security, for an estimated full award of $950,000 for the Securing the Cities Grant to help protect the City from radiological or nuclear threats, citywide. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 5-31-22.

    May 23, 2022

    ·Denver, CO
    Budget
    Source
  • 22-0642: A bill for an ordinance authorizing expenditures in the General Government Special Revenue Fund based on a letter of intent from the Colorado Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management to fund the City and County of Denver for the “2022 Emergency Management Performance Grant” program. Appropriates 50% of a grant award, or $44,864, through 12-31-22, based on the Letter of Intent from the Colorado Division of Homeland Security, for an estimated full award of $89,728 for the 2022 Emergency Management Performance Grant, citywide. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 5-31-22.

    May 23, 2022

    ·Denver, CO
    Budget
    Source
  • 22-0290: A bill for an ordinance authorizing the issuance of (1) the “City and County of Denver, Colorado, General Obligation Elevate Denver Bonds” for the purpose of financing and defraying the cost of acquiring, constructing, installing and improving various civic facilities, and (2) a tax-exempt and a taxable series of the “City and County of Denver, Colorado, General Obligation RISE Denver Bonds” for the purpose of repairing and improving various civic facilities; providing for the levy of general ad valorem taxes to pay the principal of and interest on such Bonds; and making other provisions relating thereto. Authorizes the issuance of City and County of Denver General Obligation Bonds, Series 2022A-C in a principal amount not to exceed $366.4 million for the purpose of funding projects approved by Denver voters in the November 2017 Elevate Bond Program and the November 2021 RISE Denver Bond Program, and to pay associated costs of issuance. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 3-15-22.

    Mar 7, 2022

    ·Denver, CO
    Budget
    Source
  • 21-1219: A bill for an ordinance approving a proposed Fiscal Year 2022 Amendment to the Second Amended and Restated Operating Agreement between the City and County of Denver and Denver Health and Hospital Authority, providing for the amounts to be paid for services by the City and County of Denver and by the Denver Health and Hospital Authority for Fiscal Year 2022. Approves the 2022 Denver Health and Hospital Authority operating agreement (ENVHL-202160644). The last regularly scheduled Council meeting within the 30-day review period is on 12-31-21. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 11-10-21.

    Oct 11, 2021

    ·Denver, CO
    Budget
    Source
  • Approved 2021 Budget

    Hazleton, PA
    Budget

    The 2021 approved budget projects total real estate tax revenue of $5,175,772, representing an 89–90% collection rate and a decrease of $1,165,921 from the prior year budget. The budget includes resident taxes of $30,000 (Ordinance 1949, $5 per resident over 21), per capita tax of $175,000 (Ordinance 1933, $10 per resident with income over $5,000), earned income tax of $2,632,000 (split between regular 1% EIT and Act 47 special designation), real estate transfer tax of $275,000 (city's share of 2.5% transfer tax), and local service tax of $345,000. Real estate tax collections are administered by Luzerne County's Agent, Northeast Revenue, with earned income taxes collected by Berkheimer Services.

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  • Ordinance No. ---- COUNTY OF GREENVILLE FISCAL YEAR 2022-2023 BUDGET ORDINANCE

    Greenville, SC
    Budget

    This ordinance appropriates funds for Greenville County government operations for fiscal year 2022–2023 (July 1, 2022 through June 30, 2023) across six fund categories. The General Fund totals $213,676,673, with Public Safety receiving the largest allocation at $35,754,424, followed by Strategic Operations at $29,575,165 and Community Development and Planning at $24,797,319. Special Revenue Funds total $73,608,881, including $19,434,024 for Parks and Recreation, $15,250,000 for Road Program projects, and $14,018,805 for the Infrastructure Bank. Capital Projects Fund appropriates $75,265,000, with $64,350,000 dedicated to Facility/Construction Projects. The Debt Service Fund allocates $20,822,113 for principal, interest, and service charges on various debt instruments, while Internal Service Funds total $40,806,455 primarily for Health and Dental Insurance ($28,888,059) and Fleet Management ($7,833,396). The Enterprise Fund appropriates $27,905,433 for Solid Waste and Stormwater Management operations.

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    budgetpublic safetyroad infrastructurefacility constructionsolid waste management
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  • CITY OF ALLENTOWN PENNSYLVANIA ANNUAL COMPREHENSIVE FINANCIAL REPORT

    Allentown, PA
    Budget

    The City of Allentown, Pennsylvania issued its Annual Comprehensive Financial Report for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2024, prepared by the Department of Finance under Director Bina Patel and Treasury and Accounting Manager Erika Strohler. Allentown is the county seat of Lehigh County with a population of 125,845 residents according to the 2020 U.S. Census, ranking as Pennsylvania's third largest city. The city operates under a Home Rule Charter adopted by voters on April 23, 1996, with an elected Mayor serving a four-year term as chief executive and a seven-member part-time City Council elected at large for four-year staggered terms. The City Controller, Mayor Matt Tuerk, and City Council President Cynthia Y. Mota lead the government, which holds regular public meetings at least twice monthly to enact ordinances and resolutions.

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  • ORDINANCE CITY COUNCIL CITY AND COUNTY OF HONOLULU HONOLULU. HAWAII BILL

    Honolulu, HI
    Budget

    Bill 19 (2020) is a legislative budget ordinance for the City and County of Honolulu appropriating revenues for fiscal year July 1, 2020 to June 30, 2021. Total revenues appropriated across operating funds amount to $23,427,190, with the General Fund (GN) accounting for $23,293,190. The appropriations fund the General Government—Legislative function across five main entities: City Council (69.00 full-time equivalent positions, $8,021,817 total), Office of Council Services (26.00 FTE, $2,828,550), City Clerk (42.00 FTE, $4,825,286), City Auditor (13.00 FTE, $1,867,966), and provisional accounts including Retirement System Contribution—Employers Share ($2,541,963) and FICA Tax—Employers Share ($926,999). Additional special fund allocations include $12,000 each for Solid Waste and Housing Development, $50,000 for Bus Transportation, and $60,000 for Sewer.

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    budgetfiscal year appropriationscity council funding
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  • County of Greenville Operating and Capital Budget

    Greenville, SC
    Budget

    The County of Greenville Operating and Capital Budget document establishes budgetary policies and procedures for fiscal years 2010 and 2011 under the County Code. The County Administrator is required to prepare proposed operating and capital improvement budgets for submission to council with a statement of anticipated revenues and required tax revenue, along with a certification that the budget does not exceed projected income. The operating budget must be adopted as an annual appropriations ordinance by council prior to June 30th each year and shall include a contingent account for unforeseen expenditures. The county's fiscal year runs from July 1st through June 30th, and all county offices and departments receiving county funds must submit a detailed annual fiscal report to the County Administrator, with year-end audits due within 180 days of fiscal year end.

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  • CITY COUNCIL CITY AND COUNTY OF HONOLULU HONOLULU. HAWAII ORDINANCE 1 9 — 1 3

    Honolulu, HI
    Budget

    Ordinance 19–13, passed by Honolulu City Council, appropriates the executive operating budget for the fiscal year July 1, 2019 to June 30, 2020. The ordinance authorizes total revenues of $3,452,418,507 with net appropriations of $2,834,866,665 across operating, federal, and special project funds. Operating funds total $2,713,846,226, including the General Fund at $1,999,680,728, Highway Fund at $316,777,489, Sewer Fund at $390,292,424, and Bus Transportation Fund at $269,926,190, among other departmental and special purpose funds. Federal funds allocated include $59,345,426 for Housing and Community Development Section 8 Contracts, $40,675,266 for Federal Grants, and other community development programs. The ordinance covers appropriations for General Government functions, including the Mayor's office, Department of Budget and Fiscal Services, and other executive departments.

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    budget appropriationsfiscal year 2019-2020operating fundsfederal grantstransportation funding
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  • ORDINANCE NO. 2025- [ AN ORDINANCE ADOPTING THE BUDGET OF THE CITY OF TAMPA,

    Tampa, FL
    Budget

    The City of Tampa adopted its fiscal year 2026 budget (October 1, 2025 – September 30, 2026) through this ordinance, which was presented to City Council on July 17, 2025, and underwent two required public hearings to allow citizen input before final approval. The ordinance authorizes the city to levy property taxes on taxable property within Tampa and directs the Mayor and City Clerk to certify the millage rate to the Hillsborough County Property Appraiser as required by Florida law.

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