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21 results for “cultural center planning”

  • Transportation, Waterfront, and Seattle Center Committee — Minutes 2026-05-21

    May 21, 2026

    ·Seattle, WA
    Minutes

    The Transportation, Waterfront, and Seattle Center Committee met on May 21, 2026, at 9:30 a.m. in the Seattle City Council Chamber. Resolution 32205 affirming Seattle Center as a central civic, cultural, and economic asset and requesting the Mayor direct a capital planning effort for its aging infrastructure and modernization was recommended for adoption by a 5–0 vote in favor (Saka, Rinck, Foster, Kettle, Lin; none opposed), with a bond measure decision anticipated by the end of 2027. Information items on urgent Seattle Center renovation and modernization needs (Inf 2894) and unpermitted street vending (Inf 2895) were heard, while a petition by The Yew, LLC for vacation of an alley portion at 8623 Palatine Ave N (CF 314530) was not heard. The meeting adjourned at 12:04 p.m.

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Res 32205: A resolution affirming the importance of Seattle Center as a central civic, cultural, and economic asset for The City of Seattle; acknowledging the urgent imperative to restore its aging infrastructure and grounds, renovate its buildings, and revitalize the Seattle Center Campus; requesting that the Mayor direct City departments in a capital planning effort for Seattle Center; anticipating a decision on a bond measure to fund its capital investment by the end of 2027; committing to exploring all viable funding options to support its modernization; declaring Council priorities and calling upon the Executive to direct departmental resources and budget allocations in support of its capital improvements.

May 6, 2026

·Seattle, WA
Proposal
Source
  • 2026-0738: Councilor Weber called Docket #0738, message and order approving an appropriation order in the amount of Three Hundred Eighty-Four Million Seven Hundred Five Thousand Dollars ($384,705,000.00) for various capital improvement purposes for city departments including the Boston Center for Youth and Families, Boston Housing Authority, Boston Planning and Development Agency, Boston Public Library, Innovation and Technology, Environment, Fire, Mayor’s Office of Housing, Office of Arts & Culture, Parks and Recreation, Planning, Property Management, Public Health Commission, Public Works, and the Transportation Departments, from the Committee on Ways and Means. No objection being heard, the matter was properly before the body. On motion of Councilor Weber, the order was read a second time and again passed: yeas 11 (Breadon, Culpepper, Durkan, FitzGerald, Flynn, Louijeune, Murphy, Pepén, Santana, Weber, Worrell), nays 1 (Mejia), absent 1 (Coletta Zapata).

    Apr 2, 2026

    ·Boston, MA
    Proposal
    Source
  • 2025-1995: Resolution authorizing the Mayor and the Director of the Department of City Planning, to enter into an Agreement or Agreements between the City of Pittsburgh and Casey Droege Cultural Productions d.b.a. The Art Supply Company, for the installation and maintenance of a photo installation at Beechview Healthy Active Living Center, at no cost to the City.

    Jun 27, 2025

    ·Pittsburgh, PA
    Proposal
    Source
  • 2025-0828: Councilor Worrell called Docket #0828, approving an appropriation order in the amount of Two Hundred Sixty-Six Million One Hundred Thousand Dollars ($266,100,000.00) for various capital improvement purposes for city departments including the Boston Center for Youth and Families, Boston Housing Authority, Boston Planning and Development Agency, Boston Public Library, Innovation and Technology, Environment, Fire, Mayor’s Office of Housing, Office of Arts and Culture, Parks and Recreation, Police, Property Management, Public Health Commission, Public Works, and the Transportation Department, from the Committee on Ways and Means. Hearing no objection, the matter was before the body. On motion of Councilor Worrell, the order was read a second time and again passed; yeas 11, nays 2 (Breadon, Mejia).

    Apr 3, 2025

    ·Boston, MA
    Proposal
    Source
  • 2024-0676: Councilor Worrell called Docket #0676, an appropriation order in the amount of One Hundred Eighty-Four Million Seven Hundred Eighty Thousand Dollars ($184,780,000.00) for various capital improvement purposes for city departments including the Boston Center for Youth and Families, Boston Housing Authority, Boston Planning and Development Agency, Boston Public Library, Environment, Fire, Mayor’s Office of Housing, Office of Arts and Culture, Parks and Recreation, Police, Property Management, Public Works, and the Transportation Departments, from the Committee on Ways and Means. Hearing no objection, the matter was before the body. On motion of Councilor Worrell, the order was read a second time and again passed; yeas 12, nays 1 (Breadon). Councilor Mejia motioned to reconsider her vote; Yeas 12, present 1(Pepen). Docket #0676 received a second reading and again passed; yeas 11, nays 2 (Breadon, Mejia).

    Apr 4, 2024

    ·Boston, MA
    Proposal
    Source
  • 2023-0767: Councilor Fernandes Anderson called Docket #0767, referred on April 12, 2023 Docket #0767, for an appropriation in the amount of Six Hundred Fifty-Seven Million One Hundred Ten Thousand Dollars ($657,110,000.00) for various capital improvement purposes for city departments including the Boston Center for Youth and Families, Department of Innovation and Technology, the Environment, Fire, Parks and Recreation, Police, Property Management, Public Works, and Transportation departments, Mayor's Office of Housing, Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture, Boston Public Library, Boston Housing Authority, Boston Planning and Development Agency, and the Boston Public Health Commission, from the Committee on Ways and Means. Hearing no objection, the matter was before the body. On motion of Councilor Fernandes Anderson, the order was read a second time and again passed; yeas 12.

    Apr 6, 2023

    ·Boston, MA
    Proposal
    Source
  • 2024-0102: Message and order authorizing the City of Boston to accept and expend the amount of Four Million Six Hundred One Thousand Five Hundred Eighty-Nine Dollars ($4,601,589.00) in the form of a grant for the Government Center Garage/Hub on Causeway Arts and Placemaking Fund, awarded by the Boston Planning Development Agency to be administered by the Mayor’s Office of Arts and Culture. The grant will fund public art and placemaking, including seed funding for City Hall Plaza programming.

    Mar 22, 2023

    ·Boston, MA
    Proposal
    Source
  • Neighborhoods, Education, Civil Rights, and Culture Committee — Agenda 2023-03-10

    Mar 10, 2023

    ·Seattle, WA
    Agenda

    This is an agenda for the Seattle City Council's Neighborhoods, Education, Civil Rights, and Culture Committee meeting scheduled for March 10, 2023 at 9:30 AM in Council Chamber, City Hall (600 4th Avenue, Seattle, WA 98104). The five-member committee, chaired by Tammy J. Morales with Kshama Sawant as Vice-Chair, planned to consider Resolution 32088, which approves a Memorandum of Agreement with UW Medical Center-Northwest Campus establishing a Development Advisory Committee for preparation of a Major Institution Master Plan for the campus. The meeting included provisions for remote and in-person public comment registration and was allocated 30 minutes for briefing, discussion, and possible vote on the resolution.

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  • Neighborhoods, Education, Civil Rights, and Culture Committee — Minutes 2023-03-10

    Mar 10, 2023

    ·Seattle, WA
    Minutes

    The Seattle Neighborhoods, Education, Civil Rights, and Culture Committee met on March 10, 2023, with all five members present—Chair Tammy Morales, Kshama Sawant, Andrew Lewis, Sara Nelson, and Dan Strauss. The Committee unanimously approved Resolution 32088 (5-0 vote) regarding a Memorandum of Agreement with UW Medical Center-Northwest Campus to establish a Development Advisory Committee for the institution's Major Institution Master Plan. The Committee also heard an information update on the passage of Initiative 135, which creates the Seattle Social Housing Developer Public Development Authority, and discussed Council Bill 120525, which establishes the Race and Social Justice Initiative as City policy and transfers its governance to the Office for Civil Rights within Seattle Municipal Code Sections 3.14.941 through 3.14.945. The meeting ran from 9:31 a.m. to 10:50 a.m.

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  • 22-1120: A resolution approving a proposed Amendatory Agreement between the City and County of Denver and Sewall Child Development Center, Inc. to expand their Culture of Wellness Program. Amends a grant agreement with Sewall Child Development Center, Inc. by adding $428,203.61 for a new total of $713,593.61 and one year for a new end date of 7-31-2023, through funding from the Healthy Food for Denver’s Kids Initiative, to expand their Culture of Wellness Program, which provides family educational activities such as food budgeting, meal planning and gardening at 940 Fillmore Street in Council District 10 (ENVHL- 202159244-00/ ENVHL-202264107). The last regularly scheduled Council meeting within the 30-day review period is on 11-28-2022. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 9-21-2022.

    Sep 12, 2022

    ·Denver, CO
    Proposal
    Source
  • Neighborhoods, Education, Civil Rights, and Culture Committee — Minutes 2022-08-12

    Aug 12, 2022

    ·Seattle, WA
    Minutes

    The Neighborhoods, Education, Civil Rights, and Culture Committee met on August 12, 2022, with Councilmembers Tammy J. Morales, Kshama Sawant, Andrew Lewis, and Sara Nelson present, and Dan Strauss excused. The Committee recommended passage of CB 120399, an ordinance prohibiting false and misleading advertising by limited services pregnancy centers and adding Chapter 7.32 to the Seattle Municipal Code, approved 4–0. The Committee also recommended confirmation of four appointments: Kateri Joe and Evan M. Smith to the Families, Education, Preschool, and Promise Levy Oversight Committee through December 31, 2024; Devon Breithart and Shelby Dey to the Seattle Disability Commission through April 30, 2024; all approved 4–0. The Committee heard a presentation on the Department of Education and Early Learning's Racial Equity Toolkit Analysis Report and discussed CB 120398 relating to the 2018 Families, Education, Preschool, and Promise Levy implementation and evaluation plan.

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  • Neighborhoods, Education, Civil Rights, and Culture Committee — Minutes 2022-04-22

    Apr 22, 2022

    ·Seattle, WA
    Minutes

    This April 22, 2022 Seattle City Council Committee meeting of the Neighborhoods, Education, Civil Rights, and Culture Committee, chaired by Councilmember Tammy J. Morales with four members present and one excused, recommended passage of two historic preservation ordinances: CB 120311 designating the Wagner Floating Home as a landmark and CB 120312 adding it to the Table of Historical Landmarks, and CB 120310 doing the same for The Center for Wooden Boats; both passed unanimously 4–0. The committee held CB 120312 relating to the Seattle-First National Bank Building landmark without voting, heard a presentation on the Seattle Arts Commission 2022 Work Plan, and recommended confirmation of Kayla DeMonte's reappointment to the Seattle Arts Commission for a term through December 31, 2023 by a unanimous 4–0 vote.

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  • 2022-0485: Councilor Fernandes Anderson called Docket #00485, message and order, referred on April 13, 2022 Docket #0488, approving an appropriation of Five Hundred Fifty Million Three Hundred Seventy Thousand Dollars ($550,370,000.00) for the acquisition of interests in land or the acquisition of assets, or the landscaping, alteration, remediation, rehabilitation improvement of public land, the construction, reconstruction, rehabilitation, improvement, alteration, remodeling, enlargement, demolition, removal or extraordinary repairs of public buildings, facilities, assets, works or infrastructure; for the cost of feasibility studies or engineering or architectural services for plans and specifications; for the development, design, purchase and installation of computer hardware or software and computer-assisted integrated financial management and accounting systems; and any and all cost incidental or related to the above described projects; for the purposes of various city departments included Boston Center for Youth and Families, Department of Innovation and Technology, Environment, Fire, Neighborhood Development, Office of Arts and Culture, Parks and Recreation, Police, Property Management, Public Works and Transportation Departments, Boston Public Library, Boston Redevelopment Authority and Public Health Commission, from the Committee on Ways and Means. Hearing no objection, the matter was before the body. On motion of Councilor Fernandes Anderson, the order was read a second time and again passed; yeas 13.

    Apr 7, 2022

    ·Boston, MA
    Proposal
    Source
  • 2021-1870: WHEREAS, Cenythisa “Nita” Strothers, daughter of George Williams and Rachel Strothers-Jenkins, has lived in Hazelwood for 68 years and has been an exemplary advocate, employee, volunteer and friend; and, WHEREAS, Nita began working with the A&P Company before going to the Pittsburgh Board of Education in Manchester and then to the Hazelwood Active Learning Center where she has worked with Paul, Keith and Roberta and served on the Senior Council; and, WHEREAS, Nita is active in the Morningstar Baptist Church, typing the weekly bulletin and singing in the choir. She enjoys dressing up and going out, traveling out of town and participating in Grandparents Day. Nita can be found each morning at her favorite breakfast place and has been known to devote her priceless time and effort to growing and shaping a young Hazelwood resident to become a responsible young man; and, WHEREAS, joining the Arts Excursions Unlimited in 2014, Nita teaches educational programs to children and is on the planning team to plan art and cultural trips for seniors; and,

    Sep 10, 2021

    ·Pittsburgh, PA
    Proposal
    Source
  • 1 PUBLIC MEETING AGENDA IN PERSON: Chicano Park Museum & Cultural Center

    San Diego, CA
    Agenda

    This is a public meeting agenda for the Chicano Park Museum & Cultural Center planning group held on July 19, 2023, in San Diego's Barrio Logan community. The meeting included staff reports from multiple city, county, and federal agencies, an information presentation on Port of San Diego's health risk assessment for portside communities, discussion of a Barrio Logan Community Planning Group special election, and an action item regarding parking district expansion. The next meeting was scheduled for August 16, 2023, with Spanish interpretation available.

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    cultural center planningpublic meetingcommunity planningparking districtport health assessment
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  • C I T Y O F S e a t t l e, W a s h i n g t o n 2004 Proposed Budget

    Seattle, WA
    Budget

    The City of Seattle's 2004 Proposed Budget document presents the city's financial plan under Mayor Gregory J. Nickels and the Seattle City Council, with the Department of Finance organized into five functional teams overseeing utilities, public safety, economic policy, culture and parks, and administrative services. The cover features a historical note about a time capsule discovered during the 2002 demolition of the Seattle Center Opera House, which contained artifacts from the original 1928 Civic Auditorium dedication. This document served as the official budget proposal for the 2004 fiscal year and is available in alternative formats for accessibility compliance.

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    budgetpublic safetyutilities
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  • Portland Development Commission ADOPTED BUDGET PORTLAND DEVELOPMENT COMMISSION

    Portland, OR
    Budget

    The Portland Development Commission adopted its FY 2011-12 budget document, which provides a comprehensive overview of the agency's financial plan, strategic initiatives, and performance metrics. The budget includes detailed sections on total resources and requirements, fund structure, and key performance indicators, along with the Executive Director's message and description of PDC's programs supporting economic development in Portland. The document highlights PDC's work across areas such as clean energy development (including the Vestas wind turbine facility near Wasco), downtown revitalization through Portland Main Street districts, and support for cultural institutions like the Ethos Music Center.

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    budgeteconomic developmentclean energydowntown revitalizationcultural institutions
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  • Download the Presentation to learn more!

    Evanston, IL
    Other

    The City of Evanston hired the Putting Assets to Work consulting team, led by Ben McAdams and including Sean McLean, Ryan Porter, Michael McLean, and Alexandra Stieglitz, to redevelop three underutilized municipal assets: the Police and Fire Headquarters, the former Civic Center, and the Noyes Cultural Arts Center. The team brings experience in community engagement, urban planning, finance, and development, including Michael McLean's prior management of over $100 million in Evanston development projects. The consultants cite relevant precedent projects including the New Rochelle downtown revitalization (13+ million square feet of development) and The Grove in Salt Lake City (244 mixed-income housing units with affordable options). The engagement focuses on transforming these assets into community-enhancing developments aligned with Evanston's evolving needs.

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  • SUMMARY MINUTES FOR THE MEETING OF THE BOARD ...

    Honolulu, HI
    Minutes

    The Board of Land and Natural Resources held a meeting on January 23, 2026, at the Maui Arts and Cultural Center with seven members present (both in-person and via Zoom). The board approved minutes from two previous meetings and unanimously approved Kaheawa Wind Power I's Habitat Conservation Plan and a 25-year Incidental Take License for the operation of its wind energy facility, which permits the incidental take of six protected Hawaiian species including the Hawaiian Hoary Bat, Nēnē, and various seabirds.

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    wind energyhabitat conservationprotected species
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  • C I T Y O F S e a t t l e, W a s h i n g t o n 2013-2014 Proposed Budget

    Seattle, WA
    Budget

    The City of Seattle's 2013-2014 Proposed Budget document outlines the city's financial plan under Mayor Mike McGinn's administration, prepared by the City Budget Office led by Director Beth Goldberg. The budget encompasses various departments and programs including Arts, Culture & Recreation (Parks, Seattle Center, Public Library), Health & Human Services, and Education Support Services, with detailed revenue overviews and financial policies included in the comprehensive document. The budget materials are available in alternative formats and languages in compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act.

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    budgetcity financesparks and recreationhealth serviceseducation funding
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