Town Crier
Request a township
All typesagendaminutesproposalbudgetother
All time30 days90 days1 year

3 results for “cultural organizations” · budget

  • City of Seattle 2022 Adopted Budget Table of Contents Introduction

    Seattle, WA
    Budget

    The Seattle 2022 Adopted Budget document provides a comprehensive table of contents organizing the city's fiscal plan across multiple sections, including an introduction to the budget process, revenue overviews, and departmental allocations covering areas such as arts and culture, parks and recreation, education, and human services. The budget incorporates the Race and Social Justice Initiative and details the Seattle Rescue Plan as key policy components. The document structures budget information through executive summaries, financial policies, and multi-department revenue summaries, though specific budget figures and detailed policy decisions are not provided in this table of contents excerpt.

    AI summary

    budgetrevenueparks and recreationhuman serviceseducation funding
View PDF
Source
  • 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.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • ANNUAL BUDGET AND CAPITAL PLAN

    Tulsa, OK
    Budget

    The City of Tulsa, Oklahoma adopted its Fiscal Year 2016–2017 Annual Budget and Capital Plan under Mayor Dewey F. Bartlett, Jr., with City Manager Jim Twombly, City Auditor Cathy Criswell, and a nine-member City Council representing districts 1–9. The document spans 522 pages and includes comprehensive sections covering budget policies, multiple municipal funds, department budgets, and a Capital Improvements Plan covering fiscal years 2017–2021. The budget book organizes its contents into an Executive Summary, department information, Capital Improvement Plan details, a five-year capital plan summary, and appendices, with direction provided by the Director of Finance Michael P. Kier and Budget & Planning Manager Keith Eldridge. The document uses Tulsa's distinctive architecture as its thematic framework to highlight the city's historical and cultural identity.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource