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5 results for “enforcement actions” · other

  • City of Scranton Council Responses – July 7, 2026 | PDF

    Jul 7, 2026

    ·Scranton, PA
    Other

    This document contains responses from City of Scranton administration to questions raised by Council members at a June 30, 2026 meeting, prepared for July 7, 2026. Key responses include clarification that street vacation does not transfer title to abutting property owners, who must pursue separate legal action; DPW will resume refuse pickup at St. Lucy's Church's new location at 949 Scranton Street; knotwood at East Mountain Road and Yesu Drive was cut a second time on June 30 and is not obstructing line of sight; and Code Enforcement issued a Quality of Life citation to Robert McHale at 419 10th Avenue for a dangerous tree, with the owner qualifying for low-to-moderate income tree removal assistance through available funding. The document also references unresolved inquiries from Council President Schuster regarding nuisance property definitions and police reporting procedures, and from Vice President Flynn regarding code enforcement actions and structural review at 1021 Richmont Street.

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Worcester County, Massachusetts Public Records Lookup | WorcesterRecords.us

Worcester, MA
Other

This document describes Worcester County, Massachusetts's public records system and compliance framework rather than summarizing a specific budget, policy decision, or government action. It defines categories of accessible public records (court records, property deeds, vital records, business licenses, tax records, election data, meeting minutes, financial documents, law enforcement reports, and zoning records) and identifies custodian agencies including the Worcester City Clerk's Office, Worcester Registry of Deeds, and Massachusetts Trial Court system. Worcester County operates under Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 66, § 10, which requires records custodians to provide requested documents within 10 business days, and the county complies with state open meeting laws under Chapter 30A, §§ 18-25. The document does not contain specific budget figures, named initiatives, votes, dates, or quantitative metrics beyond the 10-business-day response requirement.

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  • Outline of Nebraska Open Meetings Act | Nebraska Attorney General Mike Hilgers

    Omaha, NE
    Other

    This document outlines Nebraska's Open Meetings Act (Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 84-1407 through 84-1414), which establishes the state policy that all public body meetings must be open to the public to enable citizen participation in democratic processes. The Act, originally passed as part of LB 325 in 1975 and formally named in 2004, covers various provisions including meeting definitions, notice requirements, virtual conferencing options, emergency meetings, public rights, minutes procedures, closed sessions, circumvention prohibitions, enforcement actions, and criminal sanctions. The fundamental purpose of Nebraska's open meetings laws is to ensure that public policy formation occurs transparently at open meetings rather than in secret, except when protection of the public interest clearly requires a closed session on specific matters.

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    open meetingspublic transparencygovernment accountabilitymeeting procedureslegal compliance
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  • PUBLIC MEETING MINUTES

    Dallas, TX
    Other

    The Development Standards Committee of The Woodlands Township held a regular meeting on January 23rd, 2025, at which members approved the previous month's minutes and unanimously adopted summary action lists for six commercial development items (B, C, E, G, H, XIV) and nine residential items (2, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14). The committee also began consideration of enforcement and covenant compliance matters, including an alleged property maintenance violation at 118 West Elm Crescent in the Village of Alden Bridge, though the document appears incomplete regarding the outcome of that discussion.

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    development standardscommercial developmentresidential developmentproperty maintenancecovenant compliance
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  • ABC Meeting Documents, Alcohol & Marijuana Control Office

    Anchorage, AK
    Other

    The Alaska Alcohol & Marijuana Control Office's Alcoholic Beverage Control Board held meetings on April 7 and April 14, 2026, with agendas, meeting minutes, director reports, enforcement data, and licensing applications posted for review. The documents indicate routine board operations including review of alcohol licensing statistics, enforcement actions, notices of violation (NOVs), and multiple individual license applications for bars, restaurants, breweries, and other alcohol-serving establishments across Alaska. Meeting recordings and supporting materials were made available to board members, though specific application details were restricted from public website posting.

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    alcohol licensingmarijuana controlenforcement actionsboard meetingslicensing applications
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