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15 results for “enforcement procedures” · 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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City of Stamford Zoning Regulations April 1, 2022

Apr 1, 2022

·Stamford, CT
Other

The City of Stamford Zoning Regulations document dated April 1, 2022 presents a reorganization and restructuring of the city's zoning code, mapping previous sections into a new framework while maintaining substantive zoning requirements. The reorganization consolidates related provisions into broader categories, including General Provisions (Section 1), Permits and Administration (Section 2), and Definitions and Standards (Section 3), with corresponding updates to enforcement, appeals, and amendment procedures. The document serves as the authoritative reference for zoning districts, permit requirements, compliance standards, and administrative procedures governing land use and development in Stamford.

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zoningzoning codeland usepermits and administrationdevelopment regulations
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  • Tulsa Zoning Code Adopted November 05, 2015 Effective January 01, 2016

    Nov 5, 2015

    ·Tulsa, OK
    Other

    The Tulsa Zoning Code was adopted November 5, 2015, and became effective January 1, 2016, with amendments continuing through October 21, 2025. The code is organized as Title 42 of the Tulsa Revised Ordinances and comprises 90 chapters covering zoning districts (residential, mixed-use, commercial/industrial, overlay, special, and legacy), building types and use categories, supplemental regulations, parking, signs, landscaping, outdoor lighting, review procedures, administration, nonconformities, violations and enforcement, and measurements. The document spans 400 pages and establishes comprehensive zoning and property restriction standards for the City of Tulsa.

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    zoningland usebuilding codeordinanceenforcement
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  • CHAPTER 31: SUBDIVISION ORDINANCE Article I. PLAN COMMISSION

    Fort Worth, TX
    Other

    This document is the table of contents and organizational framework for Chapter 31 of a municipal code governing subdivision regulations. The chapter establishes procedures and standards for land subdivisions through nine articles covering the Plan Commission, Development Review Committee, platting requirements, submission and review processes, design standards, and public improvements. The subdivision ordinance was originally adopted in 2006 (Ord. 17154) and subsequently restructured in 2007 (Ord. 17851), with detailed sections addressing street design, lot configuration, easements, stormwater management, and enforcement mechanisms.

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    subdivision regulationsland developmentplat requirementsdesign standardspublic improvements
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  • Welcome to the Office of Open Records

    Stroudsburg, PA
    Other

    Monroe County, Pennsylvania established an Office of Open Records to enforce the Right-to-Know Law (Senate Bill 1, Act 3 of 2008), which provides public access to county records and establishes appeal procedures for denied requests. The office, headed by Open Records Officer Greg Christine, operates from Room 206 of the Monroe County Administrative Building at One Quaker Plaza in Stroudsburg, with hours from 9:00 am to 5:00 pm Monday through Friday, closed on major holidays. Citizens may submit records requests in person (Room 201, Monday–Friday 8:30 am to 4:30 pm), by mail, email, or fax at (570) 517-3851, and the office provides a Citizens Guide and cost information for records requests.

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  • Subdivision and Land Development Ordinance(SALDO)

    Scranton, PA
    Other

    This document is the Subdivision and Land Development Ordinance (SALDO) for the City of Scranton, Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania, effective April 1, 1996. The ordinance establishes comprehensive procedures and requirements for land subdivision and development, organized into multiple articles covering general provisions, definitions, procedures, sketch plans, and related processes. The document outlines standards for land development submissions, fees, interpretation rules, enforcement mechanisms, and the creation of a Subdivision Bureau to administer the ordinance. The ordinance was filed as Council File #13 in 1996 and is 109 pages in length.

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  • Lackawanna County Arrest, Court, and Public Records | StateRecords.org

    Scranton, PA
    Other

    This document describes Lackawanna County criminal statistics and procedures for accessing criminal records in Pennsylvania. According to 2017 data from the Pennsylvania Uniform Crime Reporting System, Lackawanna County law enforcement recorded 3,841 index crimes, comprising 3,000+ property crimes (including 2,501 larceny-thefts, 614 burglaries, and 216 motor vehicle thefts) and 480 violent crimes. The Pennsylvania State Police Department maintains the central repository of statewide criminal records and offers two methods for public access: online through the Pennsylvania Access to Criminal History (PATCH) system at $22 per request, or by mail to the Central Repository in Harrisburg (1800 Elmerton Avenue) for $22 plus $5 for notarized copies. Sex offender information is available through the Pennsylvania State Megans Law Website, searchable by location and compliance status, with optional email notification registration.

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  • Court Records | Eugene, OR Website

    Eugene, OR
    Other

    The Eugene Municipal Court Records page outlines the public's right to request court documents and provides information about the expungement process. Members of the public may request copies of non-exempt Eugene Municipal Court records for a minimal fee set by the city recorder, though the court may take reasonable time to determine if records are confidential. The page details expungement procedures under Oregon law, including eligibility timelines (ranging from 60 days to three years depending on case outcome), a $60 administrative fee, and required documentation including a Motion and Declaration form and fingerprint card from local law enforcement.

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  • 1 CODIFIED ORDINANCES OF YORK PART ONE - ADMINISTRATIVE CODE

    York, PA
    Other

    This document is the table of contents and introductory section of the Codified Ordinances of York, Pennsylvania, Part One - Administrative Code, which consolidates and codifies the city's general and permanent ordinances as of 1977. The ordinances are organized into nine titles covering general provisions, legislative procedures, administrative offices and departments (including mayor, city clerk, police, fire, public works, and community development), employment and pension provisions, and authorities and boards. The document establishes the legal framework for York's municipal governance and administration.

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    municipal governancecity administrationadministrative codeordinance enforcement
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  • Jim Thorpe Area School District - - carbon County, Pennsylvania

    Jim Thorpe, PA
    Other

    The Pennsylvania Department of the Auditor General conducted a performance audit of Jim Thorpe Area School District covering October 2009 through March 2012, finding the district complied with applicable state laws, contracts, grant requirements, and administrative procedures in all significant respects. The audit identified three findings including errors in pupil membership reporting that resulted in subsidy underpayment, a possible conflict of interest, and outdated memoranda of understanding with local law enforcement, along with one unrelated observation. The auditor general recommended implementing measures to improve operations and facilitate compliance with legal and administrative requirements.

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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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  • Zoning Hearing Board - Zoning Board Meetings - York Township

    York, PA
    Other

    The York Township Zoning Hearing Board is a quasi-judicial body that hears appeals of zoning officer determinations and grants relief from strict enforcement of the zoning ordinance in hardship cases. The board typically meets on the fourth Tuesday of each month at 6:00 p.m. at the York Township Administration Office in Dallastown, PA. The document outlines the board's composition (five members plus alternates), contact information, meeting procedures, and public participation rules, which require compliance with decorum standards under penalty of Pennsylvania law.

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    zoningzoning boardzoning appealspublic meetingspennsylvania
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  • Lane Code CHAPTER 11 CONTENTS August 2025 11-i BUILDINGS 11.005

    Eugene, OR
    Other

    This document is a table of contents and opening sections of Lane County Code Chapter 11, which establishes building regulations and codes effective August 2025. The chapter adopts the State Building Code as defined in ORS 455.010(9), specifically incorporating the Oregon Structural Specialty Code 2014 and Oregon Residential Specialty Code 2017, with exemptions noted in sections 101.2, 105, R101.2, and R105. The code also adopts Appendix O for Tsunami Loads, requiring buildings in risk category IV within designated Tsunami Inundation Zones (as determined by DOGAMI) to comply with current standards. The chapter is organized into major regulatory sections covering buildings, manufactured homes and recreational vehicle siting, historic structures, recreation parks, and enforcement procedures for noncompliance.

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    building codesstructural safetymanufactured homeshistoric structuresenforcement
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  • Louisville Metro Records Retention Schedule

    Louisville, KY
    Other

    This document is the Records Retention Schedule for Louisville Metro, a comprehensive guide prepared by the Local Records Branch and approved by the State Libraries, Archives, and Records Commission that defines how various categories of public records should be managed and retained. The schedule establishes key definitions and protocols including designations for permanent records (P), confidential records (C), and vital records (V), as well as procedures for record destruction requiring completion of destruction certificates and approval from the Department for Libraries and Archives. The document emphasizes that local government officials are responsible for understanding and enforcing applicable confidentiality laws and maintaining vital records protection plans for emergency preparedness.

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    records managementdocument retentionarchivesgovernment complianceemergency preparedness
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  • Adopted by the Board of County Commissioners of Worcester ...

    Worcester, MA
    Other

    The Worcester County Board of County Commissioners adopted Title 1 Zoning Regulations, a comprehensive ordinance establishing zoning districts and regulations for the county. The regulations cover general provisions including definitions, zoning district establishment, permit requirements, appeals procedures, enforcement mechanisms, and nonconformities, with the stated purpose of promoting public health, safety, and welfare while coordinating development in accordance with the County's Comprehensive Plan. The ordinance applies to both private and county-owned lands and structures, requiring county agencies to submit development plans to the Planning Commission for review.

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    zoning regulationspermit requirementsland developmentcounty planningenforcement procedures
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