22 results for “estate administration”
22 results for “estate administration”
The City of Tampa General Employees' Retirement Fund Board of Trustees held a regular meeting on May 20, 2025, to address actuarial matters, investment performance, and administrative items including disability re-exam audits and retirement applications. The agenda included a first quarter 2025 investment report from Asset Consulting Group and approval of monthly and quarterly invoices totaling approximately $614,988.31 across various fund managers and service providers. The meeting also covered routine consent items such as longevity retirements, deferred retirements, DROP applications, survivor allowances, and estate payments.
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The Fort Worth Housing Solutions Board held a regular meeting on July 21, 2022, to consider multiple resolutions including contracts for lawn services at administration offices and scattered sites, environmental engineering services, property management services, and a workforce training center agreement with CVS at a former Boys & Girls Club site. The agenda also included approval of monthly status reports from various departments, acceptance of payoff loans for Fair Oaks and Fair Park Apartments, and adoption of a new Section 3 policy to comply with updated regulations for small housing authorities. An executive session was scheduled to discuss potential real property transactions involving Butler, Crestwood, Palm Tree, and Cambri properties.
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The Florida Real Estate Commission held a scheduled meeting on December 13-14, 2016, in Orlando to review administrative and legal matters including enforcement trends, exam performance, financial reports, and license application counts. The agenda included consideration of two petitions for declaratory statements, review of education course approvals, legal case activity reports, and escrow disbursement orders. The next regular FREC meeting was scheduled for January 17-18, 2017.
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This document is a South Carolina Archives summary guide for Greenville County, established in 1786, that catalogs historical records held in the state archives. The guide lists the Register of Mesne Conveyances records spanning 1787–1947, including 78 microfilm reels and 4 volumes of conveyance books (1787–1929), 9 reels of plat books (1897–1912), and 78 reels of real estate mortgage books (1872–1907), among other property-related documents. The Commissioner of Locations section contains 5 microfilm reels of plat books (1804–1846) and 2 reels of warrant of survey books (1844–1880). The Clerk of Court records include 562 volumes of voter registration books (bulk 1925–1936) and a register of medical practitioners spanning 1882–1949. These archival materials serve as primary sources for genealogical, property, and administrative research in Greenville County history.
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The Township of Upper St. Clair, Pennsylvania adopted its 2025 budget under the leadership of a seven-member Board of Commissioners chaired by Daniel R. Paoly and Township Manager Matthew R. Serakowski. The comprehensive 369-page budget document includes detailed sections covering the general fund, revenues (including real estate taxes, earned income taxes, licenses, and permits), expenditures across multiple programs, and long-term financial planning with five-year projections and capital improvement initiatives. Key departmental areas outlined include general government administration, public safety (police, fire, and animal control), and community development.
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Mayor George C. Brown's 2025 budget address for the City of Wilkes-Barre identifies two major fiscal challenges: the potential loss of approximately $750,000 in annual real estate tax revenue from Commonwealth Health Wilkes-Barre General Hospital and an over 11% increase in employee healthcare costs. To offset these challenges, the administration expects increased construction and building permit revenue from major development projects including the Wright Center expansion, Meyers High School renovation into apartments and retail, the First National Bank Building purchase, and Sphere International's mixed-use development, along with anticipated increases in Earned Income Tax. The budget emphasizes cost-cutting measures in overtime and contract work, continued staffing priorities for Fire, Police, and DPW departments, infrastructure improvements including $1.1 million in Solomon's Creek flood protection and $1.5 million for Brookside Levee protection, and quality-of-life initiatives such as community policing programs and street repairs.
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The Metropolitan Utilities District scheduled committee and regular board meetings for October 1, 2025, beginning at 12:30 p.m. with committee sessions covering construction and operations, services and extensions, personnel, and judicial and legislative matters. Key agenda items included capital expenditures, lead service line replacement change orders, wage and salary increases, selection of a Vice President for Construction, dental and vision benefit administration recommendations, and a surplus property declaration for 4204 Ames Ave. The regular monthly board meeting was scheduled to follow at 1:45 p.m., with items from all committees to be presented for approval alongside public comment and a closed session on litigation, personnel, and real estate matters.
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This 2023 taxation chapter from Ontelaunee Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania establishes the comprehensive regulatory framework governing multiple tax categories including real estate tax, earned income tax, local services tax, and realty transfer tax. The document sets the tax collector's compensation at $3.00 per real estate tax bill collected (including street light assessments) and $3.00 per interim tax bill collected, effective January 1, 2020. The chapter also addresses tax administration procedures, penalty structures, exemptions, and delinquent tax collection mechanisms across nine articles covering collector compensation, real estate taxation, earned income tax, local services tax, realty transfer tax, per capita tax repeal, delinquent tax collection, and economic stimulus tax exemptions.
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This document is a legal notice from the Schuylkill Legal Record announcing the appointment of executors, executrices, and administrators for multiple estates in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania. The notice informs creditors and debtors of the deceased individuals that claims should be submitted and debts paid to the named representatives or their attorneys without delay. The document lists thirteen estates across two publication rounds, including the names of the deceased, their last residences in Schuylkill County, the appointed representatives, and contact information for the handling attorneys.
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The City of Hazleton's 2024 proposed operating budget totals $25,025,850 across six fund budgets, with the General Fund comprising $15,943,945, the Pension Fund $6,629,877, Recreation Fund $201,150, Airport Fund $895,730, Debt Service Fund $519,667, and Liquid Fuels Fund $835,481. After successfully exiting ACT 47 in 2023, Mayor Jeff Cusat's administration is proposing a 1.15 million dollar increase in real estate taxes to address three major obligations, while recommending a 50 percent reduction in ACT 205 EIT taxes, with the expectation that most city workers will see a net tax reduction. The Debt Service Fund sees a significant increase in 2024 due to a balloon principal payment related to unfunded debt borrowing from 2018. The budget was presented by Mayor Jeff Cusat and City Administrator Dan Lynch.
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