30 results for “fire department budget”
30 results for “fire department budget”
The Center Township Board met on August 1, 2025, and approved the July meeting minutes, a $10,000 contribution toward a Boys and Girls Club entrance renovation project to enhance child safety, and a $30,000 appropriation to the Township Fire fund. The board tabled a Frankfort Police Department request for an ATV pending additional information and cost quotes, and voted to continue listing the Township building for sale at $385,000.
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The Syracuse Common Council held a regular meeting on May 27, 2025, with all nine members present, where they adopted the previous meeting's minutes and reviewed communications including the Mayor's objections to budget amendments. The Council approved several items including a $500,000 bond ordinance and authorization for a Municipal Dog Shelter Project, agreements with Broadcast Music Inc. ($2,000) and Cumulus Media ($10,000) for promotional services, and a cooperative agreement with the Syracuse City School District for use of Fire Department training facilities at $1 per year.
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Charleston County's FY 2026 Budget was presented on May 22, 2025, with a three-reading ordinance process scheduled for May 22, May 27, and June 10, 2025. The county proposes 33 new positions across departments, including 20 EMS positions, 7 for the Tri-County Biological Science Center, 4 for Awendaw Fire District, and 1 each for Coroner and Public Defender, alongside 4 additional positions in Housing & Land Management, Community Development & Revitalization, Planning & Zoning, and Building Inspections. General Fund appropriations are projected to increase 4.2 percent to $365.5 million in FY 2026 from $350.7 million in FY 2025, while Debt Service appropriations are projected to increase 47.0 percent to $56.5 million from $38.4 million. The Northern Charleston Fire District millage rate increases 0.7 mills to 16.2 mills in FY 2026, resulting in an $11.20 tax change for a $400,000 homeowner, while other county and district millage rates remain unchanged.
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The City Council of Mesa held a study session on May 1, 2025, to hear a presentation and update on the Fiscal Year 2025/26 proposed budget, with six of seven council members present. The proposed budget includes the addition of two fire stations expected to reduce emergency response times, along with multiple generational improvement projects not undertaken for nearly 20 years, and continuation of programs funded through the American Rescue Plan Act during COVID. The budget faces significant financial pressures, including an estimated $20 million ongoing impact to the General Governmental Fund (equating to a $100 million loss over five years), a projected $7 million to $10 million loss from flat income tax, and $27 million to $30 million in ongoing costs from citywide benchmarks and step pay increases. The Utility Fund transfer to the General Fund is calculated at 30% per an ordinance adopted in 2020, with 83% of transfer funds allocated to Public Safety and 16.7% across all other General Fund departments.
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The Hartford Township Board held a regular meeting on January 9, 2025, where members approved budget amendments, bills and payroll totaling $46,827.04, and two financial resolutions regarding depositories and investment policy. The board also approved a laptop purchase for the zoning administrator not exceeding $1,250 and authorized treasurer training membership with the Michigan Association of Municipal Treasurers for $99 annually. An interlocal agreement with the City regarding the Fire Department was deferred to the February agenda for further discussion.
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Boston Township Trustees held their regular meeting on January 8, 2025, where they approved zoning resolution changes and authorized Cathy Anson to reorganize zoning requirements, with a hearing scheduled for February 11th. The township received $6,932.72 from Cuyahoga Falls and $10,901.70 from Peninsula Village through JEDD agreements, and reported operational updates including new police cruisers being equipped, the road department using 100 tons of salt with 140 additional tons delivered, and a Valley Fire District meeting scheduled for January 20th.
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This is an agenda for the sine die and reorganization meeting of the Mayor and Borough Council of East Newark, New Jersey, scheduled for January 8, 2025, at 6:30 PM. The meeting will address final 2024 business including authorization of bill payments totaling $60,501.16 and budget transfers, followed by the administration of oaths of office to Councilwoman Rose Evaristo and Councilman Kenneth Graham. The council will consider 14 consent agenda resolutions covering 2025 operational matters such as meeting dates, official newspapers, depositories, cash management, committee assignments, and appointment of borough professionals including Juan Barroso, Jr., as Fire Official/Inspector. The meeting will also include monthly departmental reports from the Fire, Health, Police, and Senior departments and a public comment period.
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This agenda outlines a Jackson Township Board of Trustees meeting scheduled for August 13, 2024, beginning with a 3:00 P.M. work session on fraud reporting training and tennis court construction, followed by executive sessions on police sergeants' promotions and public works compensation negotiations. The 5:00 P.M. general session includes consideration of a negotiated agreement with the Fraternal Order of Police for sergeants, a School Resource Officer memorandum of understanding, acceptance of donations totaling $370 ($270 from Teeg Family LLC for the Park Division and $100 from John Steffen and Melanie Umlauf for the Fire Department), and appropriation transfer requests from Public Works and Zoning Departments. A public hearing is scheduled at 5:00 P.M. regarding Amendment 20240693, in which the developer proposes reducing dwelling units on a 9.52-acre property at the southeast corner of Dressler and Montgomery from 38 units to 34 units across the revised R-3 PUD general development plan. The agenda also includes noxious weed resolutions, approval of July 23, 2024 meeting minutes, and consideration of the 2025 Alternative Tax Budget Document.
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