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30 results for “fire infrastructure”

  • RS2026-1823: A resolution authorizing The Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County to abandon existing public water and sanitary sewer mains, fire hydrant assembly and sanitary sewer manholes, and to accept new public water and sanitary sewer mains, fire hydrant assembly and sanitary sewer manholes, for property located at 110 Berry Street, also known as Berry Street Infrastructure (MWS Project Nos. 25-WL-71 and 25-SL-167 and Proposal No. 2025M-197ES-001).

    Feb 19, 2026

    ·Nashville, TN
    Proposal
    Source
  • Responses to City Council – February 17, 2026 | PDF

    Feb 17, 2026

    ·Scranton, PA
    Other

    On February 17, 2026, the City of Scranton provided responses to questions raised by City Council members during the February 10 meeting. Key topics included the pending grant application for Engine 10 fire station upgrades on East Mountain, coordination with Pennsylvania American Water Company (PAWC) on aging water main infrastructure following a recent break in the Hill Section, and a request for documentation of purchases and services rendered under emergency declarations (invoices still being compiled). Additionally, responses addressed a 30-day extension signed February 9, 2026 for the Fidelity Bank building purchase, and clarification that questions regarding non-respondents to an HUP Test mailing were forwarded to the Lackawanna County Tax Assessment Office.

AI summary

fire station upgradeswater infrastructureemergency declarationsproperty acquisition
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  • 2026-0321: Councilor Santana called Docket #0321, message and order authorizing the City of Boston to accept and expend the amount of One Hundred Forty Thousand Four Hundred Twenty-Six Dollars ($140,426.00) in the form of a grant, the FY25 Port Security Grant, awarded by Federal Emergency Management Agency to be administered by the Fire Department. The grant would fund strengthened port-wide risk management and protection of critical surface transportation infrastructure from acts of terrorism, major disasters, and other emergencies, from the Committee on Public Safety and Criminal Justice. No objection being heard, the matter was properly before the body.

    Feb 6, 2026

    ·Boston, MA
    Proposal
    Source
  • AGENDA - COUNCIL MEETING - TUESDAY - DECEMBER 16, 2025 - 5:30 P. M.

    Dec 16, 2025

    ·Houston, TX
    Agenda

    This is the agenda for Houston City Council's December 16–17, 2025 meeting scheduled to begin at 5:30 p.m. on December 16 at City Hall (901 Bagby) with reconvening at 9:00 a.m. on December 17. The agenda includes Motions 2025-0856 through 2025-0874, Ordinances 2025-1032 through 2025-1064, and Resolutions 2025-0046 through 2025-0047, along with a Consent Agenda of 53 items. Notable items include Motion 2025-0859 to amend previous motion 2025-806 to add a "September 11th Floating Holiday" for Municipal, Classified Police, and Fire Fighter employees; Motion 2025-0871 recommending designation of a banner district in the Houston Design District; and Motion 2025-0860 approving the Fiscal Year 2026 Operations and Maintenance Budget for the Lake Conroe Dam and Reservoir Project at $5,623,010.00 from the Enterprise Fund. The meeting will also include public speakers, a Mayor's Report, and acceptance of completed work contracts for infrastructure projects including Clinton Drive Lift Station Improvements, a 72-inch water line project, and emergency drainage repairs.

    AI summary

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  • Hazleton City Council Meeting Minutes July 22, 2025 Page 1 MINUTES

    Jul 22, 2025

    ·Hazleton, PA
    Minutes

    On July 22, 2025, Hazleton City Council held a regular meeting where Governmental Consulting Strategies and National Water Specialties Co. presented fire protection and backflow prevention programs, proposing to conduct inspections and generate revenue for the city while improving compliance and ISO ratings. The council approved previous meeting minutes and opened material bids for 2025, with a public member questioning the timing of bid openings and inquiring about funding for the Alter Street Streetscape Phase 2 and Phase 3 project, which the mayor indicated would be funded through multimodal grants.

    AI summary

    fire protectionwater infrastructurestreet improvementspublic biddinggrant funding
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  • Minutes from the July 22, 2025 Regular Meeting

    Jul 22, 2025

    ·Hazleton, PA
    Minutes

    On July 22, 2025, Hazleton City Council held a regular meeting where they approved minutes from the previous session and heard presentations from Governmental Consulting Strategies and National Water Specialties regarding fire protection and backflow prevention programs that would generate revenue for the city while improving compliance and ISO ratings. The council also opened 2025 material bids and discussed Resolution 2025-26 regarding the Alter Street Streetscape Phase 2 and 3 project, which will be funded through multimodal grants, with a citizen questioning the timing of certain contract awards on the agenda.

    AI summary

    fire protectionwater infrastructurestreet improvementpublic biddinggrant funding
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  • CARROLL TOWNSHIP BOARD OF SUPERVISORS MEETING MINUTES JULY 14, 2025

    Jul 14, 2025

    ·Carlisle, PA
    Minutes

    On July 14, 2025, Carroll Township's Board of Supervisors approved several items including authorization for a license plate reader system at the U.S. Route 15/Spring Lane Road/Ore Bank Road intersection at a cost of $7,500 annually over five years, and approval of the Treasurer's Report showing an open bill list of $212,730.01 through July 9, 2025. The board tabled discussion of a 2026-2029 Police Services Agreement with Franklintown Borough until an August 4 work session. The meeting also included review of June 2025 fire and police reports.

    AI summary

    public safetyroad infrastructurebudgetpolice services
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  • RS2025-1251: A resolution authorizing The Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County to abandon existing public water main and to accept new public water main and fire hydrant assemblies, for property located at 1221 Grundy Street, also known as the Grundy Water Infrastructure (MWS Project No. 24-WL-37 and Proposal No. 2025M-013ES-001).

    May 8, 2025

    ·Nashville, TN
    Proposal
    Source
  • AMBLER BOROUGH COUNCIL REGULAR MEETING AGENDA April 15, 2025 7:00 p.m. I.

    Apr 15, 2025

    ·Ambler, PA
    Agenda

    Ambler Borough Council held a regular meeting on April 15, 2025, with an agenda covering departmental reports from police, fire, EMS, and public works, as well as committee reports and several motions. Key items included approval of March 2025 bills totaling $1,454,104.22, authorization to proceed with Race Street EV Charger Replacement and T2 Systems e-ticketing projects, advertising of Zoning Ordinance No. 1145, and appointment of Melissa Coleman to the Human Relations Commission. The meeting minutes from March 18, 2025 document prior council activities, including approval of February bills ($554,755.78) and public comments regarding sewer odor issues being addressed by management.

    AI summary

    budget approvalzoning ordinancepublic workselectric vehicle infrastructurehuman relations
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  • 2024-1476: Councilor Santana called Docket #1476, message and order authorizing the City of Boston to accept and expend the amount of Sixty-Two Thousand One Hundred Forty-Nine Dollars ($62,149.00) in the form of a grant, for the FY24 Port Security Grant, awarded by the Federal Emergency Management Agency to be administered by the Fire Department. The grant will fund strengthened port-wide risk management and protection of critical surface transportation infrastructure from acts of terrorism, major disasters, and other emergencies, from the Committee on Public Safety & Criminal Justice. On motion of Councilor Santana, the order was passed.

    Sep 30, 2024

    ·Boston, MA
    Proposal
    Source
  • APPROVED MINUTES Hartford Township Regular Board Meeting, June 13, 2024

    Jun 13, 2024

    ·Hartford, CT
    Minutes

    The Hartford Township Board met on June 12, 2025, and approved the 2025 tax rates (Operating .8170, Roads 1.4061, Fire Apparatus .7006) following a Truth in Taxation public hearing. The board also approved budget amendments, authorized payment of bills and payroll totaling $61,178.08, and allocated $87,500.00 for the first installment of MEC Fiber Aid Construction using ARPA and General Fund monies. Additional actions included approving a January 2026 completion timeline for a dangerous building at 60892 61st Ave and presenting the 2025-2026 budget for the General, Road, Fire, and Building Funds.

    AI summary

    tax ratesbudget amendmentsfiber infrastructuredangerous buildingpayroll
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  • 2024-0910: On the message and order, referred on June 5, 2024, Docket #0910, authorizing the City of Boston to accept and expend the amount of Sixteen Thousand Eight Hundred Twenty-Five Dollars ($16,825.00) in the form of a grant, for the FY2020-2021 Port Security Grant, awarded by the Federal Emergency Management Agency to be administered by the Fire Department. The grant will fund and support increased port-wide risk management and protect critical surface transportation infrastructure from acts of terrorism, major disasters, and other emergencies, the committee submitted a report recommending the order ought to pass. The report was accepted; the order was passed.

    May 17, 2024

    ·Boston, MA
    Proposal
    Source
  • 24-0542: A bill for an ordinance authorizing a transfer from the Gateway Impact Fee Trust Fund to the Capital Improvements and Capital Maintenance Fund and making appropriations in the Capital Improvements and Capital Maintenance Fund to support the Gateway Infrastructure projects. Approves the transfer of funds and subsequent appropriation of $1,129,000 from the Gateway Impact Fee Trust Funds to the Capital Improvement Fund for Gateway Regional Infrastructure for the construction of a fire station, in Council District 11. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 4-23-2024.

    Apr 16, 2024

    ·Denver, CO
    Proposal
    Source
  • OHIO TOWNSHIP BOARD OF SUPERVISORS REGULAR MEETING August 7, 2023

    Aug 7, 2023

    ·Columbus, OH
    Minutes

    On August 7, 2023, the Ohio Township Board of Supervisors held a regular monthly meeting where they approved the July treasurer's report and unanimously authorized payment of invoices totaling $674,680.29. The Board also received a public hearing presentation on the completed 2023 Franklin Park and Ohio Township Joint Comprehensive Plan from consultant HRG for approval. Additionally, the Board reviewed operational reports including the police department's 195 calls for July and fire department activities, while beginning annual inspections of township-owned stormwater management facilities.

    AI summary

    budgetcomprehensive planpublic safetystormwater infrastructure
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  • REVISED July 17, 2023 7:00 PM

    Jul 17, 2023

    ·Seattle, WA
    Agenda

    The Tredyffrin Township Board of Supervisors met on July 17, 2023, to conduct routine business including approval of software and emergency bridge repair proposals, authorization of trash and recycling service bidding, and advancement of several ordinances for public hearings scheduled for August 28. Notable announcements included a joint fire/EMS study meeting with Easttown Township on July 31 and notification that the Chesterbrook Boulevard Leaning Wall Replacement Project would commence that month and continue through the end of 2023. The agenda also included a special presentation for the promotion of Detective Sergeant Jim Slavin to Lieutenant and approval of previous meeting minutes.

    AI summary

    emergency bridge repairtrash and recyclingordinancesfire and emsinfrastructure projects
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  • REVISED July 17, 2023 7:00 PM

    Jul 17, 2023

    ·Evanston, IL
    Agenda

    The Tredyffrin Township Board of Supervisors met on July 17, 2023, to conduct routine township business including approval of software and repair proposals, authorization of bids for trash and recycling services, and scheduling of public hearings for August 28 on four ordinances covering a Verizon cable franchise, industrial pretreatment standards, woodland conservation, and subdivision regulations. The board also announced upcoming infrastructure projects including the Chesterbrook Boulevard Leaning Wall Replacement Project running through the end of 2023 and a joint Fire/EMS Study meeting scheduled for July 31 with neighboring Easttown Township, while honoring Detective Sergeant Jim Slavin's promotion to Lieutenant.

    AI summary

    trash and recycling servicescable franchisewoodland conservationsubdivision regulationsinfrastructure projects
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  • OFFICE OF THE CITY CLERK COUNCIL MINUTES July 3, 2023

    Jul 3, 2023

    ·Mesa, AZ
    Minutes

    The City of Mesa City Council held a Study Session on July 3, 2023, at 5:15 p.m. to review agenda items for the July 3 and July 10, 2023 Regular Council meetings, with Mayor John Giles presiding and six Council members present (Francisco Heredia and Julie Spilsbury participating by video conference), while Alicia Goforth was excused. Items 7a through 7c were removed from the July 10 consent agenda, and discussion included details on The Studios @ Mesa City Center Phase 2 in District 2, which will incorporate music recording audio-visual equipment into a podcast room, and the Gateway Interchange Phase III zoning request for a 9-acre industrial development in District 6 along South 80th Street, where the City acknowledged potential cost-sharing issues with private property owners for water and wastewater infrastructure. The Council also heard a presentation on fireworks enforcement, with Fire Prevention reporting 23 permitted fireworks tents issued in 2023.

    AI summary

    zoningwater infrastructurepublic safety
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  • City of Fresno - Meeting Minutes - Final City Council

    Apr 27, 2023

    ·Fresno, CA
    Minutes

    The Fresno City Council held a regular meeting on April 27, 2023, at 9:09 a.m. with all seven council members present: President Tyler Maxwell, Vice President Annalisa Perea, and Councilmembers Esparza, Karbassi, Arias, Chavez, and Bredefeld. The agenda included a separately noticed 1:30 p.m. special meeting to discuss amendments to the Better Business Act for affordable housing exceptions and city contribution of funds to FCTC Senior, LP for water infrastructure and fire suppression. Several consent calendar items were modified, including removal of item 1-Y related to FCTC Senior, LP funding, item 1-BB regarding Council Communication Policy, removal of a closed session item on anticipated litigation regarding Bakman Water Company v. City of Fresno, and deferral of item 1-AA on a Tower District job creation incentive pilot program to the May 11, 2023 agenda.

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  • 0815-2023: To authorize the Director of Public Safety, on behalf of the Division of Support Services and the Division of Police, to enter into contract with Brakefire Inc. DBA Silco Fire Protection Company, to upgrade the existing security system infrastructure for various Public Safety locations; to waive the competitive bidding provisions of the City Code; to authorize an expenditure of $98,625.00 from Public Safety's Capital Improvement Budget; and to declare an emergency. ($98,625.00).

    Mar 8, 2023

    ·Columbus, OH
    Proposal
    Source
  • 2022-0485: Councilor Fernandes Anderson called Docket #00485, message and order, referred on April 13, 2022 Docket #0488, approving an appropriation of Five Hundred Fifty Million Three Hundred Seventy Thousand Dollars ($550,370,000.00) for the acquisition of interests in land or the acquisition of assets, or the landscaping, alteration, remediation, rehabilitation improvement of public land, the construction, reconstruction, rehabilitation, improvement, alteration, remodeling, enlargement, demolition, removal or extraordinary repairs of public buildings, facilities, assets, works or infrastructure; for the cost of feasibility studies or engineering or architectural services for plans and specifications; for the development, design, purchase and installation of computer hardware or software and computer-assisted integrated financial management and accounting systems; and any and all cost incidental or related to the above described projects; for the purposes of various city departments included Boston Center for Youth and Families, Department of Innovation and Technology, Environment, Fire, Neighborhood Development, Office of Arts and Culture, Parks and Recreation, Police, Property Management, Public Works and Transportation Departments, Boston Public Library, Boston Redevelopment Authority and Public Health Commission, from the Committee on Ways and Means. Hearing no objection, the matter was before the body. On motion of Councilor Fernandes Anderson, the order was read a second time and again passed; yeas 13.

    Apr 7, 2022

    ·Boston, MA
    Proposal
    Source
  • City of Columbia FY 2021-2022 BUDGET OVERVIEW MAY 11, 2021 iStock.com/Kruck20

    May 11, 2021

    ·Columbia, SC
    Budget

    The City of Columbia presented its FY 2021-2022 budget overview on May 11, 2021, establishing a comprehensive plan for resource allocation across direct services (police, fire, parks, public works, water/sewer), supportive services (finance, HR, IT), and non-departmental functions. The budget is funded through multiple revenue sources including property taxes, licenses and permits, charges for services, intergovernmental revenue, and enterprise fund user fees, with all allocations requiring adoption by ordinance and adherence to South Carolina's constitutional requirement for a balanced budget. The budget supports the city's strategic vision focused on attracting talent, community planning, economic prosperity, neighborhood enhancement, and innovative municipal services aligned with Columbia's long-term 2036 vision.

    AI summary

    budgetproperty taxespublic workswater infrastructurepolice and fire
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  • SYRACUSE TOWN COUNCIL REGULAR MEETING June 16, 2009

    Jun 16, 2009

    ·Syracuse, NY
    Minutes

    The Syracuse Town Council held its regular meeting on June 16, 2009, with four members present, approving payment of claims #609–#728, adopting Ordinance 09-05 for two-hour parking on Pearl Street, and issuing a proclamation celebrating the Syracuse-Turkey Creek Township Public Library's 100th anniversary. The council approved a three-year heating and air conditioning maintenance agreement with Havel Brothers at no additional cost through July 31, 2012, and authorized a $19,794.00 purchase of a bad weather warning siren from Federal Signal to be paid from the Cumulative Fire Fund, leaving a balance of $6,910. Town Manager Henry DeJulia also reported on the completion of the Dana Water Tower demolition and delays in obtaining Elkhart County approval for the town's DPUD.

    AI summary

    parking regulationspublic librarymunicipal equipmentwater infrastructurebudget approval
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  • TOWNSHIP AND SPECIAL TAX LEVIES Cl. 73 Act of Dec. 1 ...

    Carlisle, PA
    Proposal

    This legislation amends Pennsylvania's Second Class Township Code to establish and clarify tax levy authorities for second-class townships. The amendments modify Section 3205 regarding township and special tax levies, allowing township boards of supervisors to levy taxes on real property for various purposes, including general township operations (up to fourteen mills, potentially increased to nineteen mills by court petition), highway lighting (five mills), public buildings (fifty percent of general tax rate), fire protection (three mills with provisions for employee compensation), fire hydrants (two mills), parks and recreation, and debt service. The act was passed on December 1, 2004, as House Bill 250 and represents updates to taxation authority originally established in 1933.

    AI summary

    property taxtownship operationstax levyfire protectionpublic infrastructure
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  • Request & Report | Chattanooga.gov

    Chattanooga, TN
    Other

    This page from Chattanooga.gov provides an overview of municipal record request and reporting services available to the public. It lists options for accessing city documents, open records, and citations; requesting reports from fire, police, and other departments; and reporting non-emergency issues such as code violations, damaged infrastructure, and traffic incidents. The platform consolidates various request and reporting functions into one transparent, centralized hub for resident interaction with city government.

    AI summary

    public recordscode enforcementinfrastructure reportingnon-emergency servicesmunicipal requests
    Source
  • AgendaNet - Granicus Meeting Documents

    Nanticoke, PA
    Agenda

    The Planning Commission met on November 4, 2020, to consider two major items: a denial of a use permit for hot air balloon launching on agricultural land in Napa (Item 7A, continued from previous meetings), and approval of a major modification to Cakebread Cellars' winery operations (Item 7B) that would increase production from 500,000 to 800,000 gallons per year and add water storage tanks for fire suppression and domestic use. Staff recommended adoption of the denial resolution for the balloon permit and approval of the Cakebread modification, which was determined to have no significant environmental impacts under CEQA.

    AI summary

    zoningwinery operationswater infrastructure
    Source
  • 12/15/23 2024 Budget | Revenue Stroudsburg Borough

    Stroudsburg, PA
    Budget

    Stroudsburg Borough's 2024 budget revenue document, dated December 15, 2023, outlines projected revenues across multiple fund categories including General Fund, Street, Fire, Capital Equipment, Sewer, Recreation, and others. Major revenue sources include property taxes totaling $3.8 million, Act 511 taxes of $875,000, fines and violations of $665,500, and state grants for parking deck improvements totaling $1 million. The borough also budgeted $589,000 from the ARPA Local Fiscal Recovery Account and anticipated interest income of $102,617 distributed across various funds.

    AI summary

    budgetproperty taxesrevenuestate grantsinfrastructure funding
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  • City of York Code Operations Assessment Report

    York, PA
    Other

    In August 2007, Municipal Resources of Pennsylvania conducted a comprehensive assessment of the City of York's code operations, examining the Permits Office and Fire Prevention Bureau. The report identified significant operational challenges including management issues, customer service concerns, overlapping responsibilities between departments, technology deficiencies, and staffing problems, while recommending improvements in interdepartmental cooperation, customer relations, tracking systems, and information technology infrastructure. The assessment also presented alternative organizational structures to address the identified inefficiencies in code administration.

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  • Page 1 of 2 BOARD OF SUPERVISORS TREDYFFRIN TOWNSHIP

    Phoenixville, PA
    Minutes

    The Tredyffrin Township Board of Supervisors met on January 16, 2024, to conduct township business including the swearing in of a new Township Auditor and a grant funding presentation. The agenda included approval of previous meeting minutes, supervisor liaison reports, and several motions related to infrastructure projects, including bids for the Crabby Creek Stormwater Infiltration Project and Warner Spur Emergency Bridge Repair, as well as a joint fire engine purchase with Easttown Township. The Board also scheduled public hearings and meetings on stormwater and bridge replacement projects throughout January and February 2024.

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  • DOYLESTOWN TOWNSHIP 2022 FINAL BUDGET

    Doylestown, PA
    Budget

    Doylestown Township's Board of Supervisors approved the 2022 Final Budget on December 21, 2021, following a six-month review process involving collaborative input from supervisors, the Ways & Means Committee, the Township Manager, department heads, and finance staff. The comprehensive budget document includes detailed revenue and expense projections across 15 funds, supporting schedules, and five-year financial projections through 2026, covering major revenue sources, expenditures, and tax millage information. Key budget areas addressed include the General Fund, Fire Fund, Parks & Recreation, Water Fund, Debt Service, and Capital Projects, among others.

    AI summary

    budgettax millagecapital projectswater infrastructureparks recreation
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  • Township of ~ 1BILLINGS The Corporation of the Township of Billings

    Billings, MT
    Agenda

    The Township of Billings Council meeting agenda for March 7th, 2023 includes approval of previous meeting minutes, a presentation by Manitoulin Streams on stream protection and restoration projects, and multiple staff reports covering health and safety, by-law enforcement, a backyard chicken by-law amendment, bulk water and fire hall renovation updates, and Old Mill Road tender results. The agenda also addresses correspondence regarding support for the Manitoulin Island Cycling Advocates' 11th annual Manitoulin Passage Ride event and includes routine items such as accounts for payment, information items, and by-law confirmations.

    AI summary

    stream protectionbackyard chicken bylawfire hall renovationroad maintenancepublic safety
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