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17 results for “fire pension”

  • AGENDA TO THE REGULAR ADVISORY COMMITTEE MEETING Tuesday, June 10, 2025

    Jun 10, 2025

    ·Jacksonville, FL
    Agenda

    This agenda document outlines a regular Advisory Committee meeting for the City of Jacksonville Police and Fire Pension Fund scheduled for Tuesday, June 10, 2025, at 9:00 A.M. at 1 West Adams Street, Jacksonville, Florida. The meeting will be held via Zoom with specific login credentials provided, and the committee includes nine members led by Chair James Holderfield, along with fund staff including Executive Director Timothy H. Johnson. The document includes standard administrative information such as accessibility accommodations, public records contact details, and notification that the next meeting is scheduled for September 9, 2025.

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    police pension fundfire pension fundadvisory committee
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  • BL2021-830: An ordinance amending Title 3 of the Metropolitan Code to delete obsolete provisions and add certain Department of Emergency Communications employees to the Fire and Police Service Pension Plan.

    Jul 8, 2021

    ·Nashville, TN
    Proposal
    Source
  • Oakland, CA Code of Ordinances -,) THE CHARTER OF THE CITY OF OAKLAND

    Oakland, CA
    Other

    This document is Oakland, California's City Charter, adopted by voters on November 5, 1968, ratified by the California Secretary of State, and effective January 28, 1969, with amendments through November 2014. The charter establishes the fundamental law governing municipal operations and is organized into twelve main articles covering powers and form of government, the City Council, the Mayor, city officers, the City Manager, administrative organization, the Port of Oakland, fiscal administration, personnel administration, franchises and licenses, elections, and general provisions. The charter also includes appendices addressing specialized funds and systems including the KIDS FIRST! Oakland Children's Fund, Police Relief and Pension Fund, Firemen's Relief and Pension Fund, Oakland Municipal Employees' Retirement System, Police and Fire Retirement System, and off-street vehicular parking regulations. The charter grants Oakland perpetual corporate succession and continuity of existing lawful ordinances, resolutions, and regulations not in conflict with its provisions.

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  • Annual Comprehensive Financial Report

    Oklahoma City, OK
    Budget

    The City of Oklahoma City's Annual Comprehensive Financial Report for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2021, presents comprehensive financial statements prepared by the Finance Department's Accounting Services Division under Controller Alex E. Fedak, CPA. The report includes government-wide financial statements, fund financial statements covering governmental, proprietary, and fiduciary funds, and supplementary information on defined benefit pensions and other post-employment benefits. The document encompasses statements of net position, activities, revenues and expenditures, and cash flows across multiple fund categories including non-major governmental funds, enterprise funds, and internal service funds, with detailed schedules for departments such as police, fire, zoo, and hotel/motel tax operations.

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    annual budgetfinancial statementspension benefitsmunicipal finance
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  • 2020 Approved Annual Operating Budget - City of Toledo

    Toledo, OH
    Budget

    The City of Toledo's 2020 Approved Annual Operating Budget document outlines the fiscal framework for fiscal year 2020, including the city's organizational structure, departmental overviews, and financial plans. The budget document contains comprehensive sections covering budget policies, departmental operating budgets across divisions including police, fire, public utilities, and parks, five-year budget projections, and appendices detailing capital improvement projects, labor contracts, and pension information. Strategic priorities and key performance indicators are identified as part of the city's planning framework, though specific budget figures and policy details are not provided in the table of contents excerpt.

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    budgetmunicipal financecapital improvementspublic safetyutilities
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  • minutes of the meeting of the board of trustees ...

    Tampa, FL
    Minutes

    On October 25, 2023, the Board of Trustees of the Tampa Fire & Police Pension Fund held a regular meeting and approved the minutes from three previous meetings (September 26, September 27, and October 18, 2023). The board unanimously approved consent agenda items 4-11, which included ratifying pension benefits and approving billing for legal services rendered in September 2023. No public comments were submitted during the meeting, and the agenda included discussion of disability applications and other pension fund matters with attendance from board members, legal counsel, medical directors, investment advisors, and fund staff.

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    pension benefitsfire and policefund management
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  • Agenda Tampa Fire & Police Pension Board

    Tampa, FL
    Agenda

    The Tampa Fire & Police Pension Board agenda for April 22, 2026 includes approval of prior meeting minutes, ratification of pension benefits, and admission of 18 new Tampa Fire Rescue hires to the pension fund contingent on medical clearance and provider documentation. An investment management presentation will be provided showing a portfolio market value of $3,545,140,513.75 with a 6.8% return for the quarter ended March 31, 2026, along with approval of legal services billing totaling approximately $8,150 for March 2026.

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    pension benefitsfire rescueinvestment managementlegal services
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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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  • POPULAR ANNUAL FINANCIAL REPORT PENSION & POSTEMPLOYMENT HEALTHCARE

    San Jose, CA
    Budget

    This Popular Annual Financial Report summarizes the financial performance of the City of San José Police and Fire Department Retirement Plan for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2025. The Plan's total net position grew significantly to $5.97 billion (a 9.7% increase), driven by a strong net investment return of 10.0% that exceeded the actuarially assumed rate of 6.625%. During the fiscal year, the Plan successfully guided 90 members through retirement, supported 833 members during open enrollment, and engaged approximately 291 members through counseling sessions and workshops while maintaining operational continuity following a CEO leadership transition in August 2024.

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  • City of Lancaster, Pennsylvania Financial Statements and Required

    Lansford, PA
    Budget

    The City of Lancaster, Pennsylvania's financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2023, present a comprehensive audit report including the Statement of Net Position, Statement of Activities, and detailed fund statements for governmental, proprietary, and fiduciary funds. The document includes required supplementary information on pension plans (Fire, Police, Cash Balance, and Parking Authority), other post-employment benefits (OPEB) liabilities, and budgetary comparison schedules for the General Fund. The financial statements comprise 187 pages of audited financial data and notes covering the city's overall financial position and operational performance for 2023.

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    financial statementsbudgetpension plansopeb liabilitiesaudit report
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  • Municipality Tax Budget 2026 Forms From County Auditor. ...

    Columbus, OH
    Budget

    The City of Columbus, Ohio submitted its 2026 tax budget to the County Auditor, requesting total general property tax revenue of $89,944,000, comprised of $72,757,240 for the General Fund, $8,593,380 for the Police Pension Fund, and $8,593,380 for the Fire Pension Fund, with an estimated tax rate of 3.14 mills inside the limitation. The budget projects total local tax revenues of $1,357,322,000 for 2026, including $1,267,378,000 in municipal income tax and $89,520,000 in real estate property tax, representing increases from 2025 estimates. The budget was required to be adopted by July 20, 2025, with failure to comply resulting in loss of local government fund allocation.

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    tax budgetproperty taxmunicipal revenuepolice pensionfire pension
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  • City of Lancaster, Pennsylvania Financial Statements and Required

    Lancaster, PA
    Budget

    The City of Lancaster, Pennsylvania's financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2023 present a comprehensive audit report including the Statement of Net Position, Statement of Activities, and fund-level financial statements for governmental, proprietary, and fiduciary funds. The document includes required supplementary information covering management's discussion and analysis, pension plan liabilities and contributions for fire, police, cash balance, and parking authority plans, as well as other post-employment benefits (OPEB) obligations across general, water, and sewer funds. Budgetary comparison schedules and detailed notes to the financial statements provide context for the city's financial position and operational activities during the fiscal year.

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    budgetfinancial statementspension liabilitieswater infrastructuresewer fund
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  • Ne

    Lincoln, NE
    Budget

    The City of Lincoln, Nebraska submitted its annual budget beginning September 1, 2020 to the Government Finance Officers Association (GFOA) for a Distinguished Budget Presentation Award, which the city had previously received for meeting program criteria as a policy document, operations guide, financial plan, and communication device. The budget document includes comprehensive sections on budget highlights, city profile, goals, tax information, financial policies, departmental budgets for 16 city departments, and a capital improvement program with multiple funding mechanisms including general obligation bonds, revenue bonds, and state revolving loan financing. The city also received "Special Performance Measures Recognition" in addition to the budget award. The document serves as both a financial plan detailing sources and uses of funds across multiple funds including the General Fund, Water Fund, Wastewater Fund, Police and Fire Pension Fund, and others, and as a policy guide referencing the City Charter and Nebraska Statutes.

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    budgetmunicipal financecapital improvement
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  • agenda | LAFPP - City of Los Angeles

    Los Angeles, CA
    Agenda

    The Los Angeles Fire and Police Pension System (LAFPP) Board of Fire and Police Pension Commissioners held a meeting on May 3, 2018, to address five items for board action, including a DROP cost neutrality study request, Chestnut Tower loan refinancing approval, review of a domestic small cap growth equity contract, determination of maximum retired sworn non-Medicare health subsidies for fiscal year 2018-2019, and interviews with actuarial consulting firms. The meeting also included reports on relief association premium information, private equity and commodities investment activity, and miscellaneous correspondence from money managers and consultants. The agenda emphasized public participation opportunities through speaker cards and detailed accessibility accommodations, with documents available at the LAFPP office or website.

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    pension systemfire and policeinvestment managementhealth benefitsfiscal planning
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  • Bethlehem-pa

    Bethlehem, PA
    Other

    Article 151 of the City of Bethlehem's ordinances establishes and governs the Firemen's Pension Fund, created under authority of the Third Class City Code. The fund charges paid Fire Department members 7% of their pay, plus an additional 1% to cover benefits for surviving spouses and children under age 18 of retired, killed, or deceased members. The City must annually appropriate to the fund no less than one-half of one percent of all City taxes levied (excluding debt service taxes), beginning in 1949 and continuing thereafter. The fund is invested and merged with joint funds under Article 156 of the City's ordinances, with annual appropriations made in accordance with Pennsylvania's Act 205 of 1984 (Municipal Pension Plan Funding Standard and Recovery Act). Membership in the fund is voluntary for all paid firemen employed in the Bureau of Fire.

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  • Adopted 2023 Budget

    Lancaster, PA
    Budget

    The City of Lancaster adopted its 2023 budget on December 20, 2022, which includes a proposed 8 percent property tax increase—the first increase in four years. Mayor Danene Sorace noted that the increase was necessary due to rising costs in medical expenses, pension contributions, and inflation that exceeded savings achieved through fee increases, efficiency improvements, and debt refinancing. The mayor emphasized a structural budget challenge: property taxes, the city's largest revenue source at approximately $30 million annually, do not cover public safety expenses (police and fire), which comprise roughly 60 percent of the total budget.

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    budget adoptionproperty tax increasepublic safetypension contributionsrevenue
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  • CITY OF PROVIDENCE FY23 BUDGET

    Providence, RI
    Budget

    The FY23 City of Providence budget totals $567,341,359, representing a 5.15% increase, and is structured as a balanced budget emphasizing investments in youth, city services, and infrastructure. Key allocations include $100,323,373 for pension fund payments, $498.8 million for major infrastructure improvements over FY23-27, $1,526,715 for police and fire training academies to recruit up to 50 new officers and firefighters, and $721,176 for a behavioral health crisis response program. The budget also reflects tax rate adjustments across residential, commercial, tangible, and motor vehicle categories, with residential tax rates decreasing by $6.06 per $1,000 valuation, and the city achieved its first rainy day fund reserve goal of 5% since 2008 with a current balance of $28,818,000.

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    budgetinfrastructurepublic safetypension fundingtax rate
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