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16 results for “funding approval” · other

  • official gazette may 4 2022

    May 4, 2022

    ·Spokane, WA
    Other

    On April 25, 2022, the Spokane City Council held a briefing and administrative session where they approved the May 2, 2022 advance agenda by a 6-1 vote and suspended council rules to add items to the agenda. The council also considered Special Budget Ordinance C36195, which would increase appropriations in the American Rescue Plan Fund by $750,000 for additional funding needs related to The Centre (content cut off in document). The document is the official gazette containing meeting minutes, hearing notices, ordinances, and job postings from the City of Spokane.

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    budgetamerican rescue plancouncil meeting
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Participatory Budgeting - City of Jersey City

Jersey City, NJ
Other

In March 2022, Jersey City opened applications for participatory budgeting, inviting residents to submit and vote on community projects for funding up to $50,000 per ward. Approved projects across six wards total $295,000 and include tree-planting initiatives in Wards B, C, D, and F ($170,000 combined), water fountains in four parks ($28,000), family literacy workshops in Ward A ($32,000), playground improvements in Ward E ($15,000), a bus shelter in Ward D ($5,000), planters for downtown safety in Ward E ($30,000), and support for the Big Brother Big Sister Program in Ward F ($15,000). The program allows residents to propose ideas by answering how projects benefit their community and location, after which city departments consolidate similar submissions and develop scopes, timelines, and costs for implementation.

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  • Fiscal Year 2023-25 Overview of the City Budget Process City of Oakland

    Oakland, CA
    Other

    The City of Oakland's fiscal year 2023-25 budget overview describes the city's biannual budget process, which runs from January to June and must result in a balanced budget by June 30. Oakland's total annual budget is approximately $1.7 billion, comprising 62 percent Restricted Funds (grants and voter-approved bonds designated for specific purposes) and 38 percent General Purpose Funds (primarily tax-supported and flexible). Revenue sources include taxes (51 percent), service charges, fines, licenses, and permits (15 percent), bonds and other sources (14 percent), transfers (12 percent), and grants and subsidies (8 percent). The largest departmental allocations are Non-Departmental (23.9 percent), Police Department (21.2 percent), Fire Department (11.5 percent), Oakland Public Works (10.3 percent), and Human Services (7 percent). Property taxes contribute less than 26 cents per dollar to the city, with the remaining amount distributed to other government agencies including Alameda County, Oakland Unified School District, AC Transit, and others.

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  • City Council Approves the City’s 976M Budget for FY 2026

    St. Petersburg, FL
    Other

    On October 6, 2025, the St. Petersburg City Council approved a $976.2 million budget for Fiscal Year 2026, which began October 1, 2025. The budget prioritizes infrastructure strengthening and climate resilience through Mayor Kenneth T. Welch's five Pillars For Progress, including the St. Pete Agile Resilience (SPAR) Program to address hurricane impacts and sea level rise, with $202 million allocated for capital improvements and $352.4 million for Public Works Administration. The budget also includes funding for housing initiatives, homelessness prevention, and community development programs aligned with the city's commitment to equitable development and neighborhood resilience.

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    budgetinfrastructureclimate resiliencepublic workshousing
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  • Oakland's Roadmap To A Sustainable Budget

    Oakland, CA
    Other

    Oakland's November 2024 roadmap document identifies structural budget deficits driven primarily by police department overspending and proposes that fiscal stability requires reforms beyond departmental cuts. Police and fire services consume 70% of the general fund—far higher than peer cities—with police overspending alone accounting for 56% of the 2024-2025 deficit, predominantly from overtime costs that have outpaced both general fund revenue growth and inflation. The document identifies accountability gaps, including 83% of sworn overtime approval records that could not be located or verified, and notes that the majority of city employees earning over $200,000 are sworn officers, with 64% of those earning over $300,000 in that category. The analysis, authored by Bob Brownstein (former Santa Clara County and San Jose budget official), argues that balancing the deficit through cuts to non-sworn services alone is not feasible and that deeper police operational reforms are necessary to protect critical services and achieve fiscal stability.

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  • The Budget Process in PA (PDF)

    Carlisle, PA
    Other

    This document is a search results page listing Pennsylvania Commonwealth budget documents and publications from the Office of the Budget, spanning fiscal years 2008-09 through 2024-25. The page includes references to multiple governors' executive budgets and "Budget in Brief" summaries, with notable items such as $87.6 million allocated for Pennsylvania Pre-K Counts in 2008-09 and property tax relief measures discussed in the 2010-11 budget. The Commonwealth budgets referenced were signed by Governor Wolf across multiple fiscal years, with specific signing dates provided for several budget approvals.

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    budgetproperty tax reliefpre-k fundingexecutive budgetfiscal planning
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  • MEETING NOTICE Orlando City Hall, Veterans Conference ...

    Orlando, FL
    Other

    This is a meeting notice for the July 31, 2024 Community Redevelopment Agency Advisory Board meeting held at Orlando City Hall. The agenda includes election of officers, approval of previous minutes, public comment, and new business items including a retail program funding agreement with Limitless Jewelers LLC, service authorizations for engineering and transportation services related to the Church Street Festival Street Project and Magnolia Avenue Project, and a license agreement with Ivanhoe District, Inc. The notice provides procedures for public participation, including requirements for oral comments (limited to 3 minutes per item) and written comments (maximum 700 words per item, submitted 24 hours in advance).

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  • Fiscal Year 2021-23 Overview of the City Budget Process City of Oakland

    Oakland, CA
    Other

    Oakland's Fiscal Year 2021-23 budget overview describes the city's biennial budget process conducted from February to June, requiring a balanced budget by June 30. The city's total annual budget is approximately $1.7 billion, funded through taxes (51%), service charges, fines, licenses and permits (15%), bonds and other sources (14%), transfers (12%), and grants and subsidies (8%). The budget is divided into Restricted Funds (62%), which must be used for specific purposes mandated by grants and voter-approved bonds, and General Purpose Funds (38%), which are tax-supported and flexible for various city services including public safety. Of every property tax dollar paid, the City of Oakland receives approximately 26 cents, with the remaining 74 percent distributed to other government agencies including Alameda County, OUSD, AC Transit, and BART.

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  • Carlisle Borough Climate Action Plan

    Carlisle, PA
    Other

    Carlisle Borough approved a comprehensive Climate Action Plan on January 13, 2022, developed by the Borough's Climate Action Commission in partnership with ICLEI – Local Governments for Sustainability, to outline local actions and policies for reducing the borough's greenhouse gas emissions. The plan was created through collaboration among local government officials, external agencies including the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, and community stakeholders, with funding support from the US Department of Energy State Energy Program. The document serves as a roadmap for implementing climate mitigation strategies at the local level.

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    climate actiongreenhouse gas emissionssustainabilityenvironmental policy
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  • Meeting Notice Orlando City Hall, Veterans Conference Room, ...

    Orlando, FL
    Other

    This is a meeting notice for the Community Redevelopment Agency Advisory Board scheduled for September 24, 2025, at Orlando City Hall. The agenda includes approval of previous meeting minutes, public comment, and consideration of a Downtown Orlando (DTO) Restaurant Program Funding Agreement with I Love Orlando Café, LLC. The notice outlines procedures for public participation, including requirements for appearance requests, oral comment limitations of 3 minutes per item, and written comment submissions of up to 700 words per item through multiple channels.

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  • Sandra Fisk Vlahanoy City Borough Manager 239 E. Pine St.

    Mahanoy City, PA
    Other

    Mahanoy City Borough, Pennsylvania, has experienced significant population decline from 15,936 residents in 1910 to 3,912 in 2021 due to the collapse of the coal mining industry, resulting in numerous abandoned properties throughout the municipality. To address blight, the Borough established a Blight/Demolition Fund in 2014 funded by real estate taxes (approximately 1.5 mils) and $50,000 annually in earned income tax revenue, supplemented by Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) allocations totaling $96,056 in 2021, of which $45,146 was allocated to demolition projects. The Borough faces potential loss of CDBG funding in 2022 due to Act 179 population requirements and has secured additional grant funding, including approval for $133,000 to demolish three properties.

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  • City of Oakland, CA

    Oakland, CA
    Other

    The document contains the agenda and partial minutes from Oakland's Bicyclist and Pedestrian Advisory Commission (BPAC) monthly meetings held in December 2014 and November 2014. The December 18, 2014 meeting, scheduled from 5:30–7:30 pm at City Hall, included nine commissioners and covered four primary items: design alternatives for a Lake Merritt to Bay Trail pedestrian/bicycle bridge (35 minutes), near-final design review for OBAG-funded bikeways on Oak Street, Madison Street, 8th Street, and 9th Street leading to Lake Merritt BART (30 minutes), adoption of draft commission by-laws (20 minutes), and a three-month agenda look-ahead (15 minutes). The document also references approval of November and December 1 special meeting minutes and provides public comment procedures under Robert's Rules of Order.

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    bicycle infrastructurepedestrian safetytransit planning
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  • Appendix R Structure of Municipal Funds

    Anchorage, AK
    Other

    Appendix R outlines the Municipality of Anchorage's fund accounting structure, which uses Governmental, Proprietary, and Fiduciary Fund types to track resources and ensure compliance with finance-related legal requirements. Governmental funds are grouped into general, special revenue, capital projects, debt service, and permanent funds, with the Anchorage Assembly approving operating budgets at the department level and revenues/expenditures appropriated at the fund level. The document explains that governmental funds use modified accrual accounting, recognizing revenues when measurable and available, and recording expenditures when liabilities are incurred, with exceptions for debt service and compensated absences paid only when due.

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    municipal budgetfund accountinggovernment finance
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  • City of Wilmington

    Wilmington, DE
    Other

    The Wilmington Community Development & Urban Planning Committee held a revised meeting on May 9, 2024, to consider four agenda items including authorization for the Mayor to file federal housing and community development funding applications (Community Development Block Grant, HOME Investment Partnerships, Emergency Solutions Grants, and Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS programs), approval of street and alley removal from the official city map, a major subdivision plan for St. Cyprian's Holdings, LLC, and amendments to Chapter 14 regarding historic markers. Public comment was limited to three minutes per agenda item, with the meeting offered both in-person and virtually via Zoom.

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  • Budget User's Guide Charleston County

    Charleston, SC
    Other

    Charleston County's Budget User's Guide explains the structure and contents of two budget documents: the Approved Budget Detail Book, which contains comprehensive capital listings, full-time equivalent (FTE) employee breakdowns by position and pay grade, and line item budgets; and the Approved Budget Narrative Book, which presents the operating budget through schedules and narratives highlighting major changes from the prior year. The Narrative Book is organized into sixteen sections covering Performance Measures, Overview, Schedules, six Deputy Administrator divisions (Community Services, Finance, General Services, Human Services, and Transportation & Public Works), and sections on Capital, Debt, Long Term Financial Plans, and Appendix. The guide indicates that the Narrative Book includes the County Administrator's Letter to Citizens addressing major policy issues and budget challenges, Budget Highlights that answer frequently asked questions about the total operating budget and tax increases, and a Performance Measures section that documents the County's Mission, Values, Initiatives (goals), and Notable Results. The Overview section provides fund analysis, descriptions of fund types, budget expenditures by fund, financial policies, and revenue assumptions.

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    budget planningcounty budgetfinancial management
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  • Tn

    Nashville, TN
    Other

    This presentation by the Tennessee Division of Local Government Finance introduces new budget and debt manuals for local governments, approved by the State Funding Board in June 2021 pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-3-305. The Debt Manual provides guidance on forms, procedures, and uniform processes for various types of local government debt issuance (bonds, notes, lease financings, and loan agreements) across multiple entity types, and outlines oversight requirements at federal and state levels, including comptroller pre-approval for lease financings effective January 1, 2022.

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    budgetdebt managementlocal government financebond issuancecompliance
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