30 results for “government forms”
30 results for “government forms”
The City of Hazleton Government Study Commission met on November 5, 2025, with seven commissioners present to discuss the development of a potential Home Rule Charter. The Commission must report its findings and recommendations within nine months from the election date, with options to extend work by an additional nine months to prepare a proposed charter and 2 additional months if recommending district-based council elections. The Commission consulted with officials from Altoona and Williamsport, Pennsylvania, reviewing governance structures including Altoona's strong City Manager model and Williamsport's strong mayor-council form with a 7-member council. A charter and final report must be submitted to the county 13 weeks prior to an election for ballot inclusion, followed by a one-month revision period. Commissioners expressed differing readiness to vote on pursuing a charter, with some requesting additional time to study government models and gather further input before proceeding.
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The City of Hazleton Government Study Commission met on October 21, 2025, at 4:34 PM with seven commission members present to discuss the development of a Home Rule Charter. The commission conducted virtual discussions with representatives from comparable Pennsylvania municipalities: New Castle's Mayor Elisco, who recommended a full-time mayor and five-member City Council structure; Carlisle's Mayor Shultz, whose municipality has approximately 23,500 residents and an annual budget of $60 million under a council-manager form of government; and Wilkes-Barre's Mayor Brown, with approximately 55,000 residents, an annual budget exceeding $60 million, and 90 police officers, 62 firefighters, and 66 DPW employees. The commission must report its findings and recommendations to citizens within nine months from the election date, with possible extensions of nine additional months to prepare a proposed charter and two additional months if recommending district-based council elections; the charter must be completed by mid-August 2026, approximately 13 weeks before the election. The October 7, 2025 meeting minutes were approved unanimously, and the commission discussed potentially changing the location and time of the November 18 meeting.
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The City of Hazleton Government Study Commission held a meeting on October 7, 2025, with six of seven members present to evaluate the city's current form of government over a planned 9-month study period. The Commission will decide whether to recommend retaining the current government structure or draft a Home Rule Charter, with the latter extending the process by an additional 9 months and requiring voter approval via referendum. Regular GSC meetings are scheduled for the 1st and 3rd Tuesday of each month at 4:30 PM at City Hall Conference Room A, with agendas and minutes to be posted on the city website. The Commission is conducting interviews with current and former mayors, city council members, and department heads, and subcommittees held virtual discussions with representatives from Lancaster and Williamsport, both Pennsylvania municipalities with full-time mayors that adopted Home Rule Charters; Lancaster used Home Rule to increase its Earned Income Tax to fund public safety and public works.
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The City of Hazleton Government Study Commission met on August 19, 2025, at 4:30 PM with five of seven members present, chaired by Vice Chairperson Rossanna Gabriel. The Commission approved updated bylaws renaming itself the City of Hazleton Government Study Commission and finalized plans to conduct outreach to Pennsylvania municipalities operating under Home Rule Charters through Halloween, using subcommittees of 2–3 members each with standardized questions. The Commission will also distribute a separate questionnaire to Hazleton's department heads, including the Administrator, using fillable forms to encourage candid responses without direct supervisor involvement. A Public Relations Contact will be appointed from board members to handle public and media inquiries. The next meeting is scheduled for Tuesday, September 2, 2025, at 4:30 PM on the second floor of Hazleton City Hall.
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The City of Hazleton Government Study Commission met on August 5, 2025, at 4:33 PM with seven members present (Allison Keegan, Chairperson; Rossanna Gabriel arrived at 4:39 PM; Philip Bonafair, Thomas Bruno, Jeffrey Cusat, Joseph Yannuzzi, and Joseph Zeller III). The Commission approved July 15, 2025 meeting minutes and invoices unanimously. Pennsylvania Economy League representatives presented materials on the Commission's purpose, bylaws, a work plan, and the Optional Third-Class City Plan B for elected officials, with a recommendation to form sub-committees to interview officials from comparable cities with Home Rule Charters regarding government structure strengths and weaknesses. The study is scheduled for completion within nine months, after which voters will decide on adopting a new government form; if a charter is proposed, the Commission will have an additional nine months to draft it. The next meeting is scheduled for August 19, 2025, at 4:30 PM on the second floor of Hazleton City Hall.
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This Citizens' Guide describes the Hazleton City Government Study Commission, established by voter referendum in May 2025, which will conduct a nine-month study of the city's current Optional Plan B government structure. The Commission will review Hazleton's form of government, compare it to eight comparable Home Rule municipalities (Altoona, Carlisle, Easton, Lancaster, Nanticoke, New Castle, Pittston, and Wilkes-Barre), and interview Hazleton's Mayor, Council President, Council Members, and Department Heads to assess structural strengths and weaknesses. Meeting twice monthly on the 1st and 3rd Tuesday, the Commission will then vote on whether to draft a home rule charter; if approved, it will have an additional nine months to draft the charter before it goes to voter referendum. The guide emphasizes that Home Rule authority allows cities to take any action not prohibited by law, whereas without Home Rule municipalities can only do what state law permits.
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The City of Tucson's Mayor and Council operates under a council-manager form of government where elected officials set policy and an appointed City Manager executes it. Regular council meetings are held the first four Tuesdays of each month at City Hall, featuring a structured agenda that includes presentations, liquor license applications, public comment periods (up to three minutes for general matters, five minutes for public hearings), consent items, and other business. The document outlines meeting procedures, including provisions for remote participation, accessibility accommodations for persons with disabilities, Spanish-language interpretation, and the adoption of ordinances and resolutions, which take effect either immediately with an emergency clause and five council votes or thirty days after passage.
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This is a public records request form for Springfield Township, Hamilton County, Ohio's Police Department, outlining procedures for requesting public records under the Ohio Revised Code. The first five pages of requested records are duplicated at no cost; additional pages cost five cents per page. Computer disc copies cost one dollar, while audiotape and videotape copies are charged at actual production cost. Requests may be submitted orally or in writing at the Township Administrative Offices (9150 Winton Road, Cincinnati, Ohio 45231), by phone at (513) 522-1410, or by fax at (513) 729-0818 during business hours of 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding holidays. Completion of the request form is voluntary and cannot be grounds for denial of a records request.
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This document establishes identification requirements for processing requests through an unspecified government office. Acceptable photo identification includes a non-expired, government-issued ID such as a driver's license, passport, FOID card, active duty military ID, or tribal ID, with copies of both sides required. For expired IDs less than 6 months old, applicants must provide one additional document showing name and current address from the last 6 months; for IDs expired more than 6 months or absent, two forms of documentation are required, including one from a specified list (medical card, insurance card, voter registration, paycheck stub, or bank statement) plus current mail showing name and address. Special provisions apply to incarcerated individuals (requiring dated prison intake or offender summary sheet with photo), those released within 6 months (release papers plus prison photo ID with matching address), and employees of state/federal agencies or hospitals (work photo ID badge meeting specified requirements). Social Security cards are not acceptable. The document references Illinois birth records eligibility under ILCS 410/535/25(4) but the text cuts off before completing that section.
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Springfield Township's public records policy establishes procedures for residents to request government documents, including zoning, fire, police, and other departmental records through online forms or direct submission to the Township Administrator. The Township commits to providing public records within a reasonable timeframe during regular business hours (8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday-Friday) at its administrative offices located at 9150 Winton Road, Cincinnati, Ohio, with copies provided at cost. The policy excludes incarcerated individuals from accessing records related to criminal investigations, maintains organized records with a publicly available retention schedule, and requests (but does not require) completion of a Public Records Request form to facilitate document identification and delivery.
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The Oakland City Charter, adopted by voters on November 5, 1968, ratified by California's Secretary of State, and effective January 28, 1969, establishes the fundamental governing structure and powers of the City of Oakland. The charter organizes city government into twelve major 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 document also includes appendices addressing specific funds and systems, including the KIDS FIRST! Oakland Children's Fund, police and fire relief and pension funds, the Oakland Municipal Employees' Retirement System, and off-street vehicular parking regulations. The charter has been amended through November 2014 and establishes that Oakland maintains perpetual succession as a body corporate under California's state constitution.
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The City of West Columbia operates under a council form of government consisting of nine council members, including Mayor Temus C. "Tem" Miles, Jr., whose term expires November 2027. The council includes eight additional members representing districts 1–8, with terms expiring in either November 2027 or November 2029 on an alternating schedule. Regular Council Meetings are held on the first Tuesday of each month at 6:00 PM, and Council Work Sessions meet on the third Monday of each month at 6:00 PM, both at City Hall, 200 North 12th Street, West Columbia, South Carolina. The City Administrator is appointed by the Council and is responsible for administering council policy and supervising city employees.
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This is a web form template for submitting open records requests to Lancaster County government. The form allows requestors to identify specific documents they seek access to, choose whether they want access only, copies only, or both, and specify their preferred format (paper or other). Requestors must acknowledge agreement with form terms, and the County's Solicitor's Office aims to confirm receipt within 48 business hours at 717-735-1584, though this timeline does not guarantee request processing completion.
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This Evanston, Illinois application form enables residents to request long-form birth certificates, which are accepted for legal use, passports, and governmental agencies. The fee structure is $15.00 for the first certificate and $4.00 for each additional certificate, plus a $20.00 shipping fee for online or mail requests; applicants must submit money orders or cashier checks payable to the City of Evanston. Requests must be submitted to the Office of the City Clerk at 909 Davis Street, 2nd Floor, Evanston, IL 60201, and must include a non-expired government-issued photo identification. Birth records filed between November 2018 and October 17, 2021 must be obtained through the Cook County Clerk's Office instead. The applicant must indicate their relationship to the person on the birth record, as birth certificates are confidential and can only be issued to entitled requestors.
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The City of Huntsville maintains approximately 60 local and regional boards and commissions with volunteer positions appointed by the Mayor and City Council to provide advisory, policy, and governing roles that shape community quality of life. Membership terms range from two to six years with time commitments varying from a few hours to over 20 hours monthly, and positions may require specific professional expertise, residency within the city, ethics training, and background checks. Interested residents are encouraged to review individual board requirements and submit applications via email or an online interest form.
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