Town Crier
Request a township
All typesagendaminutesproposalbudgetother
All time30 days90 days1 year

12 results for “government grants” · other

  • Amended January 22, 2013 BY-LAWS OF

    Jan 22, 2013

    ·Coatesville, PA
    Other

    The Redevelopment Authority of the City of Coatesville's amended by-laws, effective January 22, 2013, establish the Authority's legal framework and powers under Pennsylvania's Urban Redevelopment Law. The Authority, created by city ordinance in 1999 and formally chartered in 2000, is granted broad public powers including the ability to designate redevelopment areas, develop rehabilitation and conservation plans, coordinate with government entities, and assemble property for redevelopment projects. The document outlines the Authority's comprehensive role in facilitating urban redevelopment activities within Coatesville to address property conditions, enforce building codes, and implement neighborhood improvement programs.

    AI summary

    redevelopment authorityurban redevelopmentproperty rehabilitationbuilding codesneighborhood improvement
View PDFSource
  • 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.

    AI summary

    budget processfiscal year 2023-25public safetymunicipal revenuebudget allocation
    View PDFSource
  • 2023-2024 Federal Lobbying Report & Update for the City of Virginia Beach, VA

    Virginia Beach, VA
    Other

    The City of Virginia Beach retained Becker DC, a national lobbying firm, to pursue federal funding through grants, infrastructure legislation, and congressionally directed spending during 2023-2024. The lobbying team is led by co-leads Alfonso Lopez and Anthony Bedell, supported by four additional team members, with Lopez bringing over 30 years of federal and Virginia legislative experience and Bedell bringing 24 years of government experience. In 2023, the team secured $49.5 million in total federal grant funding, an increase from $48.4 million in 2022, and secured $7.993 million in preliminary earmarks in pending FY24 appropriations bills. The preliminary earmarks included $3.9 million for the Rudee Inlet project through the Army Corps of Engineers and $3 million for the Laskin Road Phase I-B project. Federal awards also included a $14.9 million Safer Streets for All (SS4A) grant award with a pending grant funding agreement.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • 2023 Annual Report Monroe County Planning Commission

    Scranton, PA
    Other

    The Monroe County Planning Commission's 2023 Annual Report documents the organization's staffing, leadership, and governance structure while commemorating the passing of former Director John Woodling and the retirement of supportive Commissioner John Moyer. The report highlights the Planning Commission's ongoing mission to sustain the county's environmental, economic, and cultural assets, as articulated in the Monroe 2030 Vision Statement, and notes the continuation of key programs including Farmland Preservation and the Open Space Mini Grant program. The Commission maintained municipal partnerships throughout 2023, providing planning and mapping services to local townships and boroughs under established intergovernmental agreements.

    AI summary

    planning commissionfarmland preservationopen spacecounty governancemunicipal partnerships
    View PDFSource
  • 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.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • Commission Meetings and Minutes - Pittsburgh, PA

    Pittsburgh, PA
    Other

    This document is a directory and archive of Commission Meetings and Minutes for the Infrastructure Asset Reporting and Investment Commission in Pittsburgh, PA. The commission held quarterly meetings throughout 2024 and 2025, with documented agendas and minutes available for Q1 2024 (March 19th) through Q2 2025 (May 12th), and an additional introductory non-formal meeting on October 18th, 2023. The next meeting date was listed as "TBD" at the time of publication. The commission is one of multiple boards, authorities, and commissions overseen by the City of Pittsburgh government, with contact information available through the City-County Building at 414 Grant Street.

    AI summary

    infrastructure investmentcommission meetingsgovernment records
    Source
  • Open-Records - Public Records Access Guide - York Township

    York, PA
    Other

    York Township has established an Open Records Office to process Right-to-Know requests under Pennsylvania's Act 3 of 2008, which grants the public access to government records with certain exceptions. The Township adopted its Public Records Policy on December 9, 2008, allowing residents to request and access public records during business hours through written requests submitted in person, by mail, or email to the Open Records Officer at RTK@yorktownshippa.gov. Requests must include specific identification of the record, preferred medium, and requester contact information, though the Township is not required to create new records or reorganize existing ones to fulfill requests.

    AI summary

    public recordsopen recordsgovernment transparency
    Source
  • Redacción de la Carta de Autonomía de Hazleton GSC

    Hazleton, PA
    Other

    The document outlines the drafting process for Hazleton's Charter of Autonomy as of November 18, 2025, conducted by the Hazleton Government Studies Commission. The charter aims to transfer municipal governance from state code to local citizens while allowing flexibility in defining municipal structure, powers, taxation, and functions. Key drafting considerations include determining the government form (maintaining current structure, mirroring optional plan forms from state law, or creating a hybrid model), offering fiscal flexibility while ensuring fiscal accountability, and adhering to four style principles: clarity, consistency, concision, and legal correctness. Basic charter components must include a general grant of powers to the municipality, basic government organization with identified elected and appointed officials, legislative and administrative procedures, provisions for citizen participation, mandates for merit-based personnel systems and professional auditing, and general provisions covering transition procedures and effective dates.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • Citizen Participation Plan | 2021

    Scranton, PA
    Other

    The City of Scranton, Pennsylvania adopted a Citizen Participation Plan in 2021 to comply with HUD regulation 24 CFR 91.105 and ensure public involvement in federally funded housing and community development programs. The plan governs citizen participation in implementing activities under the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG), Emergency Solutions Grants (ESG), HOME Investment Partnerships Programs (HOME), Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing (AFH), and other formula grant programs. The plan applies to five key documents: the 5-year Consolidated Plan, Annual Action Plan and amendments, Consolidated Annual Performance and Evaluation Report (CAPER), and AFH or Analysis of Impediments to Fair Housing plans. The City commits to providing full public access to program information, encouraging participation from low- and moderate-income residents, minorities, non-English-speaking persons, and persons with disabilities, and engaging local institutions, businesses, and community organizations in planning and implementation.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • Hazleton GSC Home Rule Charter Drafting

    Hazleton, PA
    Other

    Hazleton's Government Study Commission met on November 18, 2025, to initiate a home rule charter drafting process that would shift municipal governance from state code to locally-adopted charter. The commission will address major drafting issues including determining the form of government—whether to retain the current structure, mirror optional plans from state law (executive/council plans A, B, C or council/manager), or create a hybrid form—while balancing fiscal flexibility with fiscal responsibility. Basic charter components under consideration include grants of municipal powers, government organization and structure, legislative and administrative procedures, citizen participation mechanisms, administrative practice mandates (merit personnel systems, capital budgeting, auditing), and general provisions. PEL (Pennsylvania Educator's League or equivalent consulting entity) will guide the drafting process through reviewing the current form, presenting single-issue questions for deliberation, offering guidance, and translating commission decisions into charter sections after straw votes on each item. The charter will follow four style guidelines—clarity, consistency, conciseness, and correctness—with language drawn from applicable state codes where applicable.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • Public Records - Law

    Cincinnati, OH
    Other

    The City of Cincinnati's Law Department document outlines the Ohio Public Records Act, which grants citizens the right to request access to public records to enable government oversight in a functioning democracy. The City commits to adopting a public records policy, organizing records for public access, and maintaining a retention schedule. Requests should be submitted through GovQA, the City's centralized public records management system, with responses provided promptly within a reasonable timeframe determined by individual circumstances, with copying costs charged at actual rates and certain exemptions allowed for legal review.

    AI summary

    public recordsgovernment transparencyrecords managementlegal compliance
    Source
  • Open Records Request

    Pottstown, PA
    Other

    Potter County provides information about Pennsylvania's Right-to-Know Law, which grants residents access to public records held by the County in accordance with Act 3 of 2008. The document explains that Potter County is committed to transparency and accountability, allowing the public to request documents such as meeting minutes and financial reports through a formal process. Residents who are unsatisfied with Potter County's response to records requests may appeal to the Pennsylvania Office of Open Records within 15 business days, with additional information and assistance available through the Commonwealth's Office of Open Records at 717-346-9903.

    AI summary

    open recordspublic transparencyright to knowgovernment accountability
    Source