30 results for “grant administration”
30 results for “grant administration”
This agenda document outlines the regular meeting of the Jackson, Mississippi City Council held on April 21, 2026 at 6:00 PM. The council addressed two street renamings: Lilly Street (from Woodrow Wilson Boulevard to Clover Hill Drive) to Damian Murriel Drive, and Wood Street (from Cohea Street to Peach Orchard Street) to Dr. Roderick Demond Little Drive, both scheduled for public hearing and adoption. The consent agenda included declaring parcel number 423-6 at 107 West Mayes Street as surplus property, authorizing a 48-month copier rental agreement with Advantage Business Systems Inc. for the Office of the City Attorney, and approving April 7, 2026 meeting minutes. Introduced ordinances included amendments to Chapter 2 of the City Code, a temporary moratorium on data center development and expansion, and a re-enactment of ordinance sections 86-51 through 86-62. The regular agenda encompassed claims, payroll, authorization to auction city-owned vehicles online through GovDeals, and an order amending a prior authorization for a $2,000,000 Economic Development Administration grant application.
AI summary
On April 7, 2026, the Finance, Native Communities, and Tribal Governments Committee met and unanimously recommended passage of three ordinances: CB 121184 expanding the Director of Finance and Administrative Services' authority to execute leases for transitional encampment purposes; CB 121185 amending the 2026 budget to address homelessness response; and CB 121187 authorizing the Mayor to accept and expend grants, private funding, and subsidized loans from non-City sources. The committee also heard an informational item on the State and City Tribal Relations Framework.
AI summary
On February 10, 2026, the City Council received responses to questions from a February 3 meeting, primarily addressing pave cut inspections for the Green Ridge water company project and ARPA grant allocation. The city confirmed that Pennoni conducts weekly inspections of utility work, documents findings in reports tied to specific permits, and notifies utilities of deficiencies—with violations issued if issues are not timely addressed; temporary cold patch repairs are being used due to winter weather conditions preventing hot-mix asphalt installation. The administration also provided details on ARPA grant tracking through subrecipient check-ins and quarterly reports, and listed specific allocations to organizations including NeighborWorks (business façade, home buyer, and home rehabilitation programs totaling approximately $865,881) and United Neighborhood Centers (business façade and disaster relief totaling approximately $129,930).
AI summary