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10 results for “homeless services” · budget

  • Mayor's 2023 Proposed Budget

    Nov 2, 2022

    ·Spokane, WA
    Budget

    Mayor Nadine Woodward's 2023 proposed budget, presented November 2, 2022, addresses a $37 million revenue loss from the pandemic while forgoing a 1% property tax increase for household financial relief. The budget prioritizes people-focused investments including increased shelter space, homelessness services, public safety, sanitation, garbage collection, and workforce retention in a competitive labor market. Sales tax revenue is projected to increase 5.9% overall in 2023, though gains are not expected to continue due to anticipated recession.

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    budgetproperty taxpublic safetyhomelessness servicessanitation
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  • City of Columbia FY 2023/2024 Approved Budget

    Columbia, SC
    Budget

    The City of Columbia approved its FY 2023/2024 budget totaling $425.8 million across multiple funds, with the General Fund at $170.6 million and Water & Sewer at $199.5 million representing the largest allocations. The budget allocates 38% toward personnel services ($161.7 million), 22% to service expenses, 17% to debt service, and includes $111.9 million in capital improvement projects focused primarily on wastewater infrastructure ($64.5 million). The budget framework prioritizes City Council strategic outcomes including workforce stability, critical infrastructure projects, affordable housing and homeless services, and economic development initiatives.

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    budgetwater infrastructurecapital improvementsaffordable housingeconomic development
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  • Detail Budget 2024-25

    Phoenix, AZ
    Budget

    The City of Phoenix's 2024-25 Annual Detail Budget document outlines the city's financial plan and organizational structure, featuring Mayor Kate Gallego and an eight-member City Council representing different districts. The budget document includes leadership information for key departments and deputy city managers overseeing various portfolios including heat response, homeless solutions, affordable housing, fire services, water services, and planning and development. This represents one section of a comprehensive 611-page budget document detailing Phoenix's financial allocations and strategic priorities for the fiscal year 2024-25.

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    budgetmunicipal financeaffordable housingwater servicesfire services
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  • Budget Review 2023-24 City of Portland BUDGET HIGHLIGHTS •

    Portland, ME
    Budget

    The City of Portland adopted a $7.1 billion budget for FY 2023-24, representing a 1% decrease from the previous year, with the expenditure-only portion increasing 2% to $4.2 billion due to growth in personnel services and capital projects, particularly in the Water and Sewer funds. The budget prioritizes public safety (45 new FTE including 43 police officers), charter implementation ($2.5 million), and economic recovery and livability ($59.1 million combined for trash removal, small business support, and homeless services). The city characterized FY 2023-24 as a "pinch year" for the General Fund, with expiration of one-time pandemic relief funds and American Rescue Plan dollars creating budgetary pressure, while utility rate increases are held to 4.9% for water/sewer and parking fees increase 20 cents.

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    budgetpublic safetywater infrastructurehomelessness serviceseconomic recovery
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  • Budget in Brief PROPOSED ANNUAL FISCAL PLAN FOR FISCAL YEAR 2025

    Richmond, VA
    Budget

    The Proposed FY 2025 Budget for Richmond emphasizes strengthening customer service and municipal governance through accountability, equity, and innovation, with a total budget of $2.9 billion ($1.0 billion General Fund). Key allocations include $15.8 million for Richmond Public Schools, $40.0 million for affordable housing (FY 2025-2028), $4.2 million for homeless services, $21.0 million for traffic calming and Complete Streets, $15.6 million for the Fall Line Trail, and $13.0 million for the Shockoe Project, alongside employee wage increases including a $20.00 minimum wage and 4-7% pay raises across city departments. The budget leverages local, state, and federal funding to build a sustainable, progressive city while ensuring quality municipal services for residents, businesses, and organizations.

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    budgetschool fundingaffordable housinghomeless servicestransportation infrastructure
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  • phoenix - detail budget

    Phoenix, AZ
    Budget

    The Phoenix Detail Budget document for fiscal year 2025-26 presents the City of Phoenix's annual budget structure and organizational leadership. The document outlines the city's governance framework, including Mayor Kate Gallego, the eight-member City Council, City Manager Jeff Barton, and numerous department heads responsible for services ranging from fire and police to water services, parks and recreation, and housing. The budget organization reflects the city's strategic priorities through its deputy city manager portfolios, which address heat response and mitigation, homeless solutions, affordable housing, neighborhood services, environmental programs, and water strategy among other initiatives.

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  • 2026 Proposed Budget City of Bloomington

    Bloomington, IN
    Budget

    The City of Bloomington's 2026 proposed budget, introduced by Mayor Kerry Thomson, outlines departmental allocations and priorities across multiple city services scheduled for discussion from August 18–27. The budget document includes detailed presentations for eight priority areas: High-Performing Government, Affordable Housing & Homelessness, Economic Development, Public Safety, Community Health & Vitality, and Transportation, along with supporting departments such as Public Works, Parks & Recreation, and Bloomington Transit. The administration's values emphasize community co-creation, accountable servant leadership, transparent governance, and strategic resource stewardship.

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  • City of Mesa Consolidated Annual Performance Evaluation Report (CAPER)

    Mesa, AZ
    Budget

    The City of Mesa's Consolidated Annual Performance Evaluation Report (CAPER) for FY 2024/2025 (July 1, 2024 through June 30, 2025) documents the allocation and distribution of $4,192,294 in Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) funds, with $4,068,447 awarded to programs and administration. CDBG Public Service Activities received $602,214 across six agencies (A New Leaf, Central Arizona Shelter Services, Child Crisis Arizona, Family Promise, Homeward Bound, and Save the Family Foundation of Arizona), though CASS cancelled two contracts and returned funds due to leadership and staffing changes. Housing Rehabilitation was allocated $2,342,182 for the Emergency Rehabilitation Program, while the HOME Investment Partnership Program provided $400,000 for Tenant-Based Rental Assistance focused on utility and deposit assistance. Emergency Solutions Grant (ESG) Program awarded $329,288 to three agencies (A New Leaf, CASS, and Save the Family) for emergency shelter and rapid rehousing services, with the city coordinating through the Maricopa County Continuum of Care workgroups including Coordinated Entry, Planning, and ESG Committees.

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    community development block granthousing rehabilitationemergency shelter assistancepublic services fundinghomeless services
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  • SDHC Fiscal Year 2024 - BUDGET Report

    San Diego, CA
    Budget

    The San Diego Housing Commission (SDHC) presented its proposed Fiscal Year 2024 Budget of $595 million, designed to advance its mission of fostering social and economic stability for vulnerable populations through affordable housing, financial self-reliance opportunities, and homelessness solutions. The budget aligns with SDHC's strategic priorities, which include increasing and preserving housing solutions, supporting family self-sufficiency, investing in staff, advancing homelessness solutions, and promoting equity and inclusion. The agency emphasizes collaborative partnerships with government agencies, service providers, developers, and community organizations to maximize the impact of its limited funding resources.

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    budgetaffordable housinghomelessness solutionshousing commissionself-sufficiency programs
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  • Volume 1 General Fund Revenues MAYOR TODD GLORIA Adopted Budget Fiscal Year

    San Diego, CA
    Budget

    The City of San Diego's Fiscal Year 2022 Adopted Budget projects General Fund revenues of $1.74 billion, representing a $122.6 million (7.6 percent) increase from FY 2021. The four major revenue sources—property taxes, sales taxes, transient occupancy taxes, and franchise fees—account for 67 percent of General Fund revenues and are projected to increase 9.6 percent, primarily driven by accelerated economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic. The budget also includes $149.3 million in federal Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds from the American Rescue Plan Act to address ongoing pandemic impacts, with these revenues supporting essential city services including police, fire, homeless services, libraries, and parks and recreation programs.

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    budgetgeneral fund revenuessales taxproperty taxfederal funding
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