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10 results for “housing supply”

  • 2026-0584: Resolution authorizing the Mayor, the Director of the Office of Management and Budget, and the Director of the Department of Public Safety to enter into an Agreement or Agreements with the Allegheny County Department of Human Services for the purpose of receiving funds to deliver professional services and to purchase operational supplies and vehicles in an amount not to exceed EIGHT HUNDRED THOUSAND ($800,000.00) dollars for the City’s Office of Community and Health and Safety to provide expanded outreach services to individuals who experience homelessness and housing instability.

    Jun 5, 2026

    ·Pittsburgh, PA
    Proposal
    Source
  • 1511-2026: To authorize the Director of the Department of Development to execute an amendment to the Economic Development Agreement dated April 19, 2024 between the City and WestBend QOZB, LLC to remove the developer’s obligations related to the construction and delivery of office space in association with the WestBend project provided that the developer assumes the new obligation to deliver the apartments by a certain deadline to more quickly address the City’s housing supply shortage. ($0.00)

    May 14, 2026

    ·Columbus, OH
Proposal
Source
  • Land Use and Sustainability Committee — Minutes 4/15/2026

    Apr 15, 2026

    ·Seattle, WA
    Minutes

    The Seattle Land Use and Sustainability Committee met on April 15, 2026, with five members present, presiding over Councilmember Lin. The committee discussed two ordinances: CB 121195, which addresses interim provisions to expand transitional encampment capacity through zoning amendments, and CB 121196, a comprehensive rezoning measure affecting multiple neighborhoods (University District, Fremont, Madison/Miller, Rainier Beach, and Downtown) designed to increase housing supply, support mixed-use redevelopment, remove construction barriers for alternative building methods, and incentivize community-serving uses. The meeting lasted approximately two hours, ending at 11:35 a.m.

    AI summary

    zoninghousing supplyland usesustainabilityencampment
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  • CB 121196: An ordinance relating to land use and zoning; rezoning certain land in the University District, the Fremont neighborhood, the Madison/Miller neighborhood, the Rainier Beach neighborhood, and the Downtown neighborhood; rezoning land and amending development standards to increase housing supply, support multi-purpose redevelopment on certain sites with community-based uses, remove code barriers to passive house, modular, and mass timber construction and to conversion from commercial space to housing in more zones, and incentivize community-serving uses along with the construction of more housing in certain areas; amending Sections 23.40.080, 23.47A.009, 23.49.008, 23.49.011, 23.49.036, 23.49.058, and 23.49.158 of the Seattle Municipal Code; adding a new Section 23.40.090 to the Seattle Municipal Code; adding a new Map 1L to Chapter 23.49 of the Seattle Municipal Code; and amending Chapter 23.32 of the Seattle Municipal Code at pages 60, 76, 109, 112, and 188 of the Official Land Use Map.

    Mar 16, 2026

    ·Seattle, WA
    Proposal
    Source
  • 2024-0315: WHEREAS, across the United States, landlords are using software algorithms and other information exchanges between competitors to raise rents, artificially constrain supply, and further exacerbate the housing crisis, and;

    Mar 25, 2024

    ·Pittsburgh, PA
    Proposal
    Source
  • 2023-1539: Councilor Lara called Docket #1539, message and order authorizing the City of Boston to accept and expend the amount of One Million Nine Hundred Eighty-Three Thousand Eight Hundred Thirty-Three Dollars ($1,983,833.00) in the form of a grant, for the Shelter & Services Program 23, awarded by the United States Department of Homeland Security to be administered by the Mayor’s Office of Housing. The grant will fund services to non-citizen migrants recently released from DHS custody to provide shelter, food, transportation, acute medical care, personal hygiene supplies, and case management services, and to provide funding to non-federal entities to increase their capacity to shelter non-citizen migrants recently released from DHS custody, including renovations and modifications to existing facilities, from the Committee on Housing and Community Development. Hearing no objection, the matter was before the body. Committee members polled; yeas 5. On motion of Councilor Lara, the order was passed; yeas 13.

    Sep 29, 2023

    ·Boston, MA
    Proposal
    Source
  • 21-VARIANCE-0185: Request: Variance to allow a principal structure to be greater than 25% taller than the directly adjacent houses Project Name: Euclid Avenue Variance Location: 1009 Euclid Avenue Owner/Applicant: MBE Contracting & Supply L, Mario Urrutia Representative: George McGill Jurisdiction: Louisville Metro Council District: 3- Keisha Dorsey Case Manager: Heather Pollock, Planner I

    Feb 25, 2022

    ·Louisville, KY
    Proposal
    Source
  • MEETING MINUTES Office of Economic Development

    Mesa, AZ
    Minutes

    The Economic Development Advisory Board met on April 4, 2023, at 7:30 a.m. in Mesa, Arizona, with Chair Rich Adams presiding and five members excused. The Board unanimously approved the March 7, 2023, meeting minutes by vote of 5–0 (Adams, Campbell, Genereux, Nickerson, Perry). Councilmember Julie Spilsbury addressed the Board regarding economic development in District 2, which spans from Gilbert to Sossaman and Baseline to University in central Mesa. Spilsbury reported that District 2 handled at least seven controversial zoning cases in the previous year and that she has been meeting weekly with the Planning Director. She noted that the city is developing a balanced housing plan with consultant support to establish a housing baseline specific to Mesa and ensure adequate supply and variety of housing types while protecting employment corridors.

    AI summary

    economic developmentzoninghousing planning
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  • MOORE TOWNSHIP BOARD OF SUPERVISORS 2491 COMMUNITY DRIVE BATH, PA. 18014

    Moore Township, XX
    Minutes

    Moore Township Board of Supervisors convened on October 19, 2015 (with meeting date discrepancy noted as October 19, 2016 in header) with Chairman David Tashner, Supervisors Daniel Piorkowski and Richard Gable, and Attorney Backenstoe present to address urgent items before the next regular meeting scheduled for November 1, 2016 at 7:00 pm. The Board approved a motion to purchase a 2017 Ford SUV from Kovatch for $40,386.27 plus approximately $4,614 for camera and equipment, totaling roughly $45,000, financed at 3.96% interest over 36 months at $1,327.17 monthly, to replace a vehicle with transmission failure in the Police Department. The Board also discussed heating system options for the road department shop, comparing a floor-mounted unit bid at $20,526.00 (requiring lengthy bidding process) against installation bids from Sullivan at $6,800 per unit plus $2,600 installation and from Bickert at $9,192.00, with additional quotes pending from Bath Supply and East Lawn Supply for in-house installation alternatives.

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  • 2025-27 Capital Budget New Appropriations

    Spokane, WA
    Budget

    The 2025-27 Capital Budget document outlines new appropriations for governmental operations across multiple departments, including Commerce, Archaeology & Historic Preservation, and Transportation, with total appropriations of approximately $4.52 billion in new funding and $7.34 billion including bonds. The budget includes funding for diverse projects such as behavioral health facilities, early learning centers, housing trust funds, local community projects, heritage barn grants, and transportation infrastructure, with most line items showing alignment between the Senate version and Chair ranking, though some variations exist in funding amounts. Notable allocations include $600 million for a major project under Commerce and $458.5 million for affordable housing supply and preservation initiatives.

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