30 results for “library” · other
30 results for “library” · other
This GASB 68 report provides accounting and financial reporting information for Lebanon Community Library's participation in the Pennsylvania Municipal Retirement System (PMRS), a defined benefit pension plan, as of December 31, 2023. Key findings show the library had a net pension asset of $297,327 (compared to $247,787 in 2022), total payroll of $277,378, and total pension expense of $21,429, representing -7.73% of payroll. The report includes detailed information on employee coverage, net pension liability calculations, deferred inflows and outflows, employer contributions, and actuarial assumptions and methods.
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This page from the Massachusetts Court System's Law Library provides an informational guide to Massachusetts town meeting law, including relevant statutes, court cases, and procedural resources. Key legal references include Massachusetts Constitution Amendment LXXXIX (distinguishing cities and towns), General Laws chapters 39 and 43A (municipal government), and the 2023 case Barron v. Kolenda, which established that towns cannot restrict participants from being "rude" at meetings. The resource directs users to procedural guides like Robert's Rules of Order and Town Meeting Time, as well as individual town meeting guides and citizens' petition procedures.
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The Land Records & Licenses Division of the Circuit Court for Baltimore City provides document recording, licensing, and related services at 100 North Calvert Street, Room 610, Baltimore. Chapter 538 of the 2020 Maryland General Assembly continued a $40 surcharge on recordable instruments effective July 1, 2020. The division charges $20 for basic document recording (up to 9 pages) with the $40 surcharge, $85 for marriage applications (cash only), and tiered copy fees of $0.50 per page for standard copies or $5.00 per certified instrument. Operating hours vary by service: Recording/Lien Section and Marriage & Business Licenses operate Monday–Friday 8:30 a.m.–4:00 p.m., while the Library extends to 6:15 p.m. Monday–Thursday. The division also collects state transfer taxes at ½% of consideration or assessed value, and provides notary commissions for $11.00 (new) or $8.00 (change of name/address).
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This document is a searchable business directory for Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, hosted on the CivicEngage platform. It provides contact information and website links for municipal governments and other organizations within the county, organized by category (Authorities, Chambers of Commerce, County Buildings, Federal Government, Law Enforcement, Libraries, Municipal Government, School Districts, State Government, and Tax Collection Bureau). The directory displays 33 total listings with results shown 10 per page; the first page includes 10 municipal entries such as Camp Hill Borough, Carlisle Borough, Cooke Township, Dickinson Township, East Pennsboro Township, Hampden Township, Hopewell Township, Lemoyne Borough, Lower Allen Township, and Lower Frankford Township, each with street addresses, phone numbers, fax numbers, and website URLs.
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This is the February 2025 issue of the Miners' Journal, the official publication of Minersville Borough, Pennsylvania. The newsletter highlights the borough's improved website as a reliable source of local information, announces a search for a combined Borough and Sewer Authority manager with interviews underway, and promotes upcoming community events including an Easter egg hunt on April 19 and a call for pool and lifeguard staff applications for the 2025 season. The publication also references upcoming content on ordinance changes, library events, police reminders, and heating assistance programs.
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This collection contains San José City Council Minutes, Ordinance and Resolution Records, and Office of the City Clerk documents spanning primarily from 1850 to 1950, covering the period from the city's official incorporation on March 27, 1850 through the mid-twentieth century. The San Jose Public Library's digital collections include photographs and records from this archival material, with additional archived recordings of city council and planning meetings available online from 2005 to the present. The collection serves as a historical record of local government decisions and administrative activities during San José's formative period and early development.
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This document is a webpage index for Springfield Township's meeting agendas and minutes, providing links to current and archived meeting documents for various boards and commissions including the Township Board, Planning Commission, Zoning Board of Appeals, Park Commission, and Library Board. The page includes meeting logistics such as the 7:00 PM start time for Township Board meetings, live streaming access via Zoom and phone, and instructions for public comment and accessibility accommodations. Specific meeting dates and available documents are listed for 2026 and late 2025, though no substantive discussion or policy decisions are detailed in this index document.
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The Town of Stamford, Vermont's Annual Report for the year ending December 31, 2022 provides a comprehensive overview of municipal operations, including town officers, voting information, vital records, and financial statements. The report covers revenue and expenses, tax information, delinquent taxes, and various departmental reports including the fire department, library, cemetery, and school operations. The document serves as an official record of the town's governance, budget allocations, and service delivery across municipal departments and facilities.
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This document is a webpage directory for the Akron-Summit County Public Library's Local Records collection, listing genealogical and historical resources available to researchers. The collection includes cemetery records from multiple Summit County locations (Mount Peace Cemetery with interment records from 1880–1916, Glendale Cemetery burial records from 1828–1958, and transcriptions from Springfield Township and St. Vincent cemeteries), naturalization records from the Summit County Clerk of Courts, Ohio death certificates covering 1908–1970, Summit County Index to Ohio State Penitentiary Prisoner Registers (1840–1938), Cunningham Funeral Home records (1906–1947), and maps and atlases of Akron and Summit County. The library is located at 60 South High Street, Akron, Ohio 44326, and provides contact information for additional records repositories through a separate Records and Research Facilities PDF.
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This is the 2023 annual report for the Town of Stamford, Vermont, covering the fiscal year ending December 31, 2023. The document contains town governance information, voting details, town officer listings, and comprehensive financial statements including revenue and expenses, tax information, and reports from various departments and funds such as the fire department, library, cemetery, and equipment replacement funds. The report serves as an official public record of the town's operations, finances, and departmental activities for the calendar year.
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The Dell DeHay Law Library has compiled a research guide providing links to the code of ordinances for all 41 incorporated cities and towns within Tarrant County, Texas. The guide directs users to each municipality's ordinance resources hosted on various platforms including MuniCode, eCode360, and individual city websites. The document explicitly disclaims that it is for informational purposes only and should not be construed as legal advice or a substitute for consultation with an attorney.
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The San Jose Public Library's California Room maintains archival collections of government records, including San José building permits from 1895-1986 (with later permits available online), Caltrans Right of Way Assessments for Santa Clara County from 1938-1979, and San José City Council Minutes and Ordinance Records primarily from 1850-1950. These materials are available in various formats including print, microfilm, digitized images, and online, with researchers directed to contact California Room staff for access to specific collections and usage information.
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The Pottsville Free Public Library document outlines its genealogy and local history services, noting that the library has reduced its range of offerings due to constraints. The library can search local newspapers for obituaries or events with exact dates and make referrals to other genealogical resources, but cannot search without specific dates or indexes. The library charges fees for genealogy requests, including a $10 minimum for out-of-county requests covering up to 5 printed pages and 15 minutes of staff time, with additional charges of $20 per hour (billed in 15-minute increments) and per-page printing costs for larger requests, with prepayment required for requests of 10 or more pages.
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The Huntsville-Madison County Public Library established a public records access policy defining procedures for handling external requests for employee information, Board minutes, library policies, and other records. Under the policy, the Director of Human Resources serves as the designated officer to receive and evaluate all public records requests, with authority to determine whether information should be provided based on privacy, security, and operational impact considerations. Requesters must use the City of Huntsville's Public Records Request form, and the Director will respond in writing within a reasonable timeframe regarding availability and any associated copying or compilation costs, which must be paid before records are released.
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This informational series provides an overview of the City of Madison's budget structure and processes. The document explains that Madison maintains two separate budgets—a capital budget funding long-term infrastructure projects (roads, housing, building improvements) financed primarily through borrowing, and an operating budget supporting daily city services (police, fire, libraries, sanitation) funded mainly through property taxes. The series is designed as a public education tool covering budget fundamentals, the city's structural deficit, financial policies, and revenue options, with all budget phases publicly available on the city website.
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This financial overview document presents Worcester's fiscal structure and priorities as delivered by Chief Financial Officer Timothy J. McGourthy. The city operates under significant state-mandated constraints, with approximately $920 million in FY25 budget revenue derived from limited sources (state aid, property taxes, local fees), while discretionary municipal operations comprise only 22% of total spending due to mandatory obligations in education, debt service, and pension costs. Worcester maintains a Financial Integrity Plan established since 2006 that includes a general fund reserve of 10.7% for FY25, an irrevocable OPEB trust, and a net free cash policy directing funds toward bond rating stabilization, OPEB obligations, and operations, with an average residential tax bill of $5,266 funding services ranging from K-12 education and public safety to libraries and public health services.
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This document catalogs Jacksonville's boards and commissions organized by function. The city maintains 24 advisory boards including the Better Jacksonville Plan Project Administration Committee, Homelessness Initiatives Commission, and Mayor's LGBTQ+ Advisory Board, which provide advice and resident perspectives to the mayor and City Council. Eleven oversight bodies including the Art in Public Places Committee and Board of Library Trustees perform advisory functions and may allocate city funding within certain programs. Ten regulatory boards and commissions including the Jacksonville Ethics Commission, Planning Commission, and Jacksonville Historic Preservation Commission exercise regulatory authority to make rulings and impose penalties under the Ordinance Code. Board members are required to complete ethics training materials provided by the city.
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This document describes the Knox County Tennessee County Clerk's Commission Library, which transcribes and indexes Knox County Commission meeting minutes and maintains records for various county boards and committees. The Commission Library, located in Old Courthouse Room 237, accepts applications and issues beer permits while collecting annual privilege tax fees from permit holders. County Commission meeting minutes are posted with a 60-day waiting period following approval, and audio and video recordings are available by calling 865-215-2683. The County Clerk maintains five satellite office locations across the Knox County area—West Knoxville, Farragut, North Knoxville, South Knoxville, and East Knoxville—all operating Monday through Friday with hours of 8:00 am to 4:30 pm, except the East Knoxville location which operates 9:00 am to 5:30 pm.
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This 2024 annual report from the City of Dearborn, covering the fiscal year ending June 30, 2024, highlights Mayor Abdullah H. Hammoud's administration's accomplishments in modernizing city operations, including a new city website, implementation of public health protections against air pollution, improved road safety, and revitalization of commercial districts. The report emphasizes expansion of parks and recreation amenities, enhanced public transparency through performance dashboards, improved multilingual communication services, and technology-driven city service improvements, all maintained within a balanced budget. The document covers departmental activities across assessing, communications, economic development, finance, fire, library, police, public works, and other city services.
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This guide identifies key research resources for accessing birth, death, marriage, probate, and land records in Larimer County, Colorado. Vital records are available through Larimer County Vital Records (970-498-6710) with proof of relationship required, while marriage indexes covering 1855–1950 and divorce application indexes covering 1825–1950 are housed at the Larimer County Clerk and Recorder (970-498-7860) and Fort Collins Local History Archive (970-221-6688). Probate and county court records dating from 1862 are maintained at Larimer County Courts Justice Center (970-493-3500), and land records including deeds and property information are accessible through the Clerk's Recorded Documents Database online or the Larimer County Assessor (970-498-7050). Census materials including state census microfilm from 1885 and federal census microfilm from 1870–1910 are available at Poudre River Public Library District (970-221-6380), which provides free access to Ancestry.com databases with a library card.
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The City of Boise follows an annual budget development process that runs from January through early fall, with the fiscal year operating from October 1st through September 30th. The budget funds essential services including police and fire departments, emergency medical services, libraries, parks, and utilities, as well as major capital investments like water line replacement and airport expansion. The process involves multiple stages: early planning (December–February), department budget requests and public input (March–May), department presentations (May–June), draft budget release and public workshops (June), public hearings and final adoption (July–September), and publication of the final budget before the fiscal year begins.
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This document is a chronological index of resolutions adopted by what appears to be Gem County, Idaho, spanning from 1975 through 1984. The index lists resolution titles and adoption dates but provides no dollar amounts, vote counts, or detailed descriptions of the resolutions' contents. Notable resolutions include the formation of the Western Idaho Community Action Program (04-14-1975), creation of the Garden Valley Free Library District (12-15-1978), multiple budget amendments for the 1981–1982 and 1982–1983 fiscal years, establishment of a joint catastrophic health care costs program (08-01-1984), and adoption of uniform county guidelines on indigent eligibility (08-13-1984). The index appears incomplete, ending mid-entry for 1984.
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