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17 results for “licenses” · budget

  • COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA OFFICE OF THE BUDGET DATE: November 12, 2025

    Nov 12, 2025

    ·Pottsville, PA
    Budget

    On November 12, 2025, Governor of Pennsylvania signed Act 1-A, the General Appropriation Act of 2025. Total appropriations across all funds amount to $103,747,176,000, with the General Fund comprising $98,451,842,000 in state and federal funds. The document outlines expenditure allocations across multiple dedicated funds including the State Lottery Fund, Motor License Fund, PENNVEST water infrastructure funds, and various other specialized accounts, with complete appropriation details and expenditure symbols provided for implementation.

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    budgetappropriationswater infrastructurestate fundinglottery fund
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  • COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA OFFICE OF THE BUDGET DATE: November 12, 2025

    Nov 12, 2025

    ·Pottstown, PA
    Budget

    On November 12, 2025, Pennsylvania Governor signed Act 1-A, the General Appropriation Act of 2025, authorizing total appropriations of $103.7 billion across all funds, including $98.5 billion in General Fund appropriations (comprising $49.4 billion in state funds and $49 billion in federal funds). The notification specifies expenditure symbols, amounts, and character codes for all approved appropriations across multiple fund categories including the State Lottery Fund, Motor License Fund, PENNVEST Water and Drinking Water Revolving Funds, and various other designated funds, with 2024-25 supplemental appropriations also included.

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    budget appropriationstate fundswater infrastructurefund allocationgeneral appropriation
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  • City of Columbia FY 2021-2022 BUDGET OVERVIEW MAY 11, 2021 iStock.com/Kruck20

    May 11, 2021

    ·Columbia, SC
    Budget

    The City of Columbia presented its FY 2021-2022 budget overview on May 11, 2021, establishing a comprehensive plan for resource allocation across direct services (police, fire, parks, public works, water/sewer), supportive services (finance, HR, IT), and non-departmental functions. The budget is funded through multiple revenue sources including property taxes, licenses and permits, charges for services, intergovernmental revenue, and enterprise fund user fees, with all allocations requiring adoption by ordinance and adherence to South Carolina's constitutional requirement for a balanced budget. The budget supports the city's strategic vision focused on attracting talent, community planning, economic prosperity, neighborhood enhancement, and innovative municipal services aligned with Columbia's long-term 2036 vision.

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    budgetproperty taxespublic workswater infrastructurepolice and fire
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  • Resolution Index 1980-2007 4922 12/12/2007

    Dec 12, 2007

    ·Eugene, OR
    Budget

    This document is a resolution index from the City of Eugene covering resolutions from 1980-2007, with the primary entry being Resolution 4922 (adopted 12/12/2007) approving a supplemental budget for fiscal year 2007-2008, which initially failed on 12/10/2007 but was reconsidered and adopted two days later. The index also lists related resolutions including the main budget adoption (Resolution 4912, 6/11/2007), a $7,895,000 HUD Section 108 loan authorization, multiple property tax exemptions for residential housing developments, and voter referral measures including a proposed increase to motor vehicle fuel dealer's license tax of $0.03 per gallon and an amended downtown urban renewal plan.

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    budgetsupplemental budgetproperty tax exemptionurban renewalfuel tax
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  • City of Allentown 2026 Organizational Chart Mayor Matthew Tuerk City Controller

    Allentown, PA
    Budget

    The document presents the City of Allentown's 2026 Organizational Chart and General Fund Summary Report. The organizational structure identifies Mayor Matthew Tuerk at the head, with key officials including City Controller Jeff Glazier, City Clerk Mike Hanlon, and City Council President Santo Napoli overseeing seven council members. The General Fund Summary shows total tax revenues projected at $107,598,514 for 2026, increasing from $104,772,200 in the 2025 budget, with earned income tax ($43,250,000), city real estate tax ($40,681,514), and business privilege tax ($13,072,000) as the largest revenue sources. Permits and licenses are budgeted at $2,211,000 for 2026, while charges for services include significant revenue from parking ($7,100,000 projected for 2026). The opening balance for 2026 reflects $41,861,325 from the 2025 revised budget.

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    budgettax revenuemunicipal organization
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  • 2026-27 Budget Document

    Coatesville, PA
    Budget

    Governor of Pennsylvania presents a balanced 2026-27 budget proposal following three years of what the administration characterizes as significant accomplishments, including historic education investments, seven tax cuts totaling $193 million in new credits for working Pennsylvanians, and two credit rating upgrades that saved over $200 million in borrowing costs. The proposal emphasizes continued focus on economic growth, public safety, education funding, and regulatory efficiency, with claims of eliminating permit backlogs and reducing licensing times by 75 percent while maintaining fiscal responsibility and reducing government waste.

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    budget proposaltax creditseducation fundingpublic safetyfiscal management
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  • City of Columbia FY 2022/2023 Budget

    Columbia, SC
    Budget

    The City of Columbia's FY 2022/2023 Budget document, prepared as of June 14, 2022, outlines the city's financial plan and fund structure for the fiscal year running July 1, 2022 through June 30, 2023. The budget is organized across multiple fund types including the General Fund (the principal operating fund supported primarily by property taxes, licenses, and permits), Special Revenues (for specific designated taxes and grants), and Enterprise Funds (for business-type operations such as Water & Sewer, Storm Water, and Parking). The document describes the budget framework, revenue components with designated and unrestricted uses, and notes that South Carolina law requires the city to adopt a balanced budget by ordinance with a public hearing before each fiscal year begins.

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    budgetproperty taxwater infrastructurepublic hearingenterprise funds
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  • TOWNSHIP OF UPPER ST. CLAIR, PA 2025 BUDGET 2024 BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS

    Minersville, PA
    Budget

    The Township of Upper St. Clair, Pennsylvania adopted its 2025 budget under the leadership of a seven-member Board of Commissioners chaired by Daniel R. Paoly and Township Manager Matthew R. Serakowski. The comprehensive 369-page budget document includes detailed sections covering the general fund, revenues (including real estate taxes, earned income taxes, licenses, and permits), expenditures across multiple programs, and long-term financial planning with five-year projections and capital improvement initiatives. Key departmental areas outlined include general government administration, public safety (police, fire, and animal control), and community development.

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    budgetreal estate taxespublic safetycapital improvementsgovernment administration
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  • Ordinance No. 27979-09-2025 Page 1 of 40 Ordinance No. 27979-09-2025

    Fort Worth, TX
    Budget

    Ordinance No. 27979-09-2025 appropriates funding for the City of Fort Worth's operating budget for fiscal year 2026 (October 1, 2025–September 30, 2026) and establishes the capital improvement program. The ordinance authorizes 8,910 total positions and includes revenue projections of $641.4 million in property tax, $263 million in sales tax, and approximately $130.5 million in other revenues (taxes, licenses, permits, intergovernmental funds, and service charges). The budget was submitted by the City Manager on August 12, 2025, reviewed in council work sessions, and revised by the City Council before adoption.

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  • COUNCIL AGENDA: 3/18/25 FILE: 25-242 ITEM: 3.3 Memorandum TO: CITY COUNCIL

    San Jose, CA
    Budget

    Mayor Matt Mahan presented the March Budget Message for Fiscal Year 2025-2026 to San José City Council on March 12, 2025, recommending that the City Manager submit a balanced budget guided by four established Focus Areas: Reducing Unsheltered Homelessness, Increasing Community Safety, Cleaning Up Our Neighborhoods, and Attracting Investment in Jobs and Housing. The message highlighted progress including 417 homeless placements opened, 298 new affordable housing units, deployment of 474 automatic license plate readers, and a historic $27 million investment in environmental remediation related to homelessness impacts. The framework is intended to provide direction for the City Manager to prepare proposals for May budget deliberations and the Fiscal Year 2025-2026 Proposed Budget.

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    budgethomelessnessaffordable housingpublic safetyenvironmental remediation
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  • 2026 PROPOSED BUDGET NARRATIVE MAYOR MATT TUERK FINANCE DIRECTOR BINA PATEL

    Allentown, PA
    Budget

    The 2026 Proposed Budget Narrative, presented by Mayor Matt Tuerk and Finance Director Bina Patel, outlines the municipality's General Fund revenues across multiple tax and fee categories. Key revenue sources include Earned Income Tax ($47.6 million), Current Year City Real Estate Tax ($40.7 million), Business Privilege Tax ($13.1 million), and Deed Transfer Tax ($3.1 million), along with various permits, licenses, and service fees totaling hundreds of thousands of dollars. The document provides a comprehensive breakdown of anticipated revenue sources to support the 2026 fiscal year budget.

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    budgettax revenuemunicipal finance
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  • 2026 Proposed Budget | Borough of State College

    State College, PA
    Budget

    The Borough of State College's 2026 Proposed Budget is a comprehensive 406-page document outlining the municipality's financial plan across multiple departments and funds, including General Fund, Capital Fund, Asset Replacement Fund, and Debt services. The budget covers diverse areas such as police, public works, parking, planning, public health, and regional programs, with detailed capital improvement projects including parking garage repairs, street reconstruction, sanitary sewer work, and park improvements. The document includes financial policies, demographic information, organizational structure, departmental budgets with receipt details, and a fee resolution appendix covering various municipal services and licenses.

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    budgetcapital improvementspublic workspolicemunicipal services
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  • Click here

    Jackson, MS
    Budget

    The City of Jackson's Fiscal Year 2025-26 Adopted Budget document outlines revenues and departmental allocations across 206 pages. General property tax revenue is budgeted at $68,521,457 for FY 2025-26, compared to $66,570,938 in the original FY 2025 budget. Licenses and permits revenue includes building permits projected at $1,043,929, privilege licenses at $355,100, and electrical permits at $156,509. The budget encompasses departments including Fire, Police, Public Works, Parks & Recreation, Planning & Development, Human Resources, and Information Technology, with detailed sections on Administration, Debt Services, and Employee Benefits.

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  • PROVIDENCE TOWNSHIP 2025 BUDGET

    Providence, RI
    Budget

    Providence Township's 2025 budget projects total revenues of $2,455,437, including a $850,000 carryover from 2024 surplus, with primary revenue sources being earned income tax ($1,033,000), real estate taxes ($224,000), and real estate transfer tax ($85,000). The budget also incorporates state grants totaling $45,000 (including $40,000 in municipal pension aid and $5,000 in recycling grants), permit and licensing fees across various categories, and miscellaneous local revenues. Notable revenue streams include cable TV franchise fees ($80,000), zoning permit fees ($25,000), and firefighters' relief fund receipts ($48,000).

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    budgettax revenuepermit feesemergency servicesrecycling
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  • City of Huntsville, Alabama

    Huntsville, AL
    Budget

    The City of Huntsville, Alabama adopted its Fiscal Year 2022 annual budget (beginning October 1, 2021) with total revenues projected at $417.4 million, representing significant growth across major revenue sources including sales and use taxes ($249.5 million), ad valorem taxes ($88.3 million), and license fees ($24.7 million). The budget document identifies the city's administrative structure under Mayor Tommy Battle and City Administrator John Hamilton, with departments spanning public safety, community services, infrastructure, and economic development. The city's jurisdiction expanded to 221.76 square miles by 2021, with the budget prepared by the Finance Department under Director Penny L. Smith.

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    budgetfiscal year 2022revenuesales taxpublic safety
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  • TOWNSHIP OF BETHLEHEM NORTHAMPTON COUNTY, PA 2023 ADOPTED BUDGET (ALL FUNDS)

    Bethlehem, PA
    Budget

    The Township of Bethlehem's 2023 Adopted Budget document, finalized December 19, 2022, presents comprehensive revenue and expenditure projections across six funds: General Fund, Sewer Fund, Liquid Fuels Fund, Capital Reserve Fund, Fire Tax Fund, and Stormwater Fund. Total General Fund tax revenue is budgeted at $15,976,510 for 2023, with earned income tax constituting $5,450,000, real estate tax at $7,103,510, and real estate transfer tax at $1,275,000. Licenses and permits revenue totals $841,700, and the budget includes detailed expenditure summaries and minor equipment allocations across all operating funds.

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    budgettax revenuesewer infrastructurestormwater managementcapital reserve
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  • 2026-27 Budget Document

    Pottstown, PA
    Budget

    Governor Wolf's 2026-27 budget proposal, presented February 3, 2026, emphasizes his administration's economic and fiscal accomplishments over three years, including historic education investments, seven tax cuts totaling $193 million in new tax credits for working Pennsylvanians, and two credit rating upgrades that saved over $200 million in borrowing costs. The budget reflects a focus on delivering results across education, public safety, job creation, and government efficiency, including elimination of permitting backlogs and reduction of licensing times by 75 percent. The governor presents this balanced budget as evidence of responsible fiscal management while maintaining investments in core services for Pennsylvania residents.

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    education fundingtax creditspublic safetyjob creationgovernment efficiency
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