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30 results for “lobbying registration”

  • NOTICE OF MEETING AND CITY COUNCIL AGENDAi MONDAY, MARCH 2, 2026 – 6:00 P.M.

    Mar 2, 2026

    ·Kansas City, MO
    Agenda

    This is a March 2, 2026 Jefferson City, Missouri City Council meeting agenda scheduled for 6:00 P.M. at the John G. Christy Municipal Building. The agenda includes a financial update presentation by Shiela Pearre, consideration of consent items including a surplus property sale to MoDOT and a police department UTV purchase, and introduction of eight bills covering parking and traffic amendments, a $50,000 air service guarantee agreement with Columbia Regional Airport, multiple subdivision and land use approvals, and a tax credit agreement for a conference center project.

    AI summary

    city council meetingpublic hearingsfinancial updatepublic safetyreal estate
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  • BOARD OF DIRECTORS’ MEETING AGENDA JANUARY 26, 2026, 11:30 AM I. Welcome

    Jan 26, 2026

    ·Knoxville, TN
    Agenda

    The Board of Directors of Downtown Knoxville Alliance held meetings on November 17, 2025, and scheduled a January 26, 2026 meeting at 11:30 AM to address action items including FY 24-25 audit results, November and December financial reports, and committee reports. In the November meeting, the board unanimously approved the October financial report and allocated $30,500 in sponsorships across five cultural and community events, including $10,000 each to the East Tennessee History Center and Knoxville Museum of Art programming, plus $5,000 to fund an art wraps program continuation through the Knoxville History Project.

    AI summary

    financial reportsbudget allocationcultural fundingaudit resultscommunity sponsorships
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  • NOTICE OF MEETING AND CITY COUNCIL AGENDA

    Jan 20, 2026

    ·Kansas City, MO
    Agenda

    The Jefferson City Council met on January 20, 2026, to address various agenda items including recognizing posthumous and service awards, approving a special exception permit for a conference center and hotel exceeding 100,000 square feet at 201 Madison Street and 210 Monroe Street, and making mayoral appointments to multiple boards and commissions. The consent agenda included approval of several contracts for wastewater management, yard waste removal, and transit software services, while pending bills addressed the creation of a Downtown Jefferson City Conference Center Community Improvement District.

    AI summary

    zoninghotel developmentwastewater managementspecial permitscommunity improvement district
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  • COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA OFFICE OF THE BUDGET DATE: November 12, 2025

    Nov 12, 2025

    ·Lansford, PA
    Budget

    On November 12, 2025, Pennsylvania Governor signed Act 1-A, the General Appropriation Act of 2025, establishing total appropriations of $103.747 billion across multiple funds. The General Fund received $98.45 billion in total appropriations ($49.42 billion in state funds and $49.03 billion in federal funds), while the remaining $5.3 billion was distributed across specialized funds including transportation, water infrastructure, public health, and tourism initiatives. The notification provides expenditure symbol numbers and allocations by department, with supplemental adjustments to the 2024-25 budget included in the total.

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  • 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.

    AI summary

    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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  • 1 COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE June 5, 2025 AGENDA 1. PUBLIC COMMENT 2.

    Jun 5, 2025

    ·Dearborn, MI
    Agenda

    The Committee of the Whole for the City of Dearborn met on June 5, 2025, to consider nine agenda items including approval of previous meeting minutes and multiple ordinance proposals. The meeting addressed amendments to the Animals Chapter regarding dog licensing (Ordinance No. 25-1844); comprehensive zoning amendments affecting parking, site development standards, and multiple districts (Ordinance No. 25-1845); rezoning property at 100 N. Telegraph Road from Local Business to Community Business classification (Ordinance No. 25-1846); and several regulations governing short-term rentals, non-owner-occupied residential properties, hotel licensing fees, and hotel conduct standards (Ordinances No. 25-1847 through 25-1849). Most ordinances were recommended for tabling rather than immediate advancement.

    AI summary

    zoning amendmentsshort-term rentalsdog licensingparking standardshotel licensing
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  • Monday, November 25, 2024 10:00 AM City of Phoenix Meeting Location:

    Nov 25, 2024

    ·Phoenix, AZ
    Agenda

    This document is an agenda for a City of Phoenix Economic Development and Housing Subcommittee meeting scheduled for Monday, November 25, 2024, at 10:00 AM in City Council Chambers. The agenda contains meeting access information, including options for virtual and in-person participation, registration procedures for public speakers, and details for watching or calling into the meeting via livestream or phone. No specific agenda items, budget figures, or policy decisions are listed in the provided content.

    AI summary

    economic developmenthousingpublic meetings
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  • TOWNSHIP OF BETHLEHEM 2025 BUDGET ASSUMPTIONS AS OF OCTOBER 18, 2024

    Oct 18, 2024

    ·Bethlehem, PA
    Budget

    As of October 18, 2024, the Township of Bethlehem presented its 2025 budget assumptions to the Board of Commissioners, incorporating wage increases across multiple employee groups (ranging from 3.0% to 5.9%, with medical costs rising 17.7% and pension obligations increasing 55.57%), hiring two new police officers and two truck drivers, and proposing no increases to the millage rate, sewer billing rate, or stormwater fees. The budget includes a tentative hearing schedule spanning October through December 2024, with department-specific budget reviews scheduled for late October and early November, culminating in budget adoption on December 16th.

    AI summary

    budgetwage increasespolice staffingpension obligationssewer billing
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  • CB 24-01 1/2/2024 Chief Clerk Rebekah Hubbard Calls the meeting to order at

    Jan 2, 2024

    ·Harrisburg, PA
    Minutes

    On January 2, 2024, the Board of Commissioners held its organizational meeting and unanimously approved appointments and resolutions for the year. Key appointments included Commissioner Alan M. Hall as Chairman, Commissioner David Darrow as Vice-Chairman, Rebekah Hubbard as Chief Clerk, Linda LaBarbera as Public Defender, Rebecca Wescott as Director of Tax Claim, and Gabriel Fera as County Solicitor. The board also established meeting schedules for various boards including Commissioners meetings (second and fourth Wednesday at 9:00 a.m.), Board of Assessment Revision (first Thursday at 9:00 a.m.), and Jail Board (first Tuesday at 8:30 a.m.), and authorized the Chief Clerk and Deputy Chief Clerk to use facsimile signatures on county checks.

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  • city-council-advance-agenda-2023- ...

    Sep 25, 2023

    ·Spokane, WA
    Agenda

    The City of Spokane notified the public that City Council has resumed in-person meetings at City Hall, with virtual participation available via WebEx and live streaming on Channel 5 and online platforms for the week of September 25, 2023. Public testimony sign-up for the Monday legislative session runs from 5:00-6:00 p.m., with a three-minute time limit for comments on legislative items and two minutes for open forum remarks. The document outlines public decorum rules for council meetings, including prohibitions on clapping, cheering, booing, and outbursts, and specifies that open forum discussions must relate to city affairs and not pending agenda items or election initiatives.

    AI summary

    city council meetingspublic testimonymeeting procedures
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  • April 4, 2023 COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF FORT COLLINS ...

    Apr 4, 2023

    ·Fort Collins, CO
    Minutes

    On April 4, 2023, the Fort Collins City Council held a regular meeting where Mayor Jeni Arndt presented five proclamations recognizing Donate Life Month, Fair Housing Month, Sexual Assault Awareness Month, Southwest Asian North African Heritage Month, and Earth Day. During public comment, citizens raised concerns about air quality monitoring, housing affordability, and the city's U+2 zoning policy, with Colorado State University representatives specifically requesting the Council place a U+2 policy question on the ballot due to its impact on students and residents. The meeting included a full roll call of council members and City Manager Kelly DiMartino provided an agenda review noting that all consent agenda items were recommended for approval with no changes to the published agenda.

    AI summary

    zoning policyhousing affordabilityair qualityproclamations
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  • MEETING AGENDA December 6, 2013 Bruce Berry, MD, Chair Jenny Allen, Vice Chair

    Dec 6, 2013

    ·Charleston, WV
    Agenda

    This document is a meeting agenda for the West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission dated December 6, 2013, held at the West Virginia Regional Technology Park in South Charleston. The meeting covered multiple agenda items including approval of financial aid reports, enrollment data, capital project priorities, and updates on institutional strategic initiatives related to access, success, and impact. The agenda included discussions on a Fall 2013 enrollment report, a comprehensive financial aid report, proposals to approve capital projects at West Virginia State University and Concord University, and reviews of institutional programs and textbook policies.

    AI summary

    higher educationfinancial aidcapital projectsenrollmentinstitutional strategy
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  • YORK TOWNSHIP ZONING ORDINANCE Ordinance 2012-13 Adopted 9/11/2012

    Sep 11, 2012

    ·York, PA
    Other

    York Township adopted Zoning Ordinance 2012-13 on September 11, 2012, establishing comprehensive zoning regulations for land use and development within the township. The ordinance has been amended four times through 2023 and references multiple related documents including subdivision regulations, stormwater management, floodplain management, and comprehensive planning guides. The ordinance consists of 193 pages and covers jurisdictional authority, community development objectives, and zoning provisions governed by Pennsylvania's Municipalities Planning Code.

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  • CITY COUNCIL MEETINGS RULES – PUBLIC DECORUM

    Spokane, WA
    Other

    The document establishes public decorum rules for City Council meetings, prohibiting clapping, cheering, booing, and outbursts, with a three-minute time limit for public comments and a restriction limiting individuals to speaking once per month during open forum. Additional rules specify that open forum discussions must relate to City affairs and exclude current or pending agenda items, profanity, and personal insults, while public testimony on legislative items is also limited to three minutes per speaker unless the Chair determines less time is needed to accommodate all speakers.

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    public meetingspublic commentcity councilmeeting rulespublic conduct
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  • City Clerk – City of Fresno

    Fresno, CA
    Other

    The City of Fresno's Office of the City Clerk provides quality customer service and ensures transparency in the city's legislative processes through functions including elections administration, meeting information, and document access. The office requires lobbyists to register with the city by submitting a form with a $25 fee, with specific deadlines based on registration type: initial registration within 10 days of contracting, annual renewals by April 1, amendments within 10 days of changes, and terminations within 20 days of service cessation. The registration form requires detailed information about lobbyists and their clients, including names, business addresses, and employment dates.

    AI summary

    lobbying registrationelections administrationlegislative transparency
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  • 2026 Proposed Budget

    Palmerton, PA
    Budget

    This document is the cover and introductory section of the 2026 Proposed Budget for Middletown Township, presenting the elected and appointed officials overseeing the township government along with biographies of Board of Supervisors members. The document provides governance structure and personnel information rather than budget figures, policy discussions, or specific financial allocations. Meaningful summary of budget content, decisions, or notable figures cannot be determined from these introductory pages alone.

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    budgetgovernance structuretownship administration
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  • 2026-27 Budget Document

    Pottsville, PA
    Budget

    Pennsylvania Governor presents a balanced 2026-27 budget proposal, emphasizing accomplishments from his first three years including historic education investments, seven tax cuts totaling $193 million in new credits for working families, and economic growth initiatives that created tens of thousands of jobs. The administration highlights fiscal responsibility through two credit rating upgrades, $200 million in borrowing cost savings, and streamlined permitting processes, while noting gun violence reductions and improved public safety outcomes. The budget document represents continued focus on delivering economic growth, supporting education and workers, and efficient government operations.

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  • PROPOSED BUDGET

    Greenville, SC
    Budget

    The County of Greenville, South Carolina Proposed Budget Document covers fiscal years 2026 and 2027, providing a comprehensive overview of the county's financial plan across multiple fund types including General Fund, Special Revenue Funds, Internal Service Funds, Enterprise Funds, and Capital Projects Funds. The document includes detailed budget allocations for various departments spanning administrative services, public safety, public works, planning and development, judicial services, and other county operations. The budget document serves as a transparency tool outlining revenue sources, appropriations, departmental priorities, and the county's long-term financial and operational goals.

    AI summary

    budgetpublic safetypublic workscounty operationsrevenue allocation
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  • BUDGET.PA.GOV EXECUTIVE BUDGET 2025-2026

    Palmerton, PA
    Budget

    Pennsylvania's Governor proposed the 2025-2026 Executive Budget on February 4, 2025, continuing bipartisan investments from previous budgets in K-12 education, property tax relief for seniors, and public safety while emphasizing expanded early childhood programs and mental health supports in schools. The budget builds on the Blueprint for Higher Education with competitive funding for state-related universities and includes new workforce development investments and an economic development strategy focused on innovation across multiple sectors. The Governor framed the budget as delivering on core priorities of improving education, building safer communities, and expanding economic opportunity established during the first two years of the administration.

    AI summary

    budgeteducation fundingproperty tax reliefpublic safetyworkforce development
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  • Borough of State College - 2023 Adopted Budget

    State College, PA
    Budget

    The Borough of State College adopted its 2023 budget on December 19, 2022, which totals $80.6 million in expenditures funded by $63 million in recurring revenues and $17.6 million from fund balances. The budget includes rate increases for sewer and refuse services, a 1.5 mill increase in the real estate tax rate to address inflation, and covers all municipal departments and services including police, public works, planning, parking, and regional programs. The document serves as a comprehensive financial plan encompassing the General Fund, Capital Fund, Asset Replacement Fund, and various enterprise funds with detailed departmental budgets and fee schedules.

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    budgettax increasemunicipal servicessewer servicescapital fund
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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.

    AI summary

    budget proposaltax creditseducation fundingpublic safetyfiscal management
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  • TOWNSHIP OF BETHLEHEM NORTHAMPTON COUNTY, PA 2025 ADOPTED BUDGET (ALL FUNDS)

    Bethlehem, PA
    Budget

    The Township of Bethlehem, Northampton County, PA adopted its 2025 budget as of December 16, 2024, encompassing multiple funds including General, Sewer, Liquid Fuels, Capital Reserve, Fire Tax, and Stormwater funds. General Fund revenue is projected at $16.88 million in taxes, with earned income tax increasing from $5.73 million (2024) to $6.15 million (2025), while real estate transfer tax remains flat at $1.275 million; licenses and permits revenue is budgeted at $628,500, down from $712,500 in 2024. The budget document provides detailed revenue and expenditure summaries and line-item details across all fund sections, with allocations for capital reserves, public works, and stormwater management.

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    budgettax increasecapital reservepublic worksstormwater management
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  • AMBLER BOROUGH COUNCIL MINUTES

    Ambler, PA
    Minutes

    On April 19, 2022, Ambler Borough Council held its regular monthly meeting, which was preceded by a reception honoring volunteers during National Volunteer Week. The Finance and Planning Committee received an audit presentation from Zelenkofske-Axelrod LLC, in which auditor Deborah Bacon reported an unmodified ("Clean") opinion on the Borough's financial statements with no findings, noting the governmental activities net position is $11.0 million (a $1.6 million increase from the prior year). The meeting also included recognition of Wissahickon High School students serving on the Environmental Advisory Council and approval of the previous month's meeting minutes.

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    financial auditbudgetvolunteer recognition
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  • i RULES OF THE COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF JACKSONVILLE As authorized by

    Jacksonville, FL
    Other

    This document is the Rules of the Council of the City of Jacksonville, updated September 13, 2022 to reflect amendments through Ordinance 2022-645-E, which establishes procedures and governance standards for city council operations. The rules cover council organization, including the roles and election of officers (president, vice president, sergeant-at-arms, chaplain), employee structure, and standards of conduct for council members. The document is a 95-page procedural manual authorizing governance under Section 10.101 of the Ordinance Code.

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    council proceduresgovernment operationsethics and conduct
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  • BUDGET.PA.GOV EXECUTIVE BUDGET 2025-2026

    York, PA
    Budget

    Pennsylvania's Governor submitted the 2025-2026 executive budget proposal on February 4, 2025, emphasizing continuation of bipartisan investments established in previous budgets across K-12 education, property tax relief for seniors, and law enforcement. The budget maintains scheduled school investments, expands pre-K and early intervention programs, supports state-related universities through competitive funding, and implements the Commonwealth's first comprehensive economic development strategy in nearly 20 years with focus on innovation sectors including agriculture. The proposal builds on claimed achievements from the previous two years, including the largest senior property tax cut in two decades, increased infrastructure spending, and positioning Pennsylvania as a family-friendly state.

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    budgeteducation fundingproperty tax reliefinfrastructureeconomic development
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  • CITY OF LEBANON ZONING ORDINANCE Lebanon County, Pennsylvania

    Lebanon, PA
    Other

    The City of Lebanon adopted a comprehensive Zoning Ordinance on June 22, 2020, funded through a Pennsylvania Department of Community & Economic Development Early Intervention Program Grant. The ordinance establishes zoning districts with specific allowed uses for residential and non-residential areas, dimensional requirements, design standards, historic building protections, floodplain regulations, parking standards, and sign regulations across 180 pages. The document serves as Part 13, Title One of the City of Lebanon's Codified Ordinances and was developed with assistance from Urban Research and Development Corporation.

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    zoningland usehistoric preservationfloodplain managementdesign standards
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  • City Clerk | Boston.gov

    Boston, MA
    Other
    Source
  • Recommended Budget for Fiscal Year 2023

    Hartford, CT
    Budget

    This is the table of contents and cover pages from the City of Hartford's Recommended Budget for Fiscal Year 2023, a 333-page comprehensive budget document. The document outlines the city's budgetary framework including general fund revenues and expenditures, revenue estimates, departmental expenditures across multiple city divisions (from public safety and infrastructure to health services and education), and five-year financial forecasts. Specific budget figures and detailed policy discussions are contained within the full document sections referenced in the table of contents.

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  • ANNUAL BUDGET 2025-2026 Cumberland County Government

    Portland, ME
    Budget

    Cumberland County Government's 2025-2026 Annual Budget document provides a comprehensive overview of county operations and financial planning, including departmental budgets, organizational structure, and revenue sources. The budget covers 141 pages and is organized into sections addressing the General Fund, enterprise funds, human resources, and individual departments including the Sheriff's Office, Emergency Management, District Attorney, and various administrative functions. The document outlines the county's governance structure, with County Commissioners establishing policy and a County Manager implementing operations across departments ranging from law enforcement and jail services to facilities management and public health.

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