Town Crier
Request a township
All typesagendaminutesproposalbudgetother
All time30 days90 days1 year

27 results for “maintenance” · budget

  • City of Stamford FY2025-2026 Budget Presentation March 5, 2025

    Mar 5, 2025

    ·Stamford, CT
    Budget

    The City of Stamford presented its FY2025-2026 budget on March 5, 2025, with Mayor Caroline Simmons outlining a fiscally responsible budget aimed at minimizing residents' tax burden while investing in critical services. Key priorities include public safety, schools, parks and sustainability, roads and pedestrian safety, housing, and new community initiatives, supported by a strong economic outlook showing a 2.8% unemployment rate, decreased commercial vacancy rates in the central business district, and over $1 billion in annual visitors. The administration proposed designating surplus revenue into school construction and identified $1.9 million in departmental cuts while maintaining investment in mission-critical positions.

    AI summary

    budgetpublic safetyschool fundingroad maintenancehousing
View PDFSource
  • 22-1236: A bill for an ordinance assessing the annual costs of the continuing care, operation, repair, maintenance and replacement of the Broadway Pedestrian Mall A Local Maintenance District upon the real property, exclusive of improvements thereon, benefited. Approves the 2023 annual costs of the continuing care, operation, repair, maintenance and replacement of the Broadway Pedestrian Mall A Local Maintenance District in Council District 7. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 10-4-2022.

    Sep 25, 2022

    ·Denver, CO
    Budget
    Source
  • 22-1233: A bill for an ordinance assessing the annual costs of the continuing care, operation, repair, maintenance and replacement of the Tennyson Street II Pedestrian Mall Local Maintenance District upon the real property, exclusive of improvements thereon, benefited. Approves the 2023 annual costs of the continuing care, operation, repair, maintenance and replacement of the Tennyson Street II Pedestrian Mall Local Maintenance District in Council District 1. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 10-4-2022.

    Sep 25, 2022

    ·Denver, CO
    Budget
    Source
  • 22-0710: A bill for an ordinance making an appropriation in and a rescission from General Fund Contingency to make an appropriation for a cash transfer from the General Fund to the General Government Special Revenue Fund; and making appropriations in and a cash transfer from the Transportation and Mobility Fund and appropriations in the Capital Improvements and Capital Maintenances Fund. Approves an appropriation in the General Fund to make a cash transfer to the Transportation and Mobility Special Revenue Fund and a cash transfer from the Transportation and Mobility Special Revenue Fund to the Transportation and Mobility Capital projects Fund. The last regularly scheduled Council meeting within the 30-day review period is on 7-18-22. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 6-14-22.

    Jun 6, 2022

    ·Denver, CO
    Budget
    Source
  • 0150-2022: To authorize the expenditure of $295,680.00 from the Recreation and Parks Operation Fund for the 2022 lease-purchase payments to PNC Equipment Finance, LLC and Lake Erie Golf for the lease and maintenance of 385 golf riding carts; and to declare an emergency. ($295,680.00)

    Jan 5, 2022

    ·Columbus, OH
    Budget
    Source
  • 21-1264: A bill for an ordinance assessing the annual costs of the continuing care, operation, repair, maintenance and replacement of the Phase II Broadway Pedestrian Mall Local Maintenance District upon the real property, exclusive of improvements thereon, benefited. Approves the 2022 annual costs of the continuing care, operation, repair, maintenance and replacement of the Phase II Broadway Pedestrian Mall Local Maintenance District in Council District 7. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 11-2-21.

    Oct 20, 2021

    ·Denver, CO
    Budget
    Source
  • 2532-2021: To authorize the Finance and Management Director to establish various purchase orders for automotive preventative maintenance services on behalf of the Fleet Management Division, per the terms and conditions of various previously established Universal Term Contracts; to authorize the expenditure of $60,000.00 from the Fleet Management Operating Fund. ($60,000.00)

    Sep 29, 2021

    ·Columbus, OH
    Budget
    Source
  • 21-1167: A bill for an ordinance assessing the annual costs of the continuing care, operation, repair, maintenance and replacement of the 20th Street Pedestrian Mall Local Maintenance District upon the real property, exclusive of improvements thereon, benefited. Approves the 2022 annual costs of the continuing care, operation, repair, maintenance and replacement of the 20th Street Pedestrian Mall Local Maintenance District in Council District 9. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 10-12-21.

    Sep 28, 2021

    ·Denver, CO
    Budget
    Source
  • 2509-2021: To authorize the Director of the Department of Technology to enter into contract with Softchoice LLC for Cisco SmartNet maintenance services, to authorize the expenditure of $236,597.59 from the Department of Technology, Information Services Division, Information Services Operating Fund; and to declare an emergency. ($236,597.59)

    Sep 27, 2021

    ·Columbus, OH
    Budget
    Source
  • 2483-2021: To authorize the Director of Public Utilities to enter into an Indefinite Quantity Contract with Chaltron Systems Inc. for the annual service, repair and maintenance of Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) alarm and detection systems for the Division of Water; and to authorize the expenditure of $54,000.00 from the Water Operating Fund. ($54,000.00)

    Sep 23, 2021

    ·Columbus, OH
    Budget
    Source
  • 2392-2021: To authorize the Director of Public Service to enter into contract with the Franklin County Engineer’s Office for the provision of snow and ice removal services during the 2021-2022 winter season; to authorize the expenditure of up to $700,000.00 from the Street Construction Maintenance and Repair Fund for those services; and to declare an emergency. ($700,000.00)

    Sep 13, 2021

    ·Columbus, OH
    Budget
    Source
  • 21-0904: A bill for an ordinance making a rescission from and an appropriation in the Culture and Recreation Special Revenue Fund, and authorizing a cash transfer to and an appropriation in the Parks, Trails and Open Space Capital Improvement Fund. Transfers $1,215,000 from the Parks, Trails and Open Space Operating Special Revenue Fund 15828 into the Parks, Trails, and Open Space Capital Improvement Fund 36050 and appropriates the transferred amount to be utilized for the property acquisition of 5060 North Logan Street and 401 East 50th Avenue for a new Denver Parks and Recreation maintenance facility, as well as improvements to the existing building and the surrounding site. The last regularly scheduled Council meeting within the 30-day review period is on 9-27-21. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 8-24-21.

    Aug 4, 2021

    ·Denver, CO
    Budget
    Source
  • 2025 Parks & Rec

    Allentown, PA
    Budget

    The City of Allentown Parks and Recreation Department's 2025 budget totals $8,087,937, representing an increase of $552,185 from the 2024 adjusted budget of $7,535,752. Personnel costs comprise the largest budget category at $6,401,183, including permanent wages of $2,942,505, temporary wages of $1,042,801, and employee group insurance of $1,354,332. Services and charges are budgeted at $1,130,539, with other contract services representing $880,744 of that total. Materials and supplies are allocated $449,800, and capital outlay is budgeted at $104,915. The document includes staffing details for the Park Maintenance bureau showing positions including a Parks and Recreation Director (0.25 FTE), four Maintenance Supervisors (4.0 FTE total), and various tradesman roles such as plumber, pools specialist, and electrician.

    AI summary

    parks and recreationbudgetpersonnel costscapital outlaymaintenance
    View PDFSource
  • 1 Kentucky’s 2022-2024 Executive Budget EXECUTIVE SUMMARY THE FUTURE IS NOW

    Louisville, KY
    Budget

    Kentucky's 2022-2024 Executive Budget proposes historic investments totaling $1.9 billion in additional General Fund revenues, driven by record economic recovery and a 7.5 percent growth rate following strong fiscal performance in 2021. The budget prioritizes education system transformation through universal pre-K funding and "Bucks for Brains" higher education initiatives, while also addressing long-standing needs including state employee salary increases, pension funding, child protection services, and disaster recovery from December 2021 storms. The proposal represents a significant departure from decades of budget cuts, directing resources toward workforce development, economic growth, and addressing fixed costs and deferred maintenance across state government.

    AI summary

    budgeteducation fundingworkforce developmentpension fundingdisaster recovery
    View PDFSource
  • City of Raleigh FY25 Budget at a Glance

    Raleigh, NC
    Budget

    The City of Raleigh adopted a FY25 budget of $732.2 million (13.1% increase from FY24) with a proposed tax rate of 35.50 cents per $100 of assessed value, an increase of 3.80 cents. The budget prioritizes affordable housing, transit and transportation, public safety, and growth management, with dedicated funding for employee cost-of-living adjustments and deferred capital maintenance. The city conducted enhanced community engagement beginning in October 2023, including listening sessions and participatory budgeting initiatives, to ensure resident priorities shaped spending decisions.

    AI summary

    budgettax increaseaffordable housingpublic safetytransit and transportation
    View PDFSource
  • ONE HUNDRED SEVENTH ANNUAL FINANCIAL REPORT OF DES MOINES COUNTY

    Des Moines, IA
    Budget

    This is the table of contents and opening pages of Des Moines County's 107th Annual Financial Report for the fiscal period July 1, 2011 to June 30, 2012, prepared by County Auditor Carol S. Copeland. The document contains comprehensive financial information and a detailed index covering numerous county departments and functions, including human services, conservation, emergency management, courthouse maintenance, and various specialized boards and commissions. Specific budget figures and policy decisions are not presented in this excerpt, which consists primarily of the document's organizational structure and content guide.

    AI summary

    county budgetfinancial reportfiscal management
    View PDFSource
  • odot-budget-book-2025.pdf - Oklahoma.gov

    Oklahoma City, OK
    Budget

    The Oklahoma Department of Transportation's 2025 budget, authorized through General Appropriation bill SB 1125, allocates $590 million from the Rebuild Oklahoma Access and Driver Safety (ROADS) Fund at its full statutory authorized amount. The State Transportation Fund received a $4.8 million increase to a base of $216 million, including $16.2 million for industrial area access improvements and lake/waterway access, plus $5 million for public transit. An additional $200 million appropriation established the Rural Economic Transportation Reliability and Optimization (RETRO) Fund to accelerate construction and maintenance of projects in rural areas experiencing economic development and traffic volume increases. Senate Bill 1429 repurposed the McClellan Kerr Arkansas River Navigation System Revolving Fund to the Oklahoma Ports Infrastructure Revolving Fund, with the GA bill providing $16.2 million for port and navigational system improvements.

    AI summary

    transportation budgetroad maintenancerural infrastructurepublic transitport infrastructure
    View PDFSource
  • Analysis of the Mayor’s Recommended Budget Estimate for the City of

    Syracuse, NY
    Budget

    Bonadio & Co., LLP prepared an analysis of Syracuse, New York's Mayor's Recommended Budget for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2026, submitted to the City Common Council on April 30, 2025. The analysis examines revenue, expenditure, and fund balance trends to identify concerns such as unusual growth, reliance on one-time revenue sources, and fund balance depletion. Syracuse, a city of approximately 146,000 residents, faces ongoing financial challenges typical of older urban centers, including modest revenue growth heavily dependent on sales tax, property taxes, and state aid that has not consistently kept pace with rising expenditures in employee benefits, public safety, and infrastructure maintenance.

    AI summary

    budget analysisrevenue trendspublic safetyinfrastructure maintenancefund balance
    View PDFSource
  • Borough of State College 2026-2030 Capital Improvements Plan Proposed Version

    State College, PA
    Budget

    The Borough of State College has proposed a 2026-2030 Capital Improvements Plan recommending 34 capital projects totaling $59.9 million over five years, with $38.4 million allocated for 2026. The plan requires General Fund contributions ranging from $3 million to $4.5 million annually across the five-year period and includes infrastructure maintenance and improvements, new equipment purchases, facility rehabilitation, and projects addressing regulatory mandates. The plan encompasses multiple service areas including information technology, parking, public works facilities, fleet services, sanitary sewer systems, streets, and parks.

    AI summary

    capital improvementsinfrastructurebudgetpublic workssewer systems
    View PDFSource
  • Chair Carol DeWolf Westtown Township County of Chester

    West Chester, PA
    Budget

    Westtown Township, a Second Class Township in Chester County, Pennsylvania, adopted its Fiscal Year 2022 Budget on December 20, 2021, with Chair Carol DeWolf overseeing the process. The Township, serving 10,827 residents across 8.64 square miles with a real estate assessed valuation of $822.6 million, maintains a strong financial position reflected in Moody's Aa2 rating, supported by a mature tax base and General Fund reserves meeting Government Finance Officers Association recommendations. The 2022 budget funds ongoing infrastructure projects including MS4 stream restoration efforts, park plan implementation, and continued maintenance of the Township's 54 miles of roads, presented in balanced form as required by state law.

    AI summary

    budgetinfrastructuretax baseroad maintenancepark planning
    View PDFSource
  • 1 BUFFALO FISCAL STABILITY AUTHORITY

    Buffalo, NY
    Budget

    The Buffalo Fiscal Stability Authority's third-quarter analysis of the Buffalo Municipal Housing Authority (BMHA) for fiscal year 2024-25 shows the agency operating within its overall consolidated budget as of March 31, 2025, with revenues of $47.3 million (79.2% of budget) and expenses of $45.7 million (78.9% of budget). However, the Marine Drive Apartments property is significantly underperforming, with actual expenses at 113% of budget resulting in a $1.1 million net operating loss—$1.0 million worse than projected—driven by elevated general, maintenance, administrative, and utility expenses, though partially offset by $0.5 million in favorable rental revenues. Additional notable items include a $2.05 million transfer of Fosdick Field to the Buffalo City School District and a 17.2% employee vacancy rate across BMHA, with the Capital Improvements department experiencing a particularly high 42.9% vacancy rate.

    AI summary

    municipal housingbudget analysisfiscal stabilityproperty managementemployee vacancy
    View PDFSource
  • POTTER TOWNSHIP 2020 ANNUAL OPERATING BUDGET Board of Supervisors

    Pottsville, PA
    Budget

    Potter Township's Board of Supervisors approved the 2020 Annual Operating Budget with no millage rate increase, comprising seven funds: General Fund, State Fund, Capital Fund, Wage Tax Fund, Escrow Fund, Public Safety Fund, and DCNR Grant Fund. The General Fund budget totaled $3,812,580 in receipts and appropriations, with estimated tax revenue of $2,362,600 and major expenditures including Highway Maintenance ($1,290,795), Parks ($1,019,000), and Planning & Zoning ($433,250). The State Fund received a $24,861.54 liquid fuels allocation, while the Capital Fund maintained a balance of $52,268.07 with no estimated expenditures for the year.

    AI summary

    budgethighway maintenanceparksplanning and zoningpublic safety
    View PDFSource
  • Mayor's Budget Message

    York, PA
    Budget

    The City of York submitted its proposed $104 million budget for 2017, which includes a General Fund of over $45 million and a 2% property tax reduction while remaining on track for a 15% reduction over five years. To balance the budget amid rising healthcare and pension costs, the city froze or eliminated vacant positions and held department budgets firm, while also implementing a 10% sewer fee increase and 3.9% refuse fee increase due to infrastructure maintenance and contract costs. Mayor C. Kim Bracey emphasized the structural financial challenges facing Third Class Cities in Pennsylvania and called on state legislators to address the inadequate revenue system that forces municipalities to over-rely on property taxes.

    AI summary

    budgetproperty taxsewer feerefuse feepension costs
    View PDFSource
  • FY 2020-21 Budget Presentation City of Stamford

    Stamford, CT
    Budget

    The City of Stamford's FY 2020-21 Budget Presentation for the Transportation, Traffic & Parking Department outlines the department's mission to enhance and maintain the city's transportation infrastructure with emphasis on safety, mobility, and sustainable practices. The department oversees four programs including Transportation Planning & Engineering, Traffic Maintenance, Special Events, and Parking, and is administering over $36 million in capital transportation projects across the city, including fiber optic cable replacement, signal optimization, intersection improvements, and pedestrian safety enhancements. Additionally, the department secured over $13 million in developer contributions for transportation improvements through development plan review and responded to 1,962 citizen service inquiries in the prior fiscal period.

    AI summary

    budgettransportation infrastructuretraffic managementparkingpedestrian safety
    View PDFSource
  • Capital Improvement Plan FY 2022-2023 BUDGET ...

    Des Moines, IA
    Budget

    The City of Des Moines adopted a Capital Improvement Plan on March 21, 2022, allocating $906.9 million across fiscal years 2022-2026 for infrastructure and departmental projects. Major funding priorities include Streets ($376.5 million), Storm Water ($109.3 million), Municipal Building ($155.8 million), and Parks and Recreation ($85.8 million), with the largest spending scheduled for FY 2022-2023 at $305.2 million. The plan details specific projects across departments including bridge repairs, fire equipment acquisition, library improvements, and sanitary sewer work, with funding distributed across the five-year period based on project timelines and priorities.

    AI summary

    capital improvement planinfrastructure fundingbudget allocationstreet maintenancewater infrastructure
    View PDFSource
  • 2026 Executive Operating Budget - Final Web Version City of Madison

    Madison, WI
    Budget

    The 2026 Executive Operating Budget for the City of Madison funds essential municipal services including street maintenance, library services, police and fire protection, small business support, and parks management. Mayor Satya Rhodes-Conway emphasizes that a recently approved resident referendum will provide critical additional revenue to help overcome state-imposed restrictions on local government funding, allowing the city to maintain current service levels and address emerging priorities while keeping tax increases to historically low levels. The mayor notes ongoing structural budget challenges stemming from state limitations on local revenue sources and calls for community input during the Finance Committee and Common Council deliberation period.

    AI summary

    budgetstreet maintenancepolice and fire protectionlibrary servicesparks management
    View PDFSource
  • DOYLESTOWN TOWNSHIP 2023 FINAL BUDGET

    Doylestown, PA
    Budget

    Doylestown Township's Board of Supervisors adopted the 2023 Final Budget on December 20, 2022, following a six-month collaborative review process involving township leadership, department heads, finance staff, and the Ways & Means Committee. The comprehensive 86-page budget document includes detailed revenue and expenditure projections across 15 funds, supporting schedules, and five-year financial forecasts through 2027. Key fund areas covered include the General Fund, Fire Fund, Parks & Recreation, Water Fund, Debt Service, Capital Projects, and specialized funds for roads, bridges, ambulance services, and bike paths.

    AI summary

    budget adoptionmunicipal financecapital projectswater infrastructureroad maintenance
    View PDFSource