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

30 results for “medicaid”

  • CITY OF WORCESTER Tuesday, March 24, 2026 AGENDA OF THE CITY COUNCIL

    Mar 24, 2026

    ·Worcester, MA
    Agenda

    The Worcester City Council meeting scheduled for April 14, 2026, includes approval of minutes from the March 24, 2026 meeting and consideration of a petition by Worcester Mill LLC, represented by Mark A. Borenstein, Esq., requesting discontinuance of certain portions of Mill Street and abandonment of the city's right-of-way and easement rights, which has been referred to the Planning Board. The meeting will be held at 6:30 P.M. in the Esther Howland (South) Chamber at City Hall and will allow both in-person and remote participation via Zoom.

    AI summary

    street discontinuanceproperty rightsplanning board
    View PDFSource
  • December 17, 2025 meeting agenda

    Dec 17, 2025

    ·Baltimore, MD
    Agenda

    This is an agenda document for a December 17, 2025 Board of Public Works meeting to be held online and at the State House Governor's Reception Room in Annapolis, Maryland. The agenda covers multiple state departments and agencies including Agriculture, Housing and Community Development, Maryland Department of the Environment, Maryland Department of Transportation, Department of General Services, University System of Maryland, and Department of Natural Resources, with items addressing grants, capital improvements, real property transactions, and various procurement matters across 293 pages of supporting materials.

    AI summary

    public workscapital improvementsprocurementreal propertygrants
    View PDFSource
  • 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.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • 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
    View PDFSource
  • 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.

    AI summary

    budget appropriationstate fundswater infrastructurefund allocationgeneral appropriation
    View PDFSource
  • 1 REGULAR MEETING OF THE COUNCIL October 21, 2025 AGENDA 1. ROLL CALL 2.

    Oct 21, 2025

    ·Dearborn, MI
    Minutes

    On October 21, 2025, the Dearborn City Council held a regular meeting that included several resolutions recognizing October as Michigan Library Appreciation Month and Breast Cancer Awareness Month, as well as honoring The Pink Sisters nonprofit organization and community member Mary Petlichkoff. The consent agenda included multiple contract awards and authorizations, including $119,500 to Muck-Men for irrigation pond dredging at Dearborn Hills Golf Course, $449,500 to Fuse It Piping LLC for irrigation system repairs at the same facility, $412,576 to Stryker Sales for powered stair chairs for the Fire Department, and acceptance of a $475,000 FY2023 State and Local Cybersecurity Grant.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • 1 REGULAR MEETING OF THE COUNCIL September 23, 2025 AGENDA 1. ROLL CALL 2.

    Sep 23, 2025

    ·Dearborn, MI
    Minutes

    This September 23, 2025 council meeting agenda includes ceremonial resolutions honoring Pastor Colleen Nieman's retirement, recognizing Ali Mroueh's service, and offering condolences to the family of Sarah Ahmad Mochawrab. The consent agenda authorizes several contracts and expenditures totaling over $572,000, including concrete repair at the Ford Community & Performing Arts Center ($214,602), holiday lighting installation ($60,000), asphalt resurfacing for city parking lots ($200,000), electrical work at Peace Park West ($63,150), and a new Senior Attorney Administrative position in the Law Department with an approximate annual cost of $135,000.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • BOARD OF PUBLIC WORKS TABLE OF CONTENTS AUGUST 6, 2025

    Aug 6, 2025

    ·Baltimore, MD
    Agenda

    The Board of Public Works held a meeting on August 6, 2025, at the State House in Annapolis to address a comprehensive agenda covering multiple state agencies and departments. The agenda included items from the Secretary's Action Agenda spanning agriculture, transportation, housing, environmental services, and other state departments, with a recommendation to approve funding for 28 grants under the Maryland Agricultural Cost-Share Program. The meeting was held both online and in person, with numerous capital projects, real property matters, and departmental approvals scheduled for discussion across multiple supplemental sections covering transportation, general services, procurement, and natural resources.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • ANNUAL COMPREHENSIVE FINANCIAL REPORT FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED JUNE 30, 2025

    Jun 30, 2025

    ·Hartford, CT
    Budget

    This Annual Comprehensive Financial Report from the Connecticut State Comptroller's Office documents the state's financial position for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2025. The report was prepared by the Budget and Financial Analysis Division under the leadership of Michael J. Delaney and includes government-wide financial statements, management's discussion and analysis, and audited financial information. The document represents a comprehensive accounting of Connecticut's revenues, expenditures, assets, and liabilities compiled with the assistance of accounting personnel across state agencies, universities, and colleges.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • 2025-06-05 MHTC Meeting.pdf

    Jun 5, 2025

    ·Kansas City, MO
    Agenda

    The Missouri Highways and Transportation Commission held an open meeting on June 5, 2025, in Kirksville to consider commission minutes, review committee reports, hear presentations from the City of Kirksville and regional economic development groups, and address transportation projects including bid considerations and the FY 2026 budget. The agenda included public presentations on local infrastructure needs, updates from MoDOT's Northeast District, and commission action items on transportation improvement bids and the department's fiscal year 2026 budget, with specific budget figures not detailed in the agenda document itself.

    AI summary

    transportation projectshighway infrastructurebudgeteconomic developmentcommission meeting
    View PDFSource
  • Meeting Date: Wednesday, May 21, 2025

    May 21, 2025

    ·Baltimore, MD
    Agenda

    On May 21, 2025, Maryland's Board of Public Works approved multiple agenda items including $705,000 in Agricultural Cost Share Program grants across 24 individual awards and the reversion of $124,998 from completed or canceled agricultural projects. The board also approved three wetlands licenses for various projects, two wetlands mitigation licenses requiring environmental remediation (including a $4,696.83 mitigation fee for Naval Support Activity Annapolis), and a loan modification allowing the release of out-of-state collateral for a Baltimore City business with debt restructuring to Maryland property.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • 860.522.2217 | 350 Church St. 3rd Fl., Hartford, CT 06103 | crcog.org

    Apr 26, 2025

    ·Hartford, CT
    Other

    The Central Region Council of Governments (CRCOG) Policy Board held a hybrid meeting on April 23, 2025, with representatives from 34 member towns and guest speakers from Connecticut Department of Transportation and congressional offices. The meeting covered executive director reports on project and committee updates, and included a legislative update highlighting House Bill 6831 regarding transit-oriented development funding for towns and House Bill 7112 concerning sewer infrastructure and lot size restrictions, with encouragement for board members to engage with legislators on CRCOG's suggested changes to these bills.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • Board of Health Meeting - Tuesday, April 22, 2025 Agenda

    Apr 22, 2025

    ·Cincinnati, OH
    Agenda

    The Cincinnati Board of Health held its March 25, 2025 meeting with five members present to review minutes from prior meetings and hear reports on public health matters. Key agenda items included a Commissioner's Report on measles preparedness (one case confirmed in Ohio with no immediate local risk) and medical debt relief affecting 47,000 cases over ten years. The meeting also covered the Communicable Disease Unit report, a Newborn Systems of Change presentation, finance updates, and personnel actions, with votes approving minutes from February and March meetings.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • April 3, 2025 9:00 AM Welcome to the City of St. Petersburg ...

    Apr 3, 2025

    ·St. Petersburg, FL
    Agenda

    This is the agenda and procedural notice for the April 3, 2025 St. Petersburg City Council meeting at 9:00 AM. The document outlines accessibility accommodations, decorum rules for in-person attendance (including restrictions on placards, applause, and standing in aisles), and multiple ways the public can participate—including in-person, via television channels, online streaming, or by phone/Zoom webinar. The public may provide comments on non-hearing agenda items by using the "raise hand" feature if attending via Zoom, with a three-minute speaking limit enforced by the chair.

    AI summary

    city council meetingpublic participationaccessibility accommodations
    View PDFSource
  • Board of Health Meeting - Tuesday, December 3, 2024 ...

    Dec 3, 2024

    ·Cincinnati, OH
    Agenda

    The Cincinnati Board of Health met on December 3, 2024, to address routine business including the introduction of new board member Dr. Mary Burkhardt, a COVID-19 update, and an air quality sampling presentation. The board voted to approve Resolution No. 2024-006 granting a limited variance for the Cincinnati Country Club Pool Gate from Ohio Administrative Code requirements, subject to state approval, and approved three contracts for the Hamilton County Solid Waste District, UC Health parking lease amendment, and Hamilton County Public Health. Additional votes included approval of personnel actions and various finance committee matters, with the next meeting scheduled for January 28, 2025.

    AI summary

    public healthair qualitysolid waste managementboard governance
    View PDFSource
  • Annual Comprehensive Financial Report For Fiscal Year Ended September 30, 2024

    Sep 30, 2024

    ·Ambler, PA
    Budget

    Webb County, Texas issued its Annual Comprehensive Financial Report for the fiscal year ended September 30, 2024, prepared by County Auditor Rafael Pérez, CPA, CGFM. The report contains audited financial statements including government-wide and fund financial statements, covering governmental, proprietary, and fiduciary funds, along with detailed notes on accounting policies, assets, liabilities, long-term debt, pension plans, and other financial matters. The document serves as the official financial accountability statement for the county's fiscal operations.

    AI summary

    annual budgetfinancial statementsaudit reportlong-term debtpension plans
    View PDFSource
  • Annual Comprehensive Financial Report For Fiscal Year Ended September 30, 2024

    Sep 30, 2024

    ·York, PA
    Budget

    Webb County, Texas released its Annual Comprehensive Financial Report for the fiscal year ended September 30, 2024, prepared by County Auditor Rafael Pérez, CPA, CGFM. The 380-page report contains audited financial statements including government-wide and fund financial statements, notes on accounting policies, detailed information on assets, liabilities, investments, taxes, debt, pension plans, and other financial matters. The report provides a complete accounting of Webb County's financial position and operations for the fiscal year.

    AI summary

    annual budgetfinancial reportdebt management
    View PDFSource
  • Board of Health Meeting - Tuesday, September 24, 2024 ...

    Sep 24, 2024

    ·Cincinnati, OH
    Agenda

    The Cincinnati Board of Health held a meeting on September 24, 2024, with an agenda including approval of minutes, discussion of food license fees for 2025-2026, a COVID-19 update, finance and personnel action votes, and elections of officers. The board voted to elect Ms. Ashlee Young as Board Chair and Dr. Jennifer Forrester as Board Vice-Chair, and approved a contract with Talbert Services, Incorporated. The next meeting is scheduled for October 22, 2024.

    AI summary

    food licensingpublic healthboard governance
    View PDFSource
  • JOHN F WARREN COUNTY CLERK DALLAS COUNTY, TEXAS FILED: Sep 03, 2024, 3:47 pm

    Sep 3, 2024

    ·Dallas, TX
    Budget
    View PDFSource
  • Resolution on Protection of LGBTQ Rights & Freedom CAPS Resolution 23-01 asks the City of Bloomington Common Council and the Mayor to declare the City a Safe Haven for Transgender Youth in response to state legislation passed in 2023 that bans gender-affirming health care for minors, restricts educational materials with LGBTQ+ themes in municipal schools, and requires parental notification of nomenclature and pronoun change requests from students in municipal schools. The Commission asks the City to adopt a policy or policies consistent with the principles set forth in the resolution. Resolution 23-01, passed 8-0-1, 11/2/2023

    Nov 2, 2023

    ·Bloomington, IN
    Proposal
    View PDFSource
  • OCRC MINUTES Page 1 of 60 October 5, 2023 MINUTES OF THE REGULAR MEETING OF

    Oct 5, 2023

    ·Columbus, OH
    Minutes

    The Ohio Civil Rights Commission held its regular meeting on October 5, 2023, in Columbus, with Chair Lemmie and three commissioners present. The Commission approved the minutes from its previous meeting on September 14, 2023, and approved a case name correction for a no-jurisdiction matter. The agenda included confirmation of staff findings on several complainants' requests for reconsideration regarding initial no probable cause determinations in employment and public utilities discrimination cases, involving allegations against the City of Toledo's Department of Public Utilities and other employers.

    AI summary

    civil rightsemployment discriminationpublic utilitiescomplaint review
    View PDFSource
  • Meeting Date: Wednesday, August 2, 2023

    Aug 2, 2023

    ·Baltimore, MD
    Agenda

    The Maryland Board of Public Works met on August 2, 2023, and approved ten items totaling approximately $11.7 million in spending and funding. Notable approvals included $451,240 in Agricultural Cost Share Program grants, a $10 million equipment lease-purchase agreement with Banc of America Public Capital Corp., and several staffing position changes in the Office of the Attorney General and Public Service Commission. Additional approvals included a wetlands license extension in Wicomico County, a Bay Restoration Fund grant of $49,923 to the Town of Middletown for wastewater treatment improvements, and a Drinking Water Revolving Loan Fund grant to Allegany County for a waterline replacement project.

    AI summary

    public worksbudgetwater infrastructureenvironmental permitswastewater treatment
    View PDFSource
  • ANNUAL COMPREHENSIVE FINANCIAL REPORT For the year ended December 31, 2021

    Dec 31, 2021

    ·Baton Rouge, LA
    Budget

    This Annual Comprehensive Financial Report documents the consolidated financial position of the City of Baton Rouge and Parish of East Baton Rouge for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2021. The 378-page report, prepared by the Finance Department under Director Linda Hunt, includes government-wide financial statements, fund financial statements, notes, and required supplementary information including budget comparisons and pension liability schedules. The document received a Certificate of Achievement for Excellence in Financial Reporting.

    AI summary

    annual budgetfinancial statementspension liabilityfiscal reporting
    View PDFSource
  • January 22, 2019, Joint Work Session – Item 1 EUGENE CITY COUNCIL AGENDA

    Jan 22, 2019

    ·Eugene, OR
    Agenda

    On January 22, 2019, the Eugene City Council and Lane County Board of Commissioners held a joint work session to review a Homeless Services Systems Analysis Report prepared by the Technical Assistance Collaborative. The report presented system-wide recommendations and specific proposals for a low-barrier emergency shelter and other improvements to the homeless services system. The work session was prompted by significant homelessness in the region, with over 1,600 Lane County residents experiencing homelessness on any given night, over 1,100 without shelter, and more than 2,500 school-age students identified as homeless during the previous school year.

    AI summary

    homelessness servicesemergency shelterhomeless services system
    View PDFSource
  • Volume 43 Number 40 Saturday, October 5, 2013 • Harrisburg, PA Pages 5787—5978

    Oct 5, 2013

    ·Harrisburg, PA
    Other

    This document is the Pennsylvania Bulletin for October 5, 2013, a weekly official publication containing notices, rules, and regulatory actions from Commonwealth agencies. The issue includes content from various state departments and agencies such as the Courts, Department of Environmental Protection, Department of Health, Public Utility Commission, and others, spanning pages 5787-5978 with a detailed subject index for January-September 2013. The bulletin is published by Fry Communications under the direction of the Pennsylvania Legislative Reference Bureau with an annual subscription rate of $82.00.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • 1 BOARD OF MENTAL HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE SERVICES May 28, 2010

    May 28, 2010

    ·Tulsa, OK
    Minutes

    The Board of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services met on May 28, 2010, in Oklahoma City with Commissioner Terri White and numerous board members and agency representatives present. The board approved the March 26, 2010 meeting minutes with a minor correction regarding temporary certification language. The board discussed a Critical Incident Report, noting that the Tulsa Center for Behavioral Health and Jim Taliaferro Community Mental Health Center had higher medication errors primarily due to transcription issues, which were being addressed through training and personnel adjustments at both facilities.

    AI summary

    mental health servicessubstance abusemedication errorsbehavioral healthincident reporting
    View PDFSource
  • State

    State College, PA
    Budget

    House Bill 1300 amends the Fiscal Code to implement the 2023-2024 budget and includes provisions across multiple areas including COVID-19 response programs, mental health funding, and tenant protections. The bill allocates significant funds including $360.2 million from the Tobacco Settlement Fund for FY 2023/24, $100 million in Department of Human Services mental health funding ($34 million for workforce programs, $31.5 million for criminal justice initiatives, and $34.5 million for mental health services expansion), and creates protections prohibiting Senior Citizens' property tax and rent rebate assistance from being used as lease payments, with penalties for violating landlords including full reimbursement plus 25% additional penalties. The bill also addresses unclaimed federal ARPA funds in education and continues community economic development programs, with fiscal impacts ranging from no impact for directed appropriations to indeterminate impacts for new enforcement provisions.

    AI summary

    budget allocationmental health fundingtenant protectionjudicial fundingtobacco settlement
    View PDFSource
  • city-atlanta-fy2014-budget-report.pdf

    Atlanta, GA
    Budget

    The City of Atlanta's Fiscal Year 2014 Adopted Budget document, submitted by Mayor Kasim Reed, provides a comprehensive overview of the city's financial operations and planning. The 614-page budget book includes sections on revenue forecasts, economic outlooks, operational departmental summaries for all city departments, capital project statuses, and debt management information. The document serves as a public transparency resource detailing how city funds are allocated across various departments including public safety, public works, parks and recreation, aviation, and other municipal services.

    AI summary

    budgetfiscal planningrevenue forecastspublic safetycapital projects
    View PDFSource
  • city of norfolk - proposed budget f 2026

    Norfolk, VA
    Budget

    This is the table of contents and introductory pages of the City of Norfolk's Proposed Budget for Fiscal Year 2026, a comprehensive 638-page document outlining the city's financial plan and budget allocation across all departments and funds. The budget document is organized by major functional areas including legislative, judicial, executive, general management, community development, parks and recreation, public health and safety, public works, and public school education, with sections covering revenue sources, expenditures, financial policies, and strategic goals. No specific budget figures, policy changes, or meeting decisions are presented in this excerpt, which consists only of organizational materials and the table of contents.

    AI summary

    budgetfiscal planningmunicipal financepublic workspublic safety
    View PDFSource
  • Ct

    Hartford, CT
    Agenda

    The Hartford Subcommittee of Connecticut's Municipal Accountability Review Board (MARB) held a December 16, 2021 meeting to review a tentative labor contract with the Hartford Municipal Employees Association (representing approximately 140 employees) for July 1, 2021 to June 30, 2023, which includes a 3% retroactive wage increase in year one and no increase in year two, compared to the city's budgeted 1.5%. The MARB has authority to approve, reject, or take no action on the contract by January 22, 2022, and city officials provided financial analysis and comparable data to support the agreement. A subsequent January 27, 2022 meeting agenda was scheduled to address additional labor contracts with the Federation of School Special Police Officers, Hartford Federation of Teachers, and Hartford Principals and Supervisors Association, along with the FY 2021 audit and special education data review.

    AI summary

    labor contractwage increasemunicipal accountabilityschool personnelbudget review
    View PDFSource