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13 results for “neighborhood council” · other

  • Responses to City Council – February 10, 2026 | PDF

    Feb 10, 2026

    ·Scranton, PA
    Other

    On February 10, 2026, the City Council received responses to questions from a February 3 meeting, primarily addressing pave cut inspections for the Green Ridge water company project and ARPA grant allocation. The city confirmed that Pennoni conducts weekly inspections of utility work, documents findings in reports tied to specific permits, and notifies utilities of deficiencies—with violations issued if issues are not timely addressed; temporary cold patch repairs are being used due to winter weather conditions preventing hot-mix asphalt installation. The administration also provided details on ARPA grant tracking through subrecipient check-ins and quarterly reports, and listed specific allocations to organizations including NeighborWorks (business façade, home buyer, and home rehabilitation programs totaling approximately $865,881) and United Neighborhood Centers (business façade and disaster relief totaling approximately $129,930).

    AI summary

    water infrastructuregrant allocationroad maintenanceutility inspection
arpa funding
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  • SLC.gov

    Salt Lake City, UT
    Other

    On May 5, Mayor Erin Mendenall presented her recommended Fiscal Year 2027 budget, which includes proposed updates to property tax, utility, and waste rates. The City Council will review the proposed budget, consider resident feedback, and adopt a final balanced budget no later than June 30. The page also highlights recent initiatives including the Love Your Block neighborhood improvement program reopened on May 1, 2026, offering mini-grants to residents and organizations in designated Westside neighborhoods (Glendale, Poplar Grove, Fairpark, Rose Park, Westpointe, Jordan Meadows, and Guadalupe) and the Ballpark area. On April 22, 2026, the Salt Lake City Council adopted an ordinance enabling community-wide participation in the Community Clean Energy Program with Rocky Mountain Power and 18 other Utah communities to expand access to net-100% renewable electricity.

    AI summary

    budgetproperty taxutility rateswaste managementrenewable energy
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  • West Chester, Pennsylvania | Advisory Council on Historic Preservation

    West Chester, PA
    Other

    West Chester, Pennsylvania, a Quaker-settled county seat chartered in 1799, experienced significant architectural and cultural development in the 19th century under architects William Strickland and Thomas U. Walter, earning it the designation "The Athens of Pennsylvania." The borough's historic district, established in the 1980s and expanded in 2005 to cover nearly 80 percent of the borough, has become a model for preservation and heritage tourism, leading to its recognition as a National Trust for Historic Preservation Dozen Distinctive Destination in 2006 and Preserve America Community designation in 2006. Community preservation efforts include annual Town Tours and Village Walks programs and participation in Pennsylvania's Elm Street Project, which focuses on revitalizing historically significant neighborhoods like the East End, West Chester's largest African American community.

    AI summary

    historic preservationheritage tourismhistoric district
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  • City Council Approves the City’s 976M Budget for FY 2026

    St. Petersburg, FL
    Other

    On October 6, 2025, the St. Petersburg City Council approved a $976.2 million budget for Fiscal Year 2026, which began October 1, 2025. The budget prioritizes infrastructure strengthening and climate resilience through Mayor Kenneth T. Welch's five Pillars For Progress, including the St. Pete Agile Resilience (SPAR) Program to address hurricane impacts and sea level rise, with $202 million allocated for capital improvements and $352.4 million for Public Works Administration. The budget also includes funding for housing initiatives, homelessness prevention, and community development programs aligned with the city's commitment to equitable development and neighborhood resilience.

    AI summary

    budgetinfrastructureclimate resiliencepublic workshousing
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  • Urban Forestry Commission | City of Cleveland Ohio

    Cleveland, OH
    Other

    The Urban Forestry Commission (UFC), originally established as the Tree Commission in the early 1990s and dormant since the early 2000s, was revived in 2021 through Cleveland City Council legislation amending Chapter 163 of the Codified Ordinances. The UFC advises the Mayor and City Council on policies and regulations to increase tree canopy and neighborhood vibrancy, with responsibilities including adoption of an urban forest management plan, development of a comprehensive tree inventory, policy recommendations, monitoring of implementation, and grant solicitation. The commission holds quarterly public meetings that are live-streamed on Sustainable Cleveland's YouTube and broadcast on TV20, with scheduled Budget Committee meetings on May 8, 2026 and July 10, 2026, and a Policy Committee meeting on June 10, 2026. Public comments are accepted online (by noon ET on the day of the meeting) and in-person (with sign-in required at least 5 minutes before the meeting), with each speaker limited to 3 minutes and comments required to be relevant to the posted agenda.

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  • City FAQs

    Houston, TX
    Other

    This document is a frequently asked questions guide from Houston City Council Member Fred Flickinger covering common citizen inquiries about municipal services. Topics addressed include sidewalk repair procedures (which remain the responsibility of property owners except in specific circumstances), accessing neighborhood crime statistics through the Houston Police Department, reporting dangerous animals and pool safety violations to appropriate departments, and identifying and reporting illegal signage under the city's Sign Code. The FAQ provides contact information and website links for residents to access various city services and report violations.

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  • Letter of Support - Kingwood Super Neighborhood Council

    Houston, TX
    Other
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  • District G Map (.pdf)

    Houston, TX
    Other

    This document is a map of Houston City Council District G, showing street names, major thoroughfares, and district boundaries within the city. The map identifies Mary Nan Huffman as the representative for District G and was created in February 2024 based on the COHGIS Database. The district encompasses multiple neighborhoods and is bounded by major routes including Interstate 610, Interstate 10, US 59, and US 290. No budget allocations, specific programs, or quantitative metrics are provided in this cartographic document.

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  • Zoning Ordinance for the City of Charleston, West Virginia

    Charleston, WV
    Other

    The City of Charleston, West Virginia adopted a comprehensive zoning ordinance approved by City Council on November 21, 2005, and amended through December 7, 2015 (Text Amendment No. 23). The ordinance establishes multiple zoning districts including residential zones (R-2 through R-10), mixed-use areas, residential-office zones, and various commercial districts (neighborhood, village, general, and shopping center), each with specific regulations for lot provisions, setbacks, building height, and performance standards. The document provides the regulatory framework governing land use, zoning district boundaries, permitted uses, and supplemental regulations for the city.

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    zoningland usebuilding regulations
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  • Planning & Municipal Development | Norristown, PA

    Norristown, PA
    Other

    Norristown's Planning & Municipal Development division administers zoning and planning through three foundational documents: the Comprehensive Plan, the Zoning Ordinance, and the Subdivision/Land Development Ordinance (SALDO). The Comprehensive Plan establishes the municipal vision as adopted by the Municipal Council, while the Zoning Ordinance and SALDO implement that vision through regulatory requirements. Norristown's planning goals include attracting new businesses, offices, and restaurants; upgrading facades and streetscapes in high-volume areas; beautifying the downtown; encouraging development that enhances the municipality's cultural destination status; maintaining walkable neighborhoods and historic character; reusing vacant or underutilized buildings; and improving transportation centers. The Zoning Ordinance divides the municipality into zoning districts that determine permitted land uses and guide development consistent with the Comprehensive Plan and community needs.

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  • District F 2022 Annual Report

    Houston, TX
    Other

    District F's 2022 Annual Report highlights Councilmember Tiffany D. Thomas's focus on resuming in-person community engagement and addressing resident priorities through 40 council meetings and 86 community initiatives. Key accomplishments include public safety efforts such as the second annual Public Safety Town Hall, deployment of 50 License Plate Reader cameras ($137,000), gun buyback events, and removal of 16,900 pounds of illegal dumping, along with infrastructure improvements including street light initiatives and sidewalk replacement projects. The report also documents community engagement through five National Night Out celebrations and targeted pop-up events in neighborhoods including Briarmeadow, Westmont, and Imperial Point to address resident concerns regarding public safety, traffic, and infrastructure.

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  • District F 2023 Annual Report

    Houston, TX
    Other

    District F's 2023 Annual Report, titled "District F is the Future," highlights the Houston council district's efforts to revitalize previously overlooked neighborhoods through public safety, economic development, and community engagement. Key accomplishments include the opening of the Alief Neighborhood Center, designation of Piney Point as a Conservation District, reopening of Tanglewilde Park, $250,000 in funding to address chronic homelessness, and Briarmeadow's recognition as one of Houston's hottest communities. In 2023, the district held 68 community meetings, 47 council meetings, and issued 25 proclamations while building a team focused on constituent services and neighborhood engagement.

    AI summary

    public safetyeconomic developmentcommunity engagementhomelessnessparks and recreation
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  • Map of District A (.pdf)

    Houston, TX
    Other

    This document is a map of Houston City Council District A, representing the geographic boundaries and street names within the district as of February 2024. The district is represented by Council Member Amy Peck and encompasses a large northwestern section of Houston, bounded by major highways including Interstate 45, Interstate 10, U.S. Route 290, State Highway 6, State Highway 99, and State Highway 249. The map displays numerous street names and neighborhood areas across the district without providing numerical data or specific policy information.

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