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11 results for “ordinance review” · budget

  • 22-1246: A bill for an ordinance approving a proposed Second Amendatory Agreement to the Intergovernmental Agreement between the City and County of Denver and Urban Drainage and Flood Control District d/b/a Mile High Flood District to support the final design of drainage and flood control improvements as part of the Globeville Levee Project in Council District 9. Amends an intergovernmental agreement with Urban Drainage and Flood Control District, doing business as Mile High Flood District (MHFD), by adding $2,650,000 in MHFD funds and $3,718,816.59 in City Wastewater Enterprise funds for a total addition of $6,368,816.59 and a new agreement total of $13,468,816.59 to support the final design of drainage and flood control improvements as part of the Globeville Levee Project in Council District 9. No change to agreement duration (DOTI- 202054890/ 202264701). The last regularly scheduled Council meeting within the 30-day review period is on 11-7-2022. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 10-4-2022.

    Sep 26, 2022

    ·Denver, CO
    Budget
    Source
  • 22-1167: A bill for an ordinance approving an intergovernmental agreement between the City and County of Denver and Colorado Department of Human Services, Office of Economic Security, Amends an intergovernmental agreement with the Colorado Department of Human Services - Office of Economic Security to continue implementing the Disability Navigator Program to cover costs to assist persons with disabilities. Amends an intergovernmental agreement with the Colorado Department of Human Services - Office of Economic Security by adding $642,010.82 for a new total of $1,284,021.64 and one year for a new end date of 6-30-23 to continue implementing the Disability Navigator Program to cover costs to assist persons with disabilities to navigate the application and/or appeal process for federal disability benefits under the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) program, citywide (SOCSV-202160615-00/ SOCSV-202160615-02). The last regularly scheduled Council meeting within the 30-day review period is on 10-31-2022. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 9-28-2022.

Sep 19, 2022

·Denver, CO
Budget
Source
  • 2022-0763: Message and order for Amended Annual Appropriation and Tax Order for FY2023. On motion of Councilor Fernandes Anderson as Chair of the Committee on Ways and Means will be recommending overrides to the Mayor's Annual Appropriation and Tax Order return and modification as follows: Partial override #1: 1. Increase Black Male Advancement Personnel Services, $600,000 to expand the office capacity (adding $400,000 to the line on the tax order). 2. Increase Office of Human Services (Office of Returning Citizens) Contractual Services, $800,000 to increase capacity in the Office of Returning Citizens (adding $500,000 to the line on the tax order). 3. Increase OEOI Contractual Services, $100,000 to commission a citywide life insurance study. 4. Increase City Clerk Contractual Services, $200,000 to procure codification services for the review and recodification of the City of Boston Code-Ordinances and the Special Acts relating to the City of Boston, including the City Charter. 5. Increase BCYF Personnel Services, $120,000 for youth workers to support programming for youth residents of BHA Commonwealth Apartments and BHA Faneuil Gardens. 6. Increase BPHC (Special Appropriation), $160,000 to provide salary increases of $20,000 for each FTE at Boston Youth Development Network. 7. Increase MOH Special Appropriation, $400,000 to BHA for the city housing voucher program, with set asides for project-basing at IDP units to buy deeper affordability, returning citizens, and BHA homeownership pilot launch, with the additional direction that this funding be used for a pilot for housing stipends for young people aged 19-24. 8. Increase Parks & Recreation Department Personnel Services, $688,373 for departmental capacity regarding tree maintenance (adding $144,186 to the line on the tax order). The increase overrides will be balanced by the following decrease overrides: 1. BFD Equipment: $400,000 2. BFD Equipment: $750,000 3. Law Contractual: $250,000 4. OBM Personnel: $130,000 5. DoIT Personnel: $160,000 6. BFD Contractual: $400,000 Councilor Fernandes Anderson requested a roll call of Partial Override #1 Recess President Flynn asked the Clerk to read Partial Override # 1 into the recorded. President Flynn asked the Clerk for a Roll Call Vote of Partial Override # 1, yeas 13. Councilor Lara offered a motion to Amend the Committee on Ways and Means recommended Overrides by: (a) striking out partial override #2 (b) in Partial Override #3, striking out "Decrease BPD Personnel Services (line 51200, Overtime) to”; and adding "The additional $2,410,000 will be offset by the following decrease overrides: BPD Contractual Services - $688,373, BPD Contractual Services - $100,000 and BPD Equipment - $1,700,000." so that the revised Partial Override #3 reads as follows: "increase YEE Contractual Services $4,606,667 to fully fund 6000 youth summer jobs and account for a pay adjustment ($2,746,667) and to fully fund 1,500 youth year-round jobs ($1,860,000), with the additional direction that $500,000 of the YEE contractual services funds be used for experiential learning opportunities for youth and the rest to be used for a partnership program between area high schools and colleges to create employment for low-income college students and academic support and employment opportunities for high school students (adding $2,410,000 to the line on the tax order, restoring the Council's $8,689,453). The additional $2,410,000 will be offset by the following decrease overrides: BPD Contractual Services - $688,373, BPD Contractual Services - $100,000 and BPD Equipment - $1,700,000. Second by Councilor Arroyo. The motion was passed; yeas 8, nays 5 (Baker, Bok, Flaherty, Flynn and Murphy) Councilor Fernandes Anderson moves to proceed with Revised Partial Override Number #3. Councilor Fernandes Anderson requested a roll call vote on Revised Partial Override #3; yeas 8, nays 5 (Baker, Bok, Flaherty, Flynn and Murphy) Override Failed. Dockets #0762 and #0763 are Overridden in Part and Constitute Approval of the FY23 Budget.

    Jun 10, 2022

    ·Boston, MA
    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
  • 22-0571: A bill for an ordinance authorizing a rescission and appropriation in the General Fund to make a cash transfer to and appropriation in the Liability Claims Special Revenue Fund. Approves a rescission of $2,000,000 from General Fund Contingency and makes a supplemental appropriation to the Liability Claims Special Revenue Fund. The last regularly scheduled Council meeting within the 30-day review period is on 6-20-22. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 5-17-22.

    May 9, 2022

    ·Denver, CO
    Budget
    Source
  • 2022-0498: On the message and order, referred on April 13, 2022 Docket #0498, authorizing a limit for the Environment Conservation Commission revolving fund for the Fiscal Year 2023 for the purpose of securing outside consultants including engineers, wetlands scientist, wildlife biologists or other experts in order to aid in the review of proposed projects to the Commission, per the city’s ordinance protecting local wetland and promoting climate change adaptation. The revolving fund shall be funded by receipts from fees imposed by the Commission for the purpose of securing outside consultants. The Environment Department will be the only department authorized to expend from the fund and such expenditures shall be capped at Fifty Thousand Dollars ($50,000.00), the committee submitted a report recommending the order ought to pass.

    Apr 7, 2022

    ·Boston, MA
    Budget
    Source
  • 21-1219: A bill for an ordinance approving a proposed Fiscal Year 2022 Amendment to the Second Amended and Restated Operating Agreement between the City and County of Denver and Denver Health and Hospital Authority, providing for the amounts to be paid for services by the City and County of Denver and by the Denver Health and Hospital Authority for Fiscal Year 2022. Approves the 2022 Denver Health and Hospital Authority operating agreement (ENVHL-202160644). The last regularly scheduled Council meeting within the 30-day review period is on 12-31-21. The Committee approved filing this item at its meeting on 11-10-21.

    Oct 11, 2021

    ·Denver, CO
    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
  • 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.

    AI summary

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  • Fee and Rate Adjustments in the FY 2024-25 Budget

    Dallas, TX
    Budget

    On September 13, 2024, the City of Dallas issued a memorandum regarding an upcoming City Council agenda item (September 18, 2024) proposing an ordinance to amend multiple city code chapters and adjust various fees and rates for FY 2024-25. The proposed changes include fee adjustments for public rights-of-way abandonments, stormwater drainage, sanitation collection, parking services, water and wastewater services, library processing, and other municipal services, with the adjustments reflecting compliance with the city's Financial Management and Performance Criterion #12 requiring annual reviews to ensure full cost recovery for services. The ordinance also addresses rates for departments including Dallas Public Library, Transportation and Public Works, and Private Solid Waste Haulers, with a maximum penalty provision of $2,000 for violations.

    AI summary

    budgetfee adjustmentwater infrastructurestormwater managementparking services
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  • Borough Manager’s Proposed 2025 Fiscal Year Budget

    Lansdale, PA
    Budget

    The Borough Manager's Proposed 2025 Fiscal Year Budget for Chambersburg outlines the annual budget approval process, which requires the manager to submit a balanced budget to Council by early November for public review and hearing, with final approval and tax rate setting required by year-end. According to 2022 data, Chambersburg has the largest operating budget of any borough in Pennsylvania (ranking 8th statewide among all municipalities) with total revenues of $114.6 million and expenditures of $117 million, reflecting the borough's comparatively larger size, utility operations, and infrastructure complexity relative to other regional boroughs. The document explains Council's budgetary responsibilities, including approval of the Capital Improvements Plan and utility rate ordinances, alongside authority to make amendments throughout the year.

    AI summary

    budgettax ratecapital improvementsutility ratesmunicipal spending
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