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30 results for “pennsylvania counties” · other

  • Responses to City Council – February 17, 2026 | PDF

    Feb 17, 2026

    ·Scranton, PA
    Other

    On February 17, 2026, the City of Scranton provided responses to questions raised by City Council members during the February 10 meeting. Key topics included the pending grant application for Engine 10 fire station upgrades on East Mountain, coordination with Pennsylvania American Water Company (PAWC) on aging water main infrastructure following a recent break in the Hill Section, and a request for documentation of purchases and services rendered under emergency declarations (invoices still being compiled). Additionally, responses addressed a 30-day extension signed February 9, 2026 for the Fidelity Bank building purchase, and clarification that questions regarding non-respondents to an HUP Test mailing were forwarded to the Lackawanna County Tax Assessment Office.

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    fire station upgradeswater infrastructureemergency declarationsproperty acquisition
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  • East Mountain Stormwater Presentation | October 2023

    Oct 25, 2023

    ·Scranton, PA
    Other

    The City of Scranton commissioned a stormwater and drainage feasibility study for the East Mountain area in Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania, presented by Herbert, Rowland & Grubic, Inc. on October 25, 2023. The study followed a public process that began with a first public meeting on November 30, 2022, and included field evaluations, GIS database analysis using 2021 aerial photos and drainage system data, and development of seven preliminary concepts and three preliminary designs reviewed by the City. Key findings identified flooding areas of concern, including inadequate stormwater collection along Cherry Street where existing drainage systems are not properly capturing runoff, causing water to flow past the stormwater basin and create problems at Fig Street.

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  • Please see the attached letter

    Scranton, PA
    Other

    The Scranton Fire Department is requesting City Council support to implement a Fire-Based Quick Response Service (QRS) program to provide rapid medical assistance during life-threatening emergencies. The Fire Department has completed all necessary training, licensing, and equipment acquisition, and its medical director has confirmed alignment with required protocols. Lackawanna County 911 Director Al Kearney has expressed unspecified reservations about the program, though the Fire Department notes that fire-based QRS systems are established best practice across Pennsylvania and have proven effective at decreasing response times. The Fire Department has conducted site visits to multiple Pennsylvania 911 centers that successfully dispatch fire-based QRS units and states the collective bargaining agreement supports this operational enhancement. The department requests City Council facilitate coordinated implementation with Lackawanna County 911 to improve medical response times.

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  • TOWNSHIP OF MOORE NORTHAMPTON COUNTY PENNSYLVANIA ORDINANCE NO. 2024-07

    Moore Township, PA
    Other
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  • Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania Public Records Lookup | LackawannaRecords.us

    Scranton, PA
    Other
    Source
  • York County Arrest, Court, and Public Records | StateRecords.org

    York, PA
    Other

    This document provides information about crime statistics and public records access for York County, Pennsylvania. According to 2017 Pennsylvania State Police data, York County recorded 1,094 violent crimes and 6,459 property crimes, with violent crime increasing 12.6% from 2013 while property crime decreased 17.6% over the same period. The document outlines procedures for obtaining criminal history records through the Pennsylvania State Police (online or by mail for $20-$22), the York County Clerk of Courts ($10 total), and accessing local police reports and sex offender registry information.

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    crime statisticscriminal recordspublic safety
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  • Official Zoning Map of the Township of Harris

    Harrisburg, PA
    Other

    This is the Official Zoning Map of Harris Township in Centre County, Pennsylvania, adopted in 2016 as Ordinance 16-05, which supersedes the previous zoning map from 1978. The map designates various zoning districts including agricultural, residential (single, two, and multi-family), commercial, industrial, and cultural zones, along with overlay districts for ridge protection and corridor management. The map was prepared by the Centre Regional Planning Agency and identifies key municipal features, road networks, and the Regional Growth Boundary for the township.

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    zoningland useagricultural districtresidential districtcommercial district
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  • Dauphin County, Pennsylvania Public Records Lookup | DauphinRecords.us

    Harrisburg, PA
    Other
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  • Greater Hazleton 86,432 Luzerne County 317,343

    Hazleton, PA
    Other

    This document presents a community profile and statistical overview of Greater Hazleton, Pennsylvania, including demographic and economic data. Key figures show Greater Hazleton has a population of 86,432 within Luzerne County's 317,343 residents, with a 20-mile commute radius encompassing 343,000 workers and 693,450 people. The profile highlights the region's accessibility to major markets, employment trends showing growth in management and service sectors while production jobs declined from 28.0% to 17.7% between 2010-2017, and details on four business and industrial parks totaling significant acreage for commercial development.

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    economic developmentemploymentpopulation statisticsindustrial parksregional planning
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  • Stroudsburg PA - Borough hall, mayor, stats, schools, attractions, and more

    Stroudsburg, PA
    Other

    This document provides an informational overview of Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania, located in Monroe County in northeastern Pennsylvania near the Pocono Mountains. It includes contact information for Stroudsburg Borough Hall (58 Club Court), identifies Michael Moreno as mayor, and offers practical details about the area including cost of living (average housing around $215,000, monthly rent near $1,200), geographic location (approximately 75 miles west of New York City), and local services such as vital records and building permits. The page serves as a public resource directory directing residents to municipal services and community information rather than documenting specific policy decisions or budget discussions.

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    municipal servicesgovernment contactbuilding permitsvital records
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  • Municipalities in PA - PA Department of Community & Economic Development

    Harrisburg, PA
    Other

    This document is a directory listing municipalities in Pennsylvania by county and classification maintained by the PA Department of Community & Economic Development. The table displays Pennsylvania's 2,555 municipalities organized by county (Adams, Allegheny, etc.) and classified by type—primarily boroughs and townships designated as either 1st or 2nd class—with examples including Gettysburg Borough, Littlestown Borough, and various township classifications across counties. The listing provides an index function allowing users to view entries in increments of 10, 25, 50, 75, 100, or all municipalities at once, with options to download the complete data to Excel format.

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    municipal governmentpennsylvania countieslocal government directory
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  • Lansford PA - Borough hall, mayor, stats, schools, attractions, and more

    Lansford, PA
    Other

    This document is a general informational guide about Lansford, Pennsylvania, located in Carbon County. It provides Lansford Municipal Building's address at 26 East Patterson Street, Lansford PA 18232, and directs residents to the official website at boroughoflansford.com for administrative services. The page notes that Lansford is situated in the eastern part of Pennsylvania within the Pocono Mountains region, approximately 50 miles north of Philadelphia and 20 miles northwest of Allentown, near the Lehigh River. The document includes references to local services such as building permits and vital records but does not provide specific contact phone numbers, email addresses, or completed demographic statistics. It advises residents seeking construction permits to contact the Lansford Borough Office directly for cost and processing time information.

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    municipal administrationbuilding permitsvital records
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  • Lansford borough, Carbon County, Pennsylvania

    Lansford, PA
    Other
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  • Welcome to the Office of Open Records

    Stroudsburg, PA
    Other

    Monroe County, Pennsylvania established an Office of Open Records to enforce the Right-to-Know Law (Senate Bill 1, Act 3 of 2008), which provides public access to county records and establishes appeal procedures for denied requests. The office, headed by Open Records Officer Greg Christine, operates from Room 206 of the Monroe County Administrative Building at One Quaker Plaza in Stroudsburg, with hours from 9:00 am to 5:00 pm Monday through Friday, closed on major holidays. Citizens may submit records requests in person (Room 201, Monday–Friday 8:30 am to 4:30 pm), by mail, email, or fax at (570) 517-3851, and the office provides a Citizens Guide and cost information for records requests.

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  • Moore township, Northampton County, Pennsylvania

    Moore Township, PA
    Other
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  • Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania Genealogy • FamilySearch

    Pottsville, PA
    Other
    Source
  • LUZERNE BOROUGH LUZERNE COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA 2020 ZONING ORDINANCE

    Wilkes-Barre, PA
    Other

    Luzerne Borough's 2020 Zoning Ordinance, prepared by professional planning consultant John R. Varaly, AICP, establishes comprehensive land-use regulations for the borough in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania. The ordinance covers general provisions, definitions, and regulations across multiple articles including zoning districts, permitted uses, accessory structures, setback requirements, and special exceptions. Key topics addressed include manufactured homes, stormwater management, flood plain management, outdoor lighting, swimming pools, fences, and renewable energy systems such as solar and wind installations.

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    zoningland usestormwater managementflood plain managementrenewable energy
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  • Municipalities in PA - PA Department of Community & Economic Development

    Easton, PA
    Other

    This document is a directory and reference table from the Pennsylvania Department of Community & Economic Development listing all municipalities in Pennsylvania organized by county and class (Borough, 1st Township, or 2nd Township). The table displays municipalities alphabetically within each county, beginning with Adams County entries such as Abbottstown Borough and Arendtsville Borough, and continuing through Allegheny County entries including Aleppo Township, Aspinwall Borough, and others. The document indicates there are 2,555 total municipalities catalogued and offers options to view 10 to all entries per page, with a downloadable Excel version of the complete list available. This is a reference resource with no budgetary data, policy actions, or time-bound initiatives.

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  • Palmerton PA - Borough hall, mayor, stats, schools, attractions, and more

    Palmerton, PA
    Other

    This document is a general informational page about Palmerton, Pennsylvania, located in Carbon County in the northeastern part of the state. It provides contact information for Palmerton Borough Hall (645 Columbia Avenue), identifies Donald Herrmann as mayor, and includes basic demographic and service information such as cost of living data (housing around $1,200/month, groceries $300/month) and descriptions of local amenities. The page also directs residents to the borough office for construction permits and other municipal services, with a note that phone and email contact details were not available at the time of publication.

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    borough administrationmunicipal servicescontact information
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  • FINANCIAL REPORT Diocese of Scranton Fiscal Year 2021-2022

    Scranton, PA
    Other

    The Diocese of Scranton released its audited financial statements for fiscal year 2021-2022, with Bishop Joseph C. Bambera presenting the report and emphasizing the diocese's commitment to financial transparency in response to community feedback from synodality listening sessions. The diocese was recognized by Voice of the Faithful as one of only five dioceses nationwide to achieve a 100% transparency score, with particular praise for its accessible finance webpage. The report documents how the diocese continues to serve eleven counties in northeastern and north central Pennsylvania through stewardship of donated resources and expresses gratitude to parishioners, employees, and volunteers for their financial support and prayers.

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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.

    AI summary

    zoningland usehistoric preservationfloodplain managementdesign standards
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  • Resource Directory • Cumberland County • CivicEngage

    Carlisle, PA
    Other

    This document is a searchable business directory for Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, hosted on the CivicEngage platform. It provides contact information and website links for municipal governments and other organizations within the county, organized by category (Authorities, Chambers of Commerce, County Buildings, Federal Government, Law Enforcement, Libraries, Municipal Government, School Districts, State Government, and Tax Collection Bureau). The directory displays 33 total listings with results shown 10 per page; the first page includes 10 municipal entries such as Camp Hill Borough, Carlisle Borough, Cooke Township, Dickinson Township, East Pennsboro Township, Hampden Township, Hopewell Township, Lemoyne Borough, Lower Allen Township, and Lower Frankford Township, each with street addresses, phone numbers, fax numbers, and website URLs.

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    municipal governmentbusiness directorycounty resources
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  • HAZLE TOWNSHIP LUZERNE COUNTY PENNSYLVANIA 2003 ZONING ORDINANCE

    Hazleton, PA
    Other

    Hazle Township's 2003 Zoning Ordinance, as amended through October 2016, establishes comprehensive land use regulations for the township in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania. The ordinance defines nine zoning districts (R-1 and R-2 residential, B-1 and B-2 commercial, I-1 and I-2 industrial, M-1 mining, C-1 conservation, and BP business park), along with a healthcare overlay district, and includes regulations for accessory structures, setbacks, special exceptions, and planned residential developments. The document serves as the primary tool for managing growth and development while addressing community development objectives through dimensional requirements, use restrictions, and procedural standards for development applications.

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    zoningland useresidential districtscommercial industrialdevelopment regulations
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  • Nanticoke city, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania - Census Data

    Nanticoke, PA
    Other
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  • Harrisburg PA - City hall, mayor, stats, schools, attractions, and more

    Harrisburg, PA
    Other

    This document is an informational guide to Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, providing contact information for city government services, demographic data, and frequently asked questions about the city. It includes details such as the mayor's name (Wanda Williams), city hall's address and phone number, information about Harrisburg's location in Dauphin County, and general cost-of-living statistics. The page also references resources for vital records and building permits through the city's Bureau of Codes Administration.

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    city governmentvital recordsbuilding permitsdemographic datacity services
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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.

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    historic preservationheritage tourismhistoric district
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  • CODE OF ORDINANCES of the BOROUGH OF AMBLER Montgomery County, Pennsylvania

    Ambler, PA
    Other

    The Code of Ordinances of the Borough of Ambler, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, was adopted by Borough Council on August 15, 2005, and published by General Code Publishers Corp. The document contains 27 chapters of current ordinances organized by subject matter, along with an appendix of temporary ordinances, a key to disposition of all ordinances ever enacted, and an alphabetical index. The Borough, originally settled in 1832 and incorporated in 1888, is governed by elected officials including Mayor Bud Wahl and a nine-member Council, with appointed officials including Borough Manager Rocco Wack and Solicitor Joseph Bresnan.

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    ordinanceslocal governmentmunicipal code
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  • York County, Pennsylvania Genealogy • FamilySearch

    York, PA
    Other
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  • Currently Suspended Inspection Station Report County Name OIS # Station Name

    Carlisle, PA
    Other

    This report documents vehicle inspection stations suspended across multiple Pennsylvania counties (Adams, Allegheny, Beaver, Berks, and Bucks) for various safety and emissions violations. Suspension reasons include faulty inspections, improper record keeping, fraud, discontinuance of business, and failures to produce required documentation, with suspension periods ranging from several months to over two years. The report serves as a regulatory enforcement document tracking non-compliant inspection facilities as of the document date.

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  • Lebanon County Arrest, Court, and Public Records | StateRecords.org

    Lebanon, PA
    Other

    This document describes Lebanon County public records access under Pennsylvania law, defines which records are public versus restricted, and presents crime statistics. Lebanon County public records include letters, documents, maps, recordings, and electronically stored material, but exclude records that could jeopardize physical safety, compromise computer security, contain medical information, reveal personal identifying details, or contain trade secrets. In 2019, Lebanon County recorded 52 violent crimes and 242 property crimes, representing a 3.7% increase in violent crimes and 28.1% decline in property crimes compared to 2013; the 2019 violent crimes comprised 0 murders, 18 rapes, 1 robbery, and 33 aggravated assaults, while property crimes included 60 burglaries, 169 larcenies, 13 motor vehicle thefts, and 1 arson. Lebanon County criminal records are largely public and accessible through the Pennsylvania State Police Central Repository via the ePATCH electronic system or standard record check request form SP4-164.

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    public recordscrime statisticscriminal records
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