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20 results for “pension” · other

  • The City of York Pennsylvania REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL (RFP) RFP 2024-001

    Apr 4, 2024

    ·York, PA
    Other

    The City of York, Pennsylvania issued RFP 2024-001 on April 3, 2024, soliciting proposals from qualified firms to provide investment management advisory services, asset custody, performance reporting, and retiree payment administration for three city pension plans: Police, Officers and Employees, and Paid Firefighters. Proposals must be submitted electronically by April 22, 2024, at 4:00 p.m. to the designated procurement portal. The RFP includes actuarial valuations and investment policy documentation to guide vendor submissions and evaluation criteria.

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    pension managementinvestment servicesprocurementfinancial administration
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  • LEBANON COMMUNITY LIBRARY 38-437-6 N.0595 GASB 68 Report Measurement Date of:

    Lebanon, PA
    Other

    This GASB 68 report provides accounting and financial reporting information for Lebanon Community Library's participation in the Pennsylvania Municipal Retirement System (PMRS), a defined benefit pension plan, as of December 31, 2023. Key findings show the library had a net pension asset of $297,327 (compared to $247,787 in 2022), total payroll of $277,378, and total pension expense of $21,429, representing -7.73% of payroll. The report includes detailed information on employee coverage, net pension liability calculations, deferred inflows and outflows, employer contributions, and actuarial assumptions and methods.

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  • Ga

    Atlanta, GA
    Other

    This memorandum from the Georgia Employees' Retirement System Executive Director announces the Annual Meetings of multiple retirement and assurance boards scheduled for Thursday, April 17, 2025, beginning with an Investment Committee meeting at 8:30 A.M. followed by sequential board meetings for the Employees' Retirement System (10:00 A.M.), Georgia Judicial Retirement System (11:00 A.M.), Public School Employees Retirement System (11:15 A.M.), and State Employees' Assurance Department (11:30 A.M.). The meetings will be held at Two Northside 75 in Atlanta with public participation available via conference call using provided toll-free numbers and access codes.

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    employee retirementboard meetingspublic participationgeorgia pension systems
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  • Oakland, CA Code of Ordinances -,) THE CHARTER OF THE CITY OF OAKLAND

    Oakland, CA
    Other

    The Oakland City Charter, adopted by voters on November 5, 1968, ratified by California's Secretary of State, and effective January 28, 1969, establishes the fundamental governing structure and powers of the City of Oakland. The charter organizes city government into twelve major articles covering powers and form of government, the City Council, the Mayor, city officers, the City Manager, administrative organization, the Port of Oakland, fiscal administration, personnel administration, franchises and licenses, elections, and general provisions. The document also includes appendices addressing specific funds and systems, including the KIDS FIRST! Oakland Children's Fund, police and fire relief and pension funds, the Oakland Municipal Employees' Retirement System, and off-street vehicular parking regulations. The charter has been amended through November 2014 and establishes that Oakland maintains perpetual succession as a body corporate under California's state constitution.

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  • TUCSON, ARIZONA Supp. No. 114 – Instruction Sheet

    Tucson, AZ
    Other

    This instruction sheet provides guidance for updating the Tucson, Arizona Code through Supplement No. 114, current as of March 21, 2017. Users must remove obsolete pages and replace them with revised pages across multiple chapters, including Civil Service, Crimes and Offenses, Neighborhood Preservation, Motor Vehicles and Traffic, and Pensions and Insurance. The document includes a checklist of page numbers to be removed and added to maintain an up-to-date loose-leaf copy of the Code.

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    code updatescivil servicemotor vehicles and trafficneighborhood preservationpensions and insurance
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  • Board Meeting Materials - Pittsburgh, PA

    Pittsburgh, PA
    Other

    This document is a webpage listing board meeting materials and information for the City of Pittsburgh's Comprehensive Municipal Pension Trust Fund (CMPTF). It provides access to meeting agendas, public notices, pension payment processing documents, and scheduled board meeting dates for 2026 (February 5, May 7, September 3, and December 3), which are held at 1pm in the Mayor's Conference Room. The page serves as a public transparency resource containing various pension-related reports, disclosure forms, and notices for the municipal pension fund.

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    pension fundboard meetingsmunicipal financepublic noticesfinancial transparency
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  • Finance | Newark, NJ

    Newark, NJ
    Other

    The Newark Department of Finance oversees all fiscal operations and asset management for the city, including employee and vendor payments, revenue collection, tax billing, and financial reporting, under the leadership of the Director of Finance/Chief Financial Officer. The department comprises several divisions: the Director's Office maintains custody of city assets including cash, investments, and capital authorizations; the Employee's Retirement Systems manages pension enrollment and retiree payments; the Office of Tax Abatement and Special Taxes collects and enforces revenue from payroll taxes, parking, hotel occupancy, and business licenses and permits; Assessments determines real property and personal property taxability and maintains tax maps; Accounts and Control records financial transactions across all city funds; and Revenue Collections handles property tax billing and citywide revenue collection and reporting.

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    tax billingbudget managementrevenue collectionpension administrationfinancial reporting
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  • Act 47 Plan

    Hazleton, PA
    Other

    The City of Hazleton filed for Act 47 financial recovery status on August 8, 2017, with the Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development, requesting a determination of municipal financial distress and an emergency loan. The Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development's investigation, completed August 30, 2017, confirmed that Hazleton met two statutory criteria: the city maintained deficits exceeding 1% in each of three consecutive fiscal years and expenditures exceeded revenues over a three-year period. This financial recovery plan was prepared by the Pennsylvania Economy League, Central PA Division, filed May 4, 2018, and revised June 1, 2018, and addresses departmental operations across administration, police, fire, public works, pensions, and economic development to establish recovery initiatives.

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  • City of Worcester Financial Overview Timothy J. McGourthy

    Worcester, MA
    Other

    This financial overview document presents Worcester's fiscal structure and priorities as delivered by Chief Financial Officer Timothy J. McGourthy. The city operates under significant state-mandated constraints, with approximately $920 million in FY25 budget revenue derived from limited sources (state aid, property taxes, local fees), while discretionary municipal operations comprise only 22% of total spending due to mandatory obligations in education, debt service, and pension costs. Worcester maintains a Financial Integrity Plan established since 2006 that includes a general fund reserve of 10.7% for FY25, an irrevocable OPEB trust, and a net free cash policy directing funds toward bond rating stabilization, OPEB obligations, and operations, with an average residential tax bill of $5,266 funding services ranging from K-12 education and public safety to libraries and public health services.

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  • SPUR REPORT MAY 2025 Balancing Oakland’s Budget Sound Fiscal Policy Structural

    Oakland, CA
    Other

    This SPUR report from May 2025 analyzes Oakland's structural budget deficit and proposes nine recommendations to achieve fiscal solvency and economic growth. The report identifies a decades-long imbalance where revenue growth has not kept pace with rising pension, healthcare, insurance, and operational costs, exacerbated by post-pandemic challenges including labor shortages, decreased tax revenues from real estate, tourism, and retail sales, and a 78% disapproval rating of city government according to an Oakland Budget Advisory Commission survey. The analysis notes that Oakland's fiscal crisis mirrors broader challenges in comparable California cities including San Francisco and San José, and occurred against a backdrop of governance disruption following the former mayor's recall in November 2024 and subsequent federal indictment.

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    budget deficitfiscal policypension coststax revenueeconomic growth
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  • Agenda & Minutes | City of East Providence, RI

    Providence, RI
    Other

    This document is an index page for the City of East Providence, Rhode Island's agendas and minutes archive, providing access to meeting records across multiple municipal bodies. The page lists meetings by date from April 2026 back to November 2025, organized by category including the East Providence City Council, Zoning Board of Review, Planning Board, Police & Fire Retirement Pension Board, and Personnel Hearing Board. Users can search the archives by keyword or access live feeds and video recordings through the city's YouTube page. The most recent listed meeting is the City Council Regular Meeting scheduled for April 7, 2026, posted on April 2, 2026. The document serves as a transparent repository for public records rather than containing substantive policy or budget information.

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    city councilzoning boardplanning boardpublic recordsmeeting minutes
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  • CITY OF JERSEY CITY

    Jersey City, NJ
    Other

    Mayor Steven M. Fulop introduced Jersey City's FY 2026 budget on April 18, 2025, proposing zero municipal tax rate increase for residents while maintaining full city services—marking the ninth of eleven budgets under his administration with tax increases of 2% or less. The budget includes $66 million in debt service paydown, $6 million for union contract settlements, new police and firefighter hires, full pension fund funding with cost-of-living adjustments, and investments in affordable housing and infrastructure, while managing challenges including rising insurance premiums and reduced federal and state grant funding. The municipal portion of average property tax bills has decreased to 35% from 48% over two years, with $1.6 billion in new ratables added to the tax rolls through economic development efforts.

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    budgettax increasepolice hiringinfrastructureaffordable housing
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  • Boards & Committees

    St. Petersburg, FL
    Other

    The City of St. Petersburg maintains 36 boards and committees that advise on city initiatives and work with internal departments and City Council to serve residents. The boards and committees include appointed bodies such as the Budget, Finance, and Taxation Committee and pension fund boards, as well as advisory committees covering housing, arts, aging, sustainability, and development. The Bicycle & Pedestrian Advisory Committee currently has 3 vacancies. Interested residents can apply to serve on boards and committees through a formal application process, with agendas and meeting minutes available on respective board pages, though archived documents from more than one year prior are not included on the city website and must be requested through the Public Records page.

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    boards and committeesmunicipal governancecity administration
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  • 1 CODIFIED ORDINANCES OF YORK PART ONE - ADMINISTRATIVE CODE

    York, PA
    Other

    This document is the table of contents and introductory section of the Codified Ordinances of York, Pennsylvania, Part One - Administrative Code, which consolidates and codifies the city's general and permanent ordinances as of 1977. The ordinances are organized into nine titles covering general provisions, legislative procedures, administrative offices and departments (including mayor, city clerk, police, fire, public works, and community development), employment and pension provisions, and authorities and boards. The document establishes the legal framework for York's municipal governance and administration.

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    municipal governancecity administrationadministrative codeordinance enforcement
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  • 1 COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board

    Lansford, PA
    Other

    On December 19, 2024, the Fraternal Order of Police, Schuylkill-Carbon Lodge No. 13 filed an unfair labor practices charge against Lansford Borough with the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board, alleging the Borough violated state labor law by refusing to implement pension ordinance changes required by their collective bargaining agreement and by discriminating against and coercing the FOP representative during a grievance filing on November 12, 2024. A hearing was held on September 25, 2025, in Harrisburg, where the Union withdrew claims under several sections of the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Act, leaving only claims regarding alleged coercion and discrimination during the November 12 confrontation for consideration. Both parties filed post-hearing briefs on December 1, 2025.

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  • Minutes - City of Coatesville

    Coatesville, PA
    Other

    This document is a directory and guidance page for accessing official meeting minutes from various boards, commissions, and authorities in the City of Coatesville, Pennsylvania. City Council meetings are held in Council Chambers at 1 City Hall Place, Coatesville PA, and are open to the public; these meetings will no longer be streamed live on Zoom but will be conducted in-person. The page provides quick-link access to minutes from 15 boards and commissions, including City Council, Planning Commission, Parks and Recreation Commission, and multiple pension and appeals boards, enabling residents to review governance records and city decision-making.

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    meeting minutescity councilpublic recordsgovernment operations
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  • COMPLIANCE AUDIT ____________ City of Scranton Aggregate Pension Fund

    Scranton, PA
    Other
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  • Bethlehem-pa

    Bethlehem, PA
    Other

    Article 151 of the City of Bethlehem's ordinances establishes and governs the Firemen's Pension Fund, created under authority of the Third Class City Code. The fund charges paid Fire Department members 7% of their pay, plus an additional 1% to cover benefits for surviving spouses and children under age 18 of retired, killed, or deceased members. The City must annually appropriate to the fund no less than one-half of one percent of all City taxes levied (excluding debt service taxes), beginning in 1949 and continuing thereafter. The fund is invested and merged with joint funds under Article 156 of the City's ordinances, with annual appropriations made in accordance with Pennsylvania's Act 205 of 1984 (Municipal Pension Plan Funding Standard and Recovery Act). Membership in the fund is voluntary for all paid firemen employed in the Bureau of Fire.

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    pension fundfire departmentmunicipal benefitsemployee contributions
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  • Harrisburg, Pa. Pages 4505—4618

    Harrisburg, PA
    Other

    This document is the Pennsylvania Bulletin, Volume 26, Number 38, published September 21, 1996, comprising pages 4505–4618. The Bulletin serves as the official publication of Commonwealth of Pennsylvania administrative documents and legal notices, published weekly by Fry Communications, Inc. The issue includes notices and orders from multiple state departments and agencies including the Governor, Courts, Department of Agriculture, Department of Banking, Department of Environmental Protection, Department of Transportation, Insurance Department, Public Utility Commission, and various pension and regulatory boards. The subscription rate was $80.50 per year with individual copies available for $2, with publication managed by the Joint Committee on Documents pursuant to Title 45 of the Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes.

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  • ARTICLE 156 CITY OF BETHLEHEM PENSION FUND 156.01 Establishment.

    Bethlehem, PA
    Other
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