30 results for “plan submission”
30 results for “plan submission”
The Tulsa Metropolitan Area Planning Commission held its meeting No. 2955 on February 18, 2026, to review planning and zoning matters for the City of Tulsa and surrounding Tulsa County areas. The agenda included approval of previous meeting minutes, a rezoning request (Case Z-7848) from Matthew Ward to rezone property west of Charles Page Boulevard and South 49th West Avenue from CS to RM-2, and a plat review for property at the southwest corner of 41st Street South and South 145th East Avenue. The public was invited to attend and submit comments or exhibits, with instructions provided for both in-city and county-area submissions.
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The Seattle City Council's Select Budget Committee meeting on September 26, 2025, is scheduled to review the Mayor's Proposed 2026 Budget through department overview presentations. Session I begins at 9:30 a.m. and Session II at 2 p.m. in the Council Chamber at City Hall. The agenda includes briefings and discussions from the Office of Planning and Community Development (OPCD), presented by Director Rico Quirindongo and Melissa Wilke, and the Office of Sustainability and Environment (OSE), presented by Interim Director Michelle Caulfield and Megan Doiron, with Dan Eder from the City Budget Office participating in both presentations. Only written public comments will be accepted, with submissions required four business hours before the meeting.
AI summary
This agenda documents a Select Committee on the Comprehensive Plan meeting scheduled for June 5, 2025, at 9:30 AM in Seattle City Council's Chamber at City Hall. The committee, chaired by Joy Hollingsworth with eight additional members, will consider an ordinance that repeals and replaces the Seattle Comprehensive Plan through a major update with new goals, policies, elements, and a Future Land Use Map. The ordinance amends 50 sections of Seattle Municipal Code covering land use and zoning regulations. Only written public comments will be accepted, requiring submission to Council@seattle.gov or City Hall at least two hours before the meeting.
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On May 22, 2025, the Worcester Township Planning Commission unanimously approved the preliminary land development plan for Westrum Development's Trooper Ridge project, a proposed for-sale townhome community on Trooper Road and Germantown Pike that will retain one existing home while developing the remaining area into high-end townhomes. Key conditions of approval include compliance with review letters from external agencies, submission of architectural renderings and a guest parking analysis, and exploration of passive amenities such as trails; the applicant acknowledged an $81,250 traffic impact fee and agreed to prohibit unauthorized modifications through homeowners' association documents. Commission members addressed concerns regarding limited guest parking and amenities, with the applicant proposing sidewalks throughout, discussing potential overflow parking arrangements with a nearby church, and committing to further discussions with staff on feasibility of additional amenities.
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The Select Committee on the Comprehensive Plan met on May 21, 2025, at 2:00 PM in the Seattle City Council Chamber to discuss and potentially vote on ordinance CB 120969, which amends the Seattle Municipal Code to implement interim land use and zoning controls and establish findings and a workplan for permanent legislation. The ordinance modifies 30 sections of the Municipal Code spanning chapters 23 and 25, covering zoning, land use, and procedural requirements. The committee allocated 120 minutes for briefing, discussion, and possible vote, with presentations by Lish Whitson and Ketil Freeman of Council Central Staff. Written public comment only was accepted, with submissions required two hours before the meeting.
AI summary
This May 7, 2025 Select Committee on the Comprehensive Plan agenda convenes the nine-member committee chaired by Joy Hollingsworth to address ordinance CB 120969, which implements interim land use and zoning controls complying with state law and establishes a workplan for permanent legislation. The ordinance amends 31 sections of the Seattle Municipal Code spanning chapters 23 and 25, covering zoning, land use, and procedural provisions. The meeting, held at 2:00 PM in the Council Chamber at City Hall (600 4th Avenue, Seattle), allocates 120 minutes for briefing and discussion led by Council Central Staff presenters Lish Whitson, Asha Venkataraman, and Ketil Freeman. Only written public comment is accepted, with submissions due to Council@seattle.gov or City Hall two hours prior to the meeting.
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The Select Committee on the Comprehensive Plan held a meeting on March 28, 2025, at 9:30 AM in the Seattle City Council Chamber with nine committee members chaired by Joy Hollingsworth. The agenda included three items: an overview of interim legislation to implement House Bill 1110 (60 minutes), a briefing on Mandatory Housing Affordability (MHA) overview and proposed implementation (60 minutes), and a presentation on the BERK and Heartland Seattle MHA evaluation (75 minutes). Presenters included staff from the Office of Planning and Community Development, the Mayor's Office, and external consultants BERK Consulting and Heartland Consulting. Only written public comment was accepted, with submissions required two hours prior to the meeting.
AI summary
This agenda convenes the Seattle City Council's Select Committee on the Comprehensive Plan on March 19, 2025, at 2:00 PM in the Council Chamber. The nine-member committee, chaired by Joy Hollingsworth with Mark Solomon as Vice-Chair, will conduct a 120-minute briefing and discussion on Missing Middle Zoning Requirements, presented by Council Central Staff members Lish Whitson and Ketil Freeman. Only written public comments will be accepted, with submissions due to Council@seattle.gov or City Hall by 2 hours prior to the meeting.
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This agenda announces a special meeting of the Seattle City Council's Select Committee on the Comprehensive Plan scheduled for February 5, 2025, at 11:00 AM in the Council Chamber at City Hall. The nine-member committee, chaired by Joy Hollingsworth, will hear a presentation on Comprehensive Plan Public Engagement from Rico Quirindongo (Director) and Michael Hubner of the Office of Planning and Community Development. Only written public comment will be accepted, with submissions due to Council@seattle.gov or City Hall two hours prior to the meeting.
AI summary
The Parks, Public Utilities, and Technology Committee met on April 24, 2024, and adopted Resolution 32135, which approves the Seattle Parks and Recreation 2024 Parks Development Plan and authorizes submission to the Washington State Recreation and Conservation Office, superseding the 2017 plan. Four committee members voted in favor (Hollingsworth, Nelson, Kettle, Strauss) with no opposition, while Maritza Rivera was excused. The committee recommended City Council adopt the resolution. The meeting lasted 30 minutes, from 2:03 p.m. to 2:33 p.m.
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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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The Seattle Finance and Housing Committee met on August 2, 2023, with five members present, chaired by Councilmember Mosqueda. The committee unanimously recommended passage of CB 120630, which adopts the City's 2023 Annual Action Plan for housing and community development, authorizes submission to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, and amends the 2023 Budget with appropriations modifications to various departments. The committee also unanimously recommended passage as amended of CB 120617, authorizing acceptance of grants, private funding, and subsidized loans from non-City sources and modifying appropriations across the 2023 Budget and 2023-2028 Capital Improvement Program. CB 120618, which amends the 2023 Budget and Capital Improvement Program and creates new positions, was heard but the minutes do not indicate a final recommendation status.
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The Seattle City Council Finance and Housing Committee held a public hearing on August 2, 2023, at 9:30 AM in Council Chamber to consider an ordinance relating to the 2023 Annual Action Plan for housing and community development programs. The ordinance would adopt the City's 2023 Annual Action Plan under the 2018-2023 Consolidated Plan and authorize submission to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), authorize acceptance of HUD grant funds for included programs and activities, and amend Ordinance 126725 by modifying appropriations to various departments and budget control levels in the 2023 Adopted Budget. The committee, chaired by Teresa Mosqueda with members Lisa Herbold, Alex Pedersen, Sara Nelson, and Andrew J. Lewis, accepted remote and in-person public comment during the meeting.
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On September 8, 2020, the City of St. Petersburg Community Planning & Preservation Commission held a meeting via remote communications technology (Zoom) in compliance with COVID-19 safety protocols outlined in gubernatorial and mayoral executive orders. The meeting provided multiple options for public participation, including video and audio access through Zoom as well as written comment submission, with all public comments limited to 3 minutes. The agenda outlined procedural guidelines for attendees, including requirements for submitting presentation materials in advance to ensure compliance with FCC guidelines and proper display during the broadcast on St Pete TV.
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The Denver Planning Board held an updated agenda for its March 16 meeting at 3 p.m., conducted remotely via Zoom per public health recommendations. The meeting included approval of February 16, 2022 meeting records, public comment periods limited to three minutes per speaker, and consideration of consent agenda items, including an Official Map Amendment application at 2900 N Eudora St. The Board provided multiple accessibility options for public participation, including written comment submission, live interpretation services, and real-time captioning upon request.
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The Madison County Planning and Zoning Commission held its regular meeting on May 15, 2003, in Canton, Mississippi, where commissioners considered five rezoning petitions. The commission approved recommendations for rezoning petitions from Landmark Development Co. (350 acres from A-1 to R-2), Reginald Robinson (5.35 acres from R-2 to C-2 for an auto repair shop with operational restrictions), and Properties Unlimited (1.613 acres from C-1 to R-2), while tabling Richard Newman IV's petition for a 3.69-acre office and warehouse project pending submission of schematic drawings. The minutes of the April 10, 2003 meeting were also approved.
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This document is the table of contents and organizational framework for Chapter 31 of a municipal code governing subdivision regulations. The chapter establishes procedures and standards for land subdivisions through nine articles covering the Plan Commission, Development Review Committee, platting requirements, submission and review processes, design standards, and public improvements. The subdivision ordinance was originally adopted in 2006 (Ord. 17154) and subsequently restructured in 2007 (Ord. 17851), with detailed sections addressing street design, lot configuration, easements, stormwater management, and enforcement mechanisms.
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