30 results for “public improvement district”
30 results for “public improvement district”
The Fort Worth City Council agenda for April 28, 2026 includes nine special presentations and recognitions honoring local officials, community members, and organizations, followed by a consent agenda with multiple items requiring minimal deliberation. The consent agenda addresses financial matters including a $153,398.48 appropriation to the Library Special Revenue Fund from the Addie Levy Trust, acceptance of approximately $658,707.58 in grants from the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs for homeless housing and services programs, and amendments to the Downtown Public Improvement District fiscal budget. The meeting was scheduled for 11:00 AM at the City Council Chamber in Fort Worth, Texas.
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This is a Houston City Council meeting agenda for April 21–22, 2026, scheduled to convene at 1:30 p.m. on April 21 at City Hall (901 Bagby) and reconvene at 9:00 a.m. on April 22. The agenda includes motions 2026-0206 through 2026-0224, ordinances 2026-0335 through 2026-0358, and 31 consent agenda items covering public works contracts and purchasing. Key items include acceptance of ditch re-establishment work contracts with DL Glover Utilities LLC, J Rivas Construction LLC, and Reytec Construction Resources Inc across multiple districts, as well as an ordinance appropriating $4,757,223.91 from the Airports Improvement Fund for Main Distribution Frame Hardening and Failover Site at Houston Airport System, to be awarded to Summus Industries Inc.
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This is the agenda for Houston City Council's December 16–17, 2025 meeting scheduled to begin at 5:30 p.m. on December 16 at City Hall (901 Bagby) with reconvening at 9:00 a.m. on December 17. The agenda includes Motions 2025-0856 through 2025-0874, Ordinances 2025-1032 through 2025-1064, and Resolutions 2025-0046 through 2025-0047, along with a Consent Agenda of 53 items. Notable items include Motion 2025-0859 to amend previous motion 2025-806 to add a "September 11th Floating Holiday" for Municipal, Classified Police, and Fire Fighter employees; Motion 2025-0871 recommending designation of a banner district in the Houston Design District; and Motion 2025-0860 approving the Fiscal Year 2026 Operations and Maintenance Budget for the Lake Conroe Dam and Reservoir Project at $5,623,010.00 from the Enterprise Fund. The meeting will also include public speakers, a Mayor's Report, and acceptance of completed work contracts for infrastructure projects including Clinton Drive Lift Station Improvements, a 72-inch water line project, and emergency drainage repairs.
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The Seattle Governance, Accountability, and Economic Development Committee met on September 11, 2025, with five members present (Council President Nelson, Kettle, Hollingsworth, Rivera, and Solomon) to review four items of business. The Committee unanimously recommended passage of CB 121072, which updates the structure and processes of the Office of City Auditor by amending Chapter 3.40 and Sections 14.08.040 and 14.08.050 of the Seattle Municipal Code and repealing Section 15.52.100 (5–0 vote). The Committee also unanimously recommended passage of CB 121060, modifying exemptions to the levy of special assessment for the West Seattle Junction Parking and Business Improvement Area (5–0 vote after a public hearing), and CB 121076, modifying the program manager selection process and BIA Advisory Board composition for the University District Parking and Business Improvement Area (5–0 vote). CB 121073 regarding the SODO Parking and Business Improvement Area assessment rate and exemptions was discussed but no recommendation was recorded in these minutes.
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The Governance, Accountability, and Economic Development Committee met on June 12, 2025, at 2:03 p.m., with Councilmembers Sara Nelson, Robert Kettle, Joy Hollingsworth, and Maritza Rivera present and Mark Solomon excused. The committee voted 4–0 to recommend passage of CB 120992, which grants the Downtown Seattle Association permission to install, maintain, and operate interactive media kiosks in public places within the Metropolitan Improvement District and other participating Business Improvement Areas for a 16.5-year term, renewable for one successive 13.5-year term, and authorizes the Mayor to execute a Memorandum of Understanding with the organization. The ordinance suspends and supersedes multiple sections of the Seattle Municipal Code related to this permit. The meeting adjourned at 2:54 p.m.
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The Missouri Highways and Transportation Commission held an open meeting on June 5, 2025, in Kirksville to consider commission minutes, review committee reports, hear presentations from the City of Kirksville and regional economic development groups, and address transportation projects including bid considerations and the FY 2026 budget. The agenda included public presentations on local infrastructure needs, updates from MoDOT's Northeast District, and commission action items on transportation improvement bids and the department's fiscal year 2026 budget, with specific budget figures not detailed in the agenda document itself.
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The Governance, Accountability, and Economic Development Committee met on May 22, 2025, with five members present, presided over by Councilmember Sara Nelson. The committee unanimously recommended City Council adoption of Resolution 32170, which grants the Downtown Seattle Association conceptual approval to install and operate interactive media kiosks in public spaces within the Metropolitan Improvement District and participating Business Improvement Areas, with all five members voting in favor. The committee also recommended passage of Council Bill 120978, which amends the Seattle Municipal Code to require elected officials to disclose financial interests or conflicts of interest before participating in legislative matters, though only two members voted in favor and three abstained. An information item regarding a Digital Kiosk Programmatic Term Permit was heard and discussed.
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The Parks, Public Utilities, and Technology Committee met on May 14, 2025, at 2:03 p.m. in Seattle's City Council Chamber with five members present (Councilmembers Hollingsworth, Nelson, Kettle, Rivera, and Strauss), chaired by Councilmember Hollingsworth. The committee discussed five items of business: an information item regarding Astound Cable Franchise Renewal (Inf 2680); two ordinances amending Seattle Municipal Code provisions for Seattle Public Utilities system development charges and municipal assessment reimbursement authority (CB 120966 and CB 120967); an ordinance amending the 2025 Budget and Capital Improvement Program with appropriations and position creation for Seattle Public Utilities (CB 120968); and an ordinance authorizing agreements between the City, Seattle School District No. 1, and Memorial Stadium Redevelopment LLC for redevelopment of Memorial Stadium at Seattle Center (CB 120982). The document indicates discussion occurred on these items but does not specify votes, decisions, or outcomes.
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The Governance, Accountability, and Economic Development Committee met on May 8, 2025, with five members present, chaired by Councilmember Sara Nelson. The Committee unanimously recommended confirmation of three appointments to the Seattle Film Commission—Lawrence Alexander III, Davis R. Powell, and KD Hall—each for terms ending April 23, 2028, with all five committee members voting in favor of each appointment. The Committee also discussed Resolution 32170 regarding conceptual approval for the Downtown Seattle Association to install and operate interactive media kiosks in public places within the Metropolitan Improvement District and participating Business Improvement Areas, and Council Bill 120978 concerning amendments to the Code of Ethics requiring elected officials to disclose financial interests or conflicts of interest prior to participating in legislative matters.
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