Town Crier
Request a township
All typesagendaminutesproposalbudgetother
All time30 days90 days1 year

30 results for “public parks” · other

  • City of Scranton Council Responses – June 30, 2026 | PDF

    Jun 30, 2026

    ·Scranton, PA
    Other

    This document records City of Scranton Council responses to questions raised at the June 23, 2026 meeting. Councilman Sean McAndrew requested the Parks & Recreation Director attend a caucus in June for parks updates; the city committed to scheduling this meeting. McAndrew also asked the Nay Aug Park Manager to lock city parks at night, particularly to address youth activity at Weston Field, and the manager agreed to lock the Nay Aug courts. Additionally, McAndrew requested Police Chief Thomas Carroll attend a public caucus regarding camera placement in Pretzel Park, and the city confirmed it intends to address this camera request. A separate concern about hazardous trees at 417 10th Avenue was referred to Code Enforcement, with a scheduled site visit for June 30.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • City of Scranton Council Responses – May 5, 2026 | PDF

May 5, 2026

·Scranton, PA
Other

This document contains responses from City of Scranton administration to questions posed by City Council members at their April 28, 2026 meeting, compiled on May 5, 2026. The street sign project contracted to MAC Signs was completed in December 2025, and DPW continues routine traffic sign maintenance and replacement. DPW will address sidewalk conditions in the 1000 block of North Rebecca Avenue by reseeding grass and will coordinate with the Police Department on potential additional signage for traffic safety on Euclid Avenue at Main Avenue. For the concrete barriers at East Mountain Road across from the Salvation Army, the Blight Team under the Parks Director will remove trash and cut back overgrowth, pending confirmation of property ownership. Fire Chief John Judge agreed to meet with Councilmen Sean and Mark McAndrew in his office regarding ambulance service questions, with the option to hold a public caucus afterward if needed. The Good Neighbor gift card program will run again in May 2026.

AI summary

View PDFSource
  • 1 Council Committee Assignments Last Updated: February 11, 2026

    Feb 11, 2026

    ·Los Angeles, CA
    Other

    This document outlines the committee structure and assignments for a local government council, last updated March 25, 2026. It lists 11 committees across various policy areas including arts and parks, budget and finance, civil rights and equity, economic development, energy and environment, housing and homelessness, and public safety, with designated chair and vice chair members, meeting times and locations, and assigned legislative assistants. The committees meet on a regular schedule throughout the month, with most meeting bi-weekly on designated days of the week.

    AI summary

    council committeesbudget and financepublic safetyhousing and homelessnesseconomic development
    View PDFSource
  • $50.00 ZONING REGULATIONS CITY OF STAMFORD CONNECTICUT

    Aug 31, 2021

    ·Stamford, CT
    Other

    This document is the Zoning Regulations for the City of Stamford, Connecticut, originally adopted on November 30, 1951, with amendments updated through August 31, 2021. It establishes the framework for land use planning in Stamford, including zoning districts, permitted uses, design standards, and area regulations, and is administered by the Zoning Board (chaired by David Stein) and the Zoning Board of Appeals (chaired by Joseph R. Pigott) under the oversight of Mayor David Martin. The regulations cover topics ranging from district classifications and use permissions to parking requirements, flood management, historic preservation, and publicly accessible amenity space standards.

    AI summary

    zoningland use planninghistoric preservation
    View PDFSource
  • Citizen Comments for the June 23, 2020 Special Meeting

    Jun 23, 2020

    ·Tallahassee, FL
    Other

    This document contains citizen comments submitted to the Leon County Board of County Commissioners for a June 23, 2020 special meeting. The comments, submitted between June 21–23, 2020, overwhelmingly request a mandatory face mask mandate in public spaces, with specific proposals including enforcement in stores, parks, and other public places; application to populations over age 2 per surgeon general guidelines; and requirements in indoor public settings with exceptions for seated diners. One commenter (Abra Kinch) requested equitable enforcement guidelines to prevent disparate policing by law enforcement. A separate commenter (Aaron Halford) also called for expanded financial assistance programs. The document represents pages 1–5 of a 1,242-page citizen comment compilation.

    AI summary

    public healthmask mandatelaw enforcementfinancial assistance
    View PDFSource
  • Participatory Budgeting - City of Jersey City

    Jersey City, NJ
    Other

    In March 2022, Jersey City opened applications for participatory budgeting, inviting residents to submit and vote on community projects for funding up to $50,000 per ward. Approved projects across six wards total $295,000 and include tree-planting initiatives in Wards B, C, D, and F ($170,000 combined), water fountains in four parks ($28,000), family literacy workshops in Ward A ($32,000), playground improvements in Ward E ($15,000), a bus shelter in Ward D ($5,000), planters for downtown safety in Ward E ($30,000), and support for the Big Brother Big Sister Program in Ward F ($15,000). The program allows residents to propose ideas by answering how projects benefit their community and location, after which city departments consolidate similar submissions and develop scopes, timelines, and costs for implementation.

    AI summary

    participatory budgetingcommunity projectspublic fundingparks and recreationcommunity development
    Source
  • TOWNSHIP AND SPECIAL TAX LEVIES Cl. 73 Act of Dec. 1 ...

    Coatesville, PA
    Other

    This document amends Pennsylvania's Second Class Township Code to establish tax levy provisions for townships. The amendments authorize township boards of supervisors to levy various property taxes on real property, including: up to 14 mills for general township purposes (with court approval for up to 5 additional mills), up to 5 mills for highway lighting, up to 50% of the general tax rate for public buildings, up to 3 mills for fire apparatus and services, up to 2 mills for fire hydrants, and taxes for parks and recreation facilities and debt service. The legislation was enacted December 1, 2004, as House Bill 250 (Act No. 224).

    AI summary

    property taxtax levytownship governmenthighway maintenancefire services
    View PDFSource
  • Leaf Collection Schedule

    Bethlehem, PA
    Other

    The City of Bethlehem's 2025 Leaf Collection Schedule outlines an anticipated collection period from November 3–12, 2025, divided across 18 districts on the west and north sides of the city. Residents must place leaves in street gutters in front of their properties before collection day, remove parked vehicles from scheduled streets, use only paper earth bags (no plastic), and keep leaves separate from branches, grass, and garbage; branches may be taken to the Compost Center instead. Collection will proceed as scheduled unless weather delays occur, in which case sections will be completed on the next available day. Questions should be directed to the Public Works Streets Bureau at (610) 865-7053.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • PERTINENT FACTS ABOUT THE CITY OF ALLENTOWN GENERAL

    Allentown, PA
    Other

    The City of Allentown, Pennsylvania's third-largest city with 125,845 residents according to the 2020 U.S. Census, operates under a Home Rule Charter adopted by voters on April 23, 1996, which took effect January 1997. City government consists of an elected Mayor serving a four-year term as chief executive, a seven-member part-time City Council elected at large for staggered four-year terms, and a City Controller with a four-year term; the Council holds regular public meetings at least twice monthly. The city maintains 2,000 acres of parkland and is home to the 10,000-seat PPL Arena, home of the Lehigh Valley Phantoms hockey team. Major employers in the region include ADP, Air Products and Chemicals, PPL, and Mack Trucks, with additional industries encompassing healthcare services, apparel, and fabricated metal products. Allentown is strategically positioned within 300 miles of major eastern seaboard metropolitan areas and served by Interstate 78, U.S. Routes 22, 222, and 309, plus regional rail freight services from Norfolk Southern Railway and R.J. Corman Railroad Group.

    AI summary

    city governmentparkseconomic development
    View PDFSource
  • What's Happening in Stamford Downtown STAMFORD DOWNTOWN

    Stamford, CT
    Other

    Stamford Downtown is a Special Services District established in 1992 that supplements city services in the urban core through sanitation, landscaping, placemaking, and marketing to achieve goals including economic development, residential growth, retail recruitment, and increased downtown foot traffic. The district's FY22 revenue comes primarily from special assessments (58%), contributions (28%), and event revenue (10%), with the city contributing $190,000 to cover less than 20% of public realm maintenance costs and less than 10% of public community event costs. Stamford Downtown provides extensive services including daily streetscape cleaning, snow removal, social outreach, park improvements, and free public events such as the Farmers Market, Balloon Parade Spectacular, and exercise classes, while maintaining a spending ratio of over $21 in district investment for every $1 of direct city contribution.

    AI summary

    downtown developmentspecial assessmentpublic eventseconomic developmentsanitation services
    View PDFSource
  • City Clerk | Albany, NY

    Albany, NY
    Other

    The City Clerk's Office in Albany, NY, custodian of official city documents and public records, issues permits and licenses and administers the city's bid and contract process. Under City Clerk Shaniqua Jackson, the office provides services including marriage license issuance, domestic partnership issuance, birth and death records, business and vendor applications, and passports from Room 202 at 24 Eagle Street. The City Clerk serves as secretary to the Common Council, preparing committee meetings and public hearings, transcribing proceedings, and attesting to ordinances and resolutions. Marriage license issuance, domestic partnership issuance, and passport services are by appointment only until further notice, with regular hours 8:30 am to 5 pm Monday through Friday, and marriages and residential parking permits available 9 am to 4 pm.

    AI summary

    Source
  • Home | City of East Providence, RI

    Providence, RI
    Other

    The City of East Providence, Rhode Island website serves as a municipal information portal offering access to city services, parks, and department information. Key facilities include Sabin Point, a four-acre waterfront park on Narragansett Bay, with parks and facilities operating Monday through Friday (8AM–4PM Monday–Wednesday, 8AM–6PM Thursday, 8AM–1PM Friday; contact 401-435-7500). The site provides online payment and job application capabilities, public notices for zoning and planning boards, refuse and recycling collection information, and a service request system for reporting issues such as downed trees, potholes, and streetlights. Recent announcements include the Fire Department's promotion of 18 members (April 9, 2026), the passage of new affordable housing zoning measures by the City Council (March 19, 2026), and a $27.7 million state investment announcement for affordable housing (April 2, 2026).

    AI summary

    Source
  • Meeting Agendas & Minutes

    Springfield, IL
    Other

    This document is a webpage index for Springfield Township's meeting agendas and minutes, providing links to current and archived meeting documents for various boards and commissions including the Township Board, Planning Commission, Zoning Board of Appeals, Park Commission, and Library Board. The page includes meeting logistics such as the 7:00 PM start time for Township Board meetings, live streaming access via Zoom and phone, and instructions for public comment and accessibility accommodations. Specific meeting dates and available documents are listed for 2026 and late 2025, though no substantive discussion or policy decisions are detailed in this index document.

    AI summary

    meeting minutesgovernment boardszoning boardplanning commissionpublic records
    Source
  • Calendar • City Council

    Billings, MT
    Other

    This is a City Council calendar for Billings, Montana, listing seven scheduled events for April 2026. The calendar includes two regular City Council business meetings on April 13 and April 27, both at 5:30 PM in City Hall Council Chambers (316 North 26th Street, 5th Floor); a City Council work session on April 20 at 5:30 PM; two tours of Signal Peak Energy Arena on April 15 and 16 at 3:00 PM at Amend Park Recreation Campus (5101 King Ave E); a COVID-19 memorial plaque dedication on April 17 from 12:00–1:00 PM featuring remarks by former Mayor Cole and a moment of silence; and a public hearing on amendments to Montana Administrative Rules on April 21 from 11:00 AM–4:30 PM in Helena. The calendar allows users to search by date range, subscribe to notifications, and view past events.

    AI summary

    Source
  • Bethlehem-Pa.gov

    Bethlehem, PA
    Other

    Bethlehem is a city of 75,000 people in eastern Pennsylvania presenting itself as undergoing economic and cultural renaissance. The city operates a community website offering access to multiple municipal functions including community recovery funding, permits, city council meetings, recreation programs, taxes, and procurement. Current recreation offerings include Volleyball Nights at Fairview Park (Wednesday nights starting June 17th for adults), the 2026 Family Park Program (June 15th–July 23rd), Fitness in the Garden (3rd Tuesday monthly, April–September), and Trail Tuesdays (1st Tuesday monthly, April–October). The website also hosts notifications of seasonal closures, such as the ice rink closure notice, and provides community event information and voluntary water conservation messaging.

    AI summary

    community recoveryrecreationwater conservationpublic eventscity services
    Source
  • Zoning Overview

    Fort Worth, TX
    Other

    This document is an educational presentation from a Development 101 Workshop providing an overview of zoning principles and regulations. It covers the definition and purpose of zoning, the various zoning districts (residential A through D districts and commercial E districts), what zoning regulates (lot size, land use, parking, setbacks, landscaping, and signage), and the different roles of various departments and boards in zoning administration including zoning changes, design review, historic preservation, and board of adjustment functions. The presentation outlines how zoning promotes orderly growth, protects property owners, and facilitates adequate public services while preventing overcrowding and traffic congestion.

    AI summary

    zoningland use regulationsdevelopment
    View PDFSource
  • AMBLER BOROUGH MONTGOMERY COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA O P E N S P A C E P L A N

    Ambler, PA
    Other

    Ambler Borough's 2006 Open Space Plan outlines the municipality's strategy for protecting natural resources, improving public access to parks and recreational facilities, and preserving historic sites in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania. The plan was developed by the Open Space Committee and Borough Council and funded in part by Montgomery County's Green Fields/Green Towns Program. Key goals include preserving sensitive natural features and reducing flooding, improving public access to existing parks, making aesthetic improvements, preserving historic resources, and creating or improving recreational facilities.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • Annual Report 2024 For Fiscal Year Ending December 31 • Published June 2025

    Scranton, PA
    Other

    The Township of Langley's 2024 Annual Report covers fiscal performance for the year ending December 31, 2024, published in June 2025. Key highlights include the identification of an additional $3.5 million in annual savings through budget efficiencies, maintaining the lowest property tax rates in Metro Vancouver while continuing infrastructure investments in roads, parks, and public facilities. The township expanded public safety services by adding firefighters and RCMP officers, achieved a 3 percent decline in the Crime Severity Index for the fourth consecutive year, and made progress on major capital projects including the 208 Street corridor improvements.

    AI summary

    budget efficiencyproperty taxroad infrastructurepublic safetycrime prevention
    View PDFSource
  • City of Columbus 2023 ANNUAL REPORT Andrea Blevins, City Clerk Columbus, Ohio 1

    Columbus, OH
    Other

    The City of Columbus 2023 Annual Report is a comprehensive document covering departmental activities and accomplishments across all city agencies for the year 2023, with Andrea Blevins serving as City Clerk. The report includes sections on 21 different city departments and offices, ranging from the City Attorney and Finance to Public Health, Recreation and Parks, and Education. Key highlights include the City Attorney's Office handling over 10,000 criminal prosecutions, launching a diversion program that helped 63 offenders, shutting down 17 problem properties, and increasing enforcement against domestic violence, drunk driving, and street racing.

    AI summary

    annual reportpublic safetycity administrationparks and recreationpublic health
    View PDFSource
  • Monthly Calendar & Agendas – City of Columbia City

    Columbia, SC
    Other

    This document is a monthly calendar and agenda listing for the City of Columbia City for April 2026, posted March 31st and amended April 7th. It includes scheduled municipal meetings such as City Council meetings (April 16th and workshops on April 10th and 17th), Parks Committee (April 14th), Planning Commission (April 21st, canceled), and Municipal Court (April 9th), along with community events including the spring cleanup event (April 18th) and the open burning season (April 4th-19th). The document also provides links to city records, ordinances, budgets, and meeting minutes available to the public.

    AI summary

    municipal meetingscity councilparks committeeplanning commissioncommunity events
    Source
  • ARPA Memo to Council – April 2026 with Appendices

    Scranton, PA
    Other

    This memo from Scranton's Office of Community Development, dated May 5, 2026, provides a timeline update on American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) spending and implementation from Q2 2022 through Q3 2023. The city received a second tranche of federal ARPA funds totaling $34,373,025 in Q3 2022. The ARPA program launched multiple grant categories including nonprofit recovery grants, small business recovery and wage boost grants, wellness grants, affordable childcare grants, and facade improvement grants, with application periods and recipient announcements tracked throughout the timeline. Notable initiatives included playground transformations at Kennedy Elementary School with Trust for Public Lands and Valley In Motion, downtown connectivity improvements, and soft openings of renovated parks at Novembrino Park and Connors Park. The city maintained federal compliance through regular quarterly reporting deadlines and established an interactive ARPA data summary on its website at www.scrantonpa.gov/arpa/arpa-data/.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • Budget & Management | City of Cleveland Ohio

    Cleveland, OH
    Other

    The Division of Budget and Management in Cleveland's Department of Finance prepares, implements, and monitors annual operating budgets and financial plans to fund City services. The General Fund Operating Budget, funded primarily by a 2.5% City Income Tax on all workers in Cleveland, supports Safety Forces (Police, Fire, and EMS), Waste and Recycling Pick Up, City Parks, and Neighborhood Resource and Recreation Centers. Enterprise Funds operate as self-supporting services including Water, Water Pollution Control, Cleveland Public Power, the Airport, Cemeteries, Golf Courses, City Parking Facilities, Public Auditorium, and West Side Market. The City also funds capital improvements and infrastructure through debt, restricted funds, and grants, including Community Development Block Grants (CDBG) from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development that must support projects eliminating blight and assisting low- and moderate-income residents in housing, public improvements, and land use areas. Budget documents are available for fiscal years 2023 through 2026, along with an interactive budget portal and comprehensive financial reports.

    AI summary

    municipal budgetpublic safetywater infrastructurecommunity developmentcity services
    Source
  • Full month view of Calendar & Meetings – Welcome to the City of Fort Worth

    Fort Worth, TX
    Other

    MayFest is Fort Worth's largest community festival scheduled for May 3, 2026, at Trinity Park, featuring live music, food, carnival rides, vendors, and family-friendly activities. The Fort Worth Animal Care & Control (FWACC) will have a booth at the event to inform residents about supporting animals in the community.

    AI summary

    community eventsanimal servicesparkspublic engagement
    Source
  • TOWNSHIP AND SPECIAL TAX LEVIES Cl. 73 Act of Dec. 1 ...

    Lebanon, PA
    Other

    This Pennsylvania legislation, enacted December 1, 2004, amends the Second Class Township Code to establish and clarify tax levy authority for second-class townships. The amendment specifies maximum millage rates townships may levy for various purposes, including: up to 14 mills (expandable to 19 mills with court approval) for general township purposes, up to 5 mills for highway lighting, up to 50 percent of general tax rate for public buildings and debt service, up to 3 mills for fire protection and apparatus (with voter approval for rates exceeding 3 mills), up to 2 mills for fire hydrants, and flexible rates for parks and recreation facilities. The legislation also permits townships to allocate up to one mill of fire protection tax revenue for compensation of fire suppression employees.

    AI summary

    tax leviestownship governanceproperty taxpublic infrastructurefire services
    View PDFSource
  • Planning Commission | City of Virginia Beach

    Virginia Beach, VA
    Other

    The Virginia Beach Planning Commission is an 11-member body appointed by City Council to review land use, zoning, conditional use permits, street closures, and plan amendments. The Commission holds public hearings on the second Wednesday of each month at noon in the City Council chamber, with staff briefings at 9 a.m., and forwards recommendations to City Council for final decisions. The City is currently updating the Interfacility Traffic Area (ITA) Master Plan, exploring sports tourism, Innovation Park expansion, and municipal services, with a public meeting held on April 29, 2026 at Building 19 and a public comment deadline of May 31. Related April–May 2026 events include the Thalia Creek Greenway Phase III ribbon cutting on May 7 at 1 p.m., a Parks & Recreation Commission meeting on May 7 at 3 p.m., and a Transition Area/ITA Citizens Advisory Committee meeting on May 7 at 5:30 p.m.

    AI summary

    zoningland use planningpublic hearings
    Source
  • 2024 YEAR IN REVIEW CITY OF DEARBORN MAYOR ABDULLAH H. HAMMOUD

    Dearborn, MI
    Other

    This 2024 annual report from the City of Dearborn, covering the fiscal year ending June 30, 2024, highlights Mayor Abdullah H. Hammoud's administration's accomplishments in modernizing city operations, including a new city website, implementation of public health protections against air pollution, improved road safety, and revitalization of commercial districts. The report emphasizes expansion of parks and recreation amenities, enhanced public transparency through performance dashboards, improved multilingual communication services, and technology-driven city service improvements, all maintained within a balanced budget. The document covers departmental activities across assessing, communications, economic development, finance, fire, library, police, public works, and other city services.

    AI summary

    budgetpublic healthroad safetyeconomic developmentparks and recreation
    View PDFSource
  • Title 20 - ZONING | Code of Ordinances | San Jose, CA

    San Jose, CA
    Other

    This document is a table of contents for Title 20 (Zoning) of the San Jose Municipal Code, dated January 29, 2020. Title 20 comprises 16 chapters covering zoning districts, regulations, and procedures, including general provisions and zoning districts (Chapter 20.10), residential and commercial zoning districts (Chapters 20.30 and 20.40), downtown zoning regulations (Chapter 20.70), parking and loading (Chapter 20.90), and affordable housing density bonuses and incentives (Chapter 20.190). The document serves as an index to San Jose's comprehensive municipal code, which spans 27 titles covering topics from general provisions to procurement of public works.

    AI summary

    zoningland usemunicipal codeaffordable housingdevelopment regulations
    View PDFSource
  • Lower Paxton Township, PA | Official Website

    Harrisburg, PA
    Other

    This webpage from Lower Paxton Township, PA serves as a municipal portal providing community information and announcements. The site highlights ongoing projects including a Prince Street Pedestrian Safety Improvements Project seeking public input through April 17 and a Koons Park Master Plan with Phase 1 basketball court improvements underway, while also promoting community events such as a Kite Festival on April 18 and a compost facility opening on March 24. The page provides navigation to government services, permit purchasing, online payments, and features employee spotlights and upcoming meetings and events for township residents.

    AI summary

    pedestrian safetypark improvementscommunity eventsgovernment servicespermits
    Source
  • City Council | City of Worcester

    Worcester, MA
    Other

    Worcester's City Council is the legislative body consisting of eleven elected officials: Mayor and Councilor-at-Large Joe Petty, six additional Councilors-at-Large, and five District Councilors representing Districts 1–5. As of July 2025, all current and upcoming agendas, archived meeting minutes, and meeting videos are available through the OneMeeting portal, with archived materials going back to 2021 and older files being added on an ongoing basis. Residents can petition the City Council on topics including street conditions, lighting, public safety, housing, zoning, taxation, traffic, and parking, and can contact their councilors using the city's online contact form or identify their district representative through an interactive map.

    AI summary

    Source
  • Annual Budget Process and Timeline | City of Boise

    Boise, ID
    Other

    The City of Boise follows an annual budget development process that runs from January through early fall, with the fiscal year operating from October 1st through September 30th. The budget funds essential services including police and fire departments, emergency medical services, libraries, parks, and utilities, as well as major capital investments like water line replacement and airport expansion. The process involves multiple stages: early planning (December–February), department budget requests and public input (March–May), department presentations (May–June), draft budget release and public workshops (June), public hearings and final adoption (July–September), and publication of the final budget before the fiscal year begins.

    AI summary

    budgetpublic safetywater infrastructureparks and recreationcapital projects
    Source