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5 results for “public right of way” · other

  • Archival Records | City of OKC

    Oklahoma City, OK
    Other

    The City of Oklahoma City maintains archival records available for public research by appointment, including ordinances from 1890–1966 accessible as downloadable PDFs and meeting minutes since 2008. The archives contain extensive holdings spanning from 1890 to 2019, including 135 volumes of City Council meeting minutes and journals (1890–1999), Budget Files from 1923–2018 (18.3 cubic feet, 49 volumes), City Council Dockets (1996–2007, 335 cubic feet), and land documents such as Deeds (1900–2018, 14 cubic feet) and Easements/Public Rights-of-Way (1929–2019, 435 cubic feet). The archives also house records from major initiatives including the Metropolitan Area Projects (MAPS, 1993–2004, 8 cubic feet) and MAPS for Kids (2001–2018, 14 cubic feet). Public records requests can be submitted online, and Police Department records are available through the Police Records Bureau at (405) 297-1112.

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  • Meadow Brook Public Presentation | June 2024

    Scranton, PA
    Other

The document presents the Meadow Brook Flood Control Project, Phase 3, a flood control initiative in Scranton, Pennsylvania authorized and funded by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania with a total construction estimate of $12,100,000. The project involves four primary partners: the Department of General Services as funding agency and contract administrator, the Department of Environmental Protection as program agency, Reilly Associates as design professional, and the City of Scranton as project sponsor. The City of Scranton is required to provide $42,000 in performance security and establish a maintenance escrow account with $14,000 annual deposits. The project timeline extends from July 2024 design phases through construction spanning November 2025 to May 2027, with right-of-way acquisition scheduled for March 2025 and construction bidding in June 2025.

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  • Government Records | Archival Collections | San Jose Public Library

    San Jose, CA
    Other

    The San Jose Public Library's California Room maintains archival collections of government records, including San José building permits from 1895-1986 (with later permits available online), Caltrans Right of Way Assessments for Santa Clara County from 1938-1979, and San José City Council Minutes and Ordinance Records primarily from 1850-1950. These materials are available in various formats including print, microfilm, digitized images, and online, with researchers directed to contact California Room staff for access to specific collections and usage information.

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    government recordsbuilding permitscity councilordinancesarchival collections
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  • LETTERHEAD - Wilmington City Council

    Wilmington, DE
    Other

    The Wilmington City Council's Public Works & Transportation Committee held a meeting on November 19, 2018, to address street infrastructure changes requested by the Riverfront Development Corporation. The primary agenda items included approving the removal of a portion of Garasches Lane from the Official City Map while accepting dedication of a new unnamed city street connecting South Walnut Street and Garasches Lane, and declaring the removed portion of Garasches Lane as surplus property for disposition to the Riverfront Development Corporation. The meeting also included discussion of amendments to city code regarding wireless telecommunications facilities in public rights of way and a presentation on solar technology by Sun Edge LLC, with public comment limited to three minutes per agenda item.

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    street infrastructurepublic workswireless telecommunicationssolar technologyproperty disposition
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  • News Flash • Norristown, PA • CivicEngage

    Norristown, PA
    Other

    Norristown Municipal Council approved a traffic calming policy on April 5, 2022 allowing residents to petition for removable speed humps on residential streets at approximately $2,500 each. Petitions require signatures from at least 75 percent of property owners on blocks that are at least 1,000 feet long, have a posted speed limit of 25 mph or less, are in residentially zoned districts, and are municipally owned and maintained. After staff review and police chief assessment, affected property owners must vote to approve the final safety plan with a 75 percent majority. For public rights-of-way with no residential properties, the municipality can be petitioned directly through the Public Works department following the same review process.

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    traffic calmingpublic safetyroad maintenance
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