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

7 results for “public safety staffing” · budget

  • city of norfolk - proposed budget f 2026

    Norfolk, VA
    Budget

    The City of Norfolk's Proposed Budget for FY 2026 is a comprehensive fiscal planning document that outlines revenues, expenditures, and strategic priorities across all city departments and funds. The budget covers major service areas including General Fund operations, Public Safety (Fire-Rescue, Police, Emergency Management), Public Works, Parks and Recreation, Public Health, Education (Norfolk Public Schools), and Judicial functions. The document includes General Fund revenue and expenditure summaries, proposed fee changes, Full Time Equivalent staffing levels, bonded indebtedness information, and strategic goals and objectives aligned with City Council's vision for Norfolk.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • FY 2023 - Adopted BUdGet

    Boise, ID
    Budget

The FY 2023 Adopted Budget document for the City of Boise covers the fiscal year ending September 30, 2023, and includes comprehensive information on revenue, expenditures, capital projects, staffing levels, and policy changes across all city departments. The budget was prepared by the Department of Finance and Administration under Mayor Lauren McLean's administration and the City Council. The document emphasizes the city's priorities of putting people first, addressing economic opportunities, and addressing housing affordability and public safety challenges in response to Boise's ongoing growth and change.

AI summary

budgetcapital projectspublic safetyhousing affordabilityrevenue expenditures
View PDFSource
  • City of Columbus 2024 Adopted Budget

    Columbus, OH
    Budget

    The City of Columbus adopted a 2024 amended general fund budget of $1,211,579,657 on March 4, 2024, after the City Auditor identified an additional $16,879,657 in available resources at year-end. The additional capacity was allocated to increase staffing and services across multiple departments, including $500,000 for police records technicians, $296,325 for City Treasurer staff, and $15,720,000 distributed among three subfunds focusing on jobs growth, public safety initiatives, and neighborhood improvements. Additional funding was also directed to public health tobacco cessation and maternal health programs, park and recreation expansion, and workforce development initiatives.

    AI summary

    budgetpublic safetyworkforce developmentpublic healthpark expansion
    View PDFSource
  • City of Wilkes-Barre

    Wilkes-Barre, PA
    Budget

    Mayor George C. Brown's 2025 budget address for the City of Wilkes-Barre identifies two major fiscal challenges: the potential loss of approximately $750,000 in annual real estate tax revenue from Commonwealth Health Wilkes-Barre General Hospital and an over 11% increase in employee healthcare costs. To offset these challenges, the administration expects increased construction and building permit revenue from major development projects including the Wright Center expansion, Meyers High School renovation into apartments and retail, the First National Bank Building purchase, and Sphere International's mixed-use development, along with anticipated increases in Earned Income Tax. The budget emphasizes cost-cutting measures in overtime and contract work, continued staffing priorities for Fire, Police, and DPW departments, infrastructure improvements including $1.1 million in Solomon's Creek flood protection and $1.5 million for Brookside Levee protection, and quality-of-life initiatives such as community policing programs and street repairs.

    AI summary

    budgettax revenueinfrastructurepublic safetyflood protection
    View PDFSource
  • borough of kennett square 2021 approved budget

    Kennett Square, PA
    Budget

    The Borough of Kennett Square's 2021 approved budget document outlines the municipality's financial plan across multiple funds including the General Fund, Water Fund, and various debt obligations. The budget includes detailed breakdowns of revenues and expenditures by department—including General Government, Public Safety, Public Works, and Recreation—along with staffing levels, wage and benefits analysis, and a comparison of tax rates and assessments from 2010–2020. The document also provides comprehensive debt service information covering general obligation bonds and notes issued between 2019 and 2021 for projects including sewer upgrades, parking garages, and borough-owned properties.

    AI summary

    budgettax ratesdebt servicewater fundpublic works
    View PDFSource
  • APPROVED-FY-2020-City-of-Charleston-Budget.pdf

    Charleston, WV
    Budget

    The City of Charleston approved its Fiscal Year 2020 municipal budget (July 1, 2019 through June 30, 2020) with the General Fund approved by City Council on March 18, 2019, the Parking System on May 20, 2019, and the Coliseum and Convention Center on June 3, 2019. The General Fund totaled approximately $98.9 million in revenues, with taxes comprising 70.7% ($69.97 million) and fees 17.5% ($17.26 million), while expenditures of $98.9 million were allocated primarily to Personal Services (70.1%), with Public Safety representing the largest functional category at 49.1% ($48.6 million) followed by General Government at 23.5% ($23.2 million). The budget document includes detailed breakdowns of departmental staffing, pay grade schedules, capital expenditure projects, and separate accounting for the Coliseum/Convention Center and Parking System operations.

    AI summary

    municipal budgetpublic safetytax revenuegeneral fundcapital expenditure
    View PDFSource
  • Operating Budget Short Overview 2025

    Akron, OH
    Budget

    The City of Akron proposed a $798 million operating budget for 2025, representing a 2.0% decrease from 2024, with 71% of general fund expenditures dedicated to staffing for approximately 2,000 employees. The budget prioritizes public safety as the top initiative, maintaining current staffing levels of 488 police officers and 402 firefighter/medics, while also investing in core city services including fleet upgrades and permit processing efficiency, and targeted strategic investments in gun violence prevention, youth opportunity, and education programs. The budget was presented to Akron City Council amid revenue constraints and includes a forecasted 2% cost-of-living adjustment that had not yet been finalized.

    AI summary

    budgetpublic safetystaffingeducation programsgun violence prevention
    View PDFSource