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

3 results for “recorder's office” · budget

  • City Council - City of Knoxville

    Knoxville, TN
    Budget

    The Knoxville City Council will hold a public hearing on Thursday, May 7, 2026 at 5:00pm to discuss the proposed operating budget and capital improvements budget for fiscal year 2025/2026. Members of the public may sign up to offer comments by contacting the City Recorder's Office at CityRecorder@knoxvilletn.gov or 865-215-2075 by the 4:00pm deadline on the day of the hearing. The nine-member Council, composed of six district representatives and three at-large members, meets regularly with agendas available online and meetings broadcast on local television and streamed online.

    AI summary

    budgetcapital improvementspublic hearing
    Source
  • 2026 MAYOR’S BUDGET C I T Y A N D C O U N T Y O F D E N V E R FINAL

Denver, CO
Budget

This is the cover page and organizational structure section of Denver's 2026 Mayor's Budget for fiscal year beginning January 1, 2025. The document, which received the Government Finance Officers Association Distinguished Budget Presentation Award, lists Mayor Mike Johnston, the Chief Financial Officer, all executive directors of major city departments, the 13-member Denver City Council, and other elected officials including the auditor, clerk and recorder, district attorney, and county court judges. Specific budget figures, policy changes, or substantive decisions are not presented in this introductory material.

AI summary

budgetcity governmentfiscal planning
View PDFSource
  • City of Columbus 2023 Adopted Budget

    Columbus, OH
    Budget

    The City of Columbus adopted a 2023 general fund budget of $1,162,941,386 on February 13, 2023 (ordinance 2936-2023), which included $18.9 million in additional resources discovered at year-end beyond the initial $1.144 billion projection. The amended budget allocated additional funds to several priority areas, including $4 million to create a new Office of Violence Prevention, $1 million to sustain the Early Start summer program, $175,000 for record sealing and expungement services, and distributed $15.7 million across three subfunds focused on jobs growth ($5.4 million), public safety initiatives ($2.1 million), and neighborhood initiatives ($8.2 million).

    AI summary

    budgetpublic safetyjobs growthneighborhood initiativesviolence prevention
    View PDFSource