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

5 results for “revenue collection” · minutes

  • April 22, 2026 Meeting Minutes

    Apr 22, 2026

    ·Hazleton, PA
    Minutes

    The Hazleton Government Study Commission met on April 22, 2026, at 5:02 PM to review draft articles of a proposed Home Rule Charter. The Commission, with six of seven members present, approved April 15 meeting minutes unanimously and reviewed updated drafts of Article II (City Council) and Article VI (Other Appointed Officials) prepared by PEL Consultants. New business focused on Article VII (Ordinances) and Article VIII (Budget and Finance), with updated drafts to be provided at the next meeting on May 6, 2026, at 5:00 PM. Public commenter David Dominguez raised questions about the proposed Controller position, revenue incentives for municipalities, and tax collection methods, noting that tax collection would be handled by an outside firm.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • Ne

    Jun 26, 2025

·Lincoln, NE
Minutes

The Lincoln Transportation and Utilities Advisory Committee held a business meeting on June 26, 2025, to review the LOTM (Local Option Transportation Millage) program. The FY24/25 LOTM revenue projection is $78.0 million, with collections exceeding projections by $687K through June 2025, allocated to Existing Streets (73.5%), Growth (25.0%), and a joint project at N. 33rd & Cornhusker (7.5%). The meeting covered multiple 2025 street construction projects funded by LOTM and non-LOTM sources, including work on arterials, residential areas, and infrastructure improvements, with several potential 2026 projects identified for future programming.

AI summary

transportation fundingstreet infrastructurebudget allocation
View PDFSource
  • Council met in regular session on Tuesda

    Hazleton, PA
    Minutes

    Hazleton City Council held a regular meeting on November 10, 2020 via Zoom teleconference, during which attorney Ray Rinaldi presented a major development proposal for the old Pagnotti Mining site. The Hazleton Creek Commerce Center project represents approximately $500 million in capital investment and would include commercial buildings of one million square feet or more, with the developer requesting a 10-year LERTA (Local Economic Revitalization Tax Assistance) exemption while maintaining current tax collections on the existing property. The project is projected to generate $3.5 million to $6 million annually in tax revenue for the city, school district, and county once the exemption period ends, with land development review hearings scheduled for December.

    AI summary

    economic developmenttax incentiveland development
    View PDFSource
  • TOURIST DEVELOPMENT COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES

    Jacksonville, FL
    Minutes

    The Tourist Development Council held a virtual meeting on October 15, 2020, to review the fiscal year ending September 30, 2020. Bed tax collections totaled $6,303,825, representing a 26.68% decline compared to the previous year, with September revenue down 36.24% due to COVID-19 impacts; the council approved prior meeting minutes and reviewed account balances totaling approximately $3.2 million in carryover funds and $1.37 million in the Development Account. Council members discussed reallocating the $2 million in expenditure savings from the prior fiscal year, with plans to evaluate reallocation proposals at the February meeting after December's full fiscal close-out and further revenue trend analysis.

    AI summary

    bed taxtourism fundingbudget allocationcovid-19 impact
    View PDFSource
  • Meeting Minutes

    Fresno, CA
    Minutes

    The Citizens Advisory Committee for County Service Area 44D – Monte Verdi met on February 6, 2023, to review financial performance for the second quarter of fiscal year 2023-24. At the end of the second quarter, appropriations were expended at 94%, with major expenses including PG&E ($62,562), Central State Sanitation hauling ($41,265), and an annual loan payment of $160,848.19; revenues collected were at 34% of expected amounts, consistent with prior years. The committee also discussed held charges from the previous fiscal year resulting from salary reversals needed to cover overspent expenses, with the district owing back charges to be addressed in the new fiscal year.

    AI summary

    budgetfinancial managementservice area operations
    View PDFSource