23 results for “sanitation”
23 results for “sanitation”
Mayor Nadine Woodward's 2023 proposed budget, presented November 2, 2022, addresses a $37 million revenue loss from the pandemic while forgoing a 1% property tax increase for household financial relief. The budget prioritizes people-focused investments including increased shelter space, homelessness services, public safety, sanitation, garbage collection, and workforce retention in a competitive labor market. Sales tax revenue is projected to increase 5.9% overall in 2023, though gains are not expected to continue due to anticipated recession.
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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.
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This ordinance repeals and restates Chapter 16, Article IV of Fort Worth's municipal code to update food establishment regulations to align with recent changes in state law and clarify existing requirements. The ordinance covers food service establishments, retail food stores, mobile food units, and vendors, while maintaining one local standard exceeding state requirements regarding handwashing sink placement in food preparation areas. The document includes definitions and regulatory provisions for health and sanitation standards to protect public health.
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This informational series provides an overview of the City of Madison's budget structure and processes. The document explains that Madison maintains two separate budgets—a capital budget funding long-term infrastructure projects (roads, housing, building improvements) financed primarily through borrowing, and an operating budget supporting daily city services (police, fire, libraries, sanitation) funded mainly through property taxes. The series is designed as a public education tool covering budget fundamentals, the city's structural deficit, financial policies, and revenue options, with all budget phases publicly available on the city website.
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The Health Office, located on the first floor of Pottsville City Hall, is led by Health Officer Frank Spleen, who oversees eating and drinking establishment inspections, permits, and sanitation enforcement, with assistance from Secretary Diane Fiorillo. Spleen also serves as the Animal Control Officer and Shade Tree Officer, enforcing animal control laws and the Shade Tree Ordinance including tree removal, trimming, and planting throughout the city. The office can be contacted via email at health-animal@pottsvillepa.gov or through an online form on the city website.
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On September 13, 2024, the City of Dallas issued a memorandum regarding an upcoming City Council agenda item (September 18, 2024) proposing an ordinance to amend multiple city code chapters and adjust various fees and rates for FY 2024-25. The proposed changes include fee adjustments for public rights-of-way abandonments, stormwater drainage, sanitation collection, parking services, water and wastewater services, library processing, and other municipal services, with the adjustments reflecting compliance with the city's Financial Management and Performance Criterion #12 requiring annual reviews to ensure full cost recovery for services. The ordinance also addresses rates for departments including Dallas Public Library, Transportation and Public Works, and Private Solid Waste Haulers, with a maximum penalty provision of $2,000 for violations.
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This is an index page linking to the San Diego County Board of Supervisors' Statements of Proceedings for 2026 and prior years (2005–2025). The page lists 18 scheduled meetings with proceeding dates ranging from January 13 to April 22, 2026, covering the Board of Supervisors' General and Land Use Legislative Sessions, Budget Workshop, and proceedings for the San Diego County Fire Protection District, Sanitation District, Housing Authority, In-Home Supportive Services Public Authority, and Redevelopment Successor Agency. Meeting recordings and materials are maintained by the Clerk of the Board, reachable at (619) 531-5434 or at 1600 Pacific Highway, Room 402, San Diego, CA 92101.
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This 2018 Scranton City Council ordinance amends the 2014 Quality of Life and Violations Ticket Process to add new definitions, violations, and penalties to the Property Maintenance Rules and Regulations. The amendments introduce five new violations: unlawful occupancy of buildings without a Certificate of Occupancy, illegal parking non-conforming to zoning ordinances, nuisance animals that disturb the peace or damage property, unlicensed dogs, and dangerous or vicious animals. The ordinance was requested by the Director of Licensing, Inspections, and Permits to combat blight and preserve public health, safety, sanitation, and aesthetic conditions in the city.
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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.
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