27 results for “signage approval”
27 results for “signage approval”
This is an agenda for the Springfield Township Park and Recreation Advisory Committee meeting held on January 7, 2026, listing the committee members, meeting order, and topics to be discussed. Key items included the approval of November minutes, an administrative report noting the anticipated January 19 start date for new Director Jim Murphy, and a park report covering maintenance and updates across multiple township parks, including dugout replacement at Bysher Park, playground fence repairs at Connor James McKelvie Community Park, and plans for a pedestrian bridge at James A. Cisco Park. New business included consideration of Springfield Township Rotary proposals for a Mermaid Park Arboretum project and Piszek Pavilion signage, as well as Little League Land Use Agreements.
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The Columbus City Graphics Commission held a public hearing on October 21, 2025, to review zoning applications for sign variances and permits under the Columbus Graphics Code. Two applications were considered: one requesting variances to allow LED fuel pricing signage at a gas station located at 2725 W. Broad Street in a mixed-use district, and another seeking approval for a two-sided projecting sign at 595½ S. 3rd Street in a residential district with a requested height increase from 6 feet to 14 feet. The hearing took place at the Michael B. Coleman Government Center and was available for public viewing via the City of Columbus YouTube channel.
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On September 9, 2025, the Dearborn City Council held a regular meeting with all seven members present, during which they unanimously approved several resolutions including a citation honoring Mike Esseily for his leadership in special education services and the consent agenda. The Council also approved bids for Water Main Repair Parts totaling $200,000 (split between Core and Main, LP at $150,000 and EJ USA, Inc. at $50,000) and accepted a bid from Johnson Sign Company for $54,995 for wayfinding signage and removal at Camp Dearborn, with both contracts to be financed from the appropriate city funds.
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The Tulsa Metropolitan Area Planning Commission held Meeting No. 2930 on February 5, 2025, with nine members present. The commission approved minutes from the prior meeting (January 22, 2025) by a 9–0 vote. The commission reviewed PUD-530-3, a minor amendment request by A-Max Sign Company to modify signage standards at the southwest corner of East 19th Street South and South Lewis Avenue in City Council District 4, which would increase allowable identification signs from one to two and raise the maximum height of ground signs from 10 feet to 28 feet to accommodate YWCA letters on an existing clock tower structure. The proposed amendment would align PUD-530 standards more closely with underlying OL zoning requirements and would require additional approval from the Tulsa Preservation Commission due to the site's location within a historic preservation overlay.
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The Tulsa Metropolitan Area Planning Commission held Meeting No. 2877 on November 2, 2023, at 1:00 p.m. with 9 members present. The Commission approved the minutes from the October 19, 2022 meeting by a 7-0-2 vote (Carr, Covey, Craddock, Krug, Shivel, Walker, Zalk voting "aye"; Bayles and Kimbrel abstaining). Under the Consent Agenda, the Commission considered PUD-650-A-1, a minor amendment requested by Lori Worthington for property at the northeast corner of South Yale Avenue and East Skelly Drive in City Council District 5, to increase allowable wall signage from 2 square feet per linear foot to accommodate a 63.17 square foot sign for a tenant space 27 feet in width.
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The Development Standards Committee of The Woodlands Township will hold a regular meeting on June 18, 2025, at 5:00 p.m. at 2801 Technology Forest Boulevard to consider and act upon several items, including approval of meeting minutes, executive session consultation with legal counsel, and multiple commercial variance requests. The agenda includes variance requests from Talla Nganeku LLC regarding building enclosure and signage modifications, The Woodlands Christian Church/Centro Alfa for monument sign panels, and GOP International Solutions LLC/RapidCare Emergency Room for building and monument sign height, number, and illumination compliance issues.
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Wilmington Township Supervisors met on February 3rd, 2025, and approved multiple expense payments totaling approximately $54,457 across general fund, payroll, park maintenance, state fund, and realty transfer accounts. The supervisors discussed traffic safety concerns at several intersections and committed to contacting PennDOT to include additional signage in planned 2025-2026 construction projects in those areas. The board also approved a salt contract for 250 tons, authorized advertisement for bids on a Phillips School Road Culvert Replacement Project, and passed Resolution #1 of 2025 for 2024 tax processing.
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This is an agenda for a Stamford, Vermont Select Board meeting scheduled for Thursday, January 22, 2026, at 6:00 p.m. at the town office. The meeting will cover routine items including approval of prior minutes, highway and recycling updates, a planning commission municipal grant discussion, budget work session, and correspondence items such as signing a Certificate of No Suits Pending for the 2024 Grand List and reviewing the Town Warrant draft. A visitor hearing is scheduled for Tim Jones regarding a Green Mountain Power project, with updates on 911 numbering and town signage also on the agenda.
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This ordinance proposes amendments to Fort Worth's zoning code to revise the Low Intensity Mixed-Use (MU-1) and High Intensity Mixed-Use (MU-2) districts. The changes address office and hotel height regulations in MU-2, clarify standards for screening, landscaping, building types, parking, and signage, and add microbrewery, microdistillery, and brewpub as allowed uses in the MU-2 district. The amendments were developed through a 2018 reconvening of the Mixed-Use Zoning Advisory Group (MUZAG) to address issues identified by staff, developers, and neighborhood groups, and have been recommended for approval by both the Zoning Commission and Urban Design Commission.
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The Metropolitan Development Commission of Marion County held a Hearing Examiner meeting on August 29, 2024, to consider three petitions regarding signage and modifications in the Indianapolis area. The primary petition (2024-APP-009/2024-VAR-010) involved St. Vincent Hospital and Health seeking approvals for updated campus-wide wayfinding signage across multiple parcels on West 86th Street, Harcourt Road, and Naab Road, which required numerous variances from zoning standards including permission for oversized pole signs, freestanding signs in restricted areas, and signs exceeding height limitations near protected districts. Two additional petitions addressed signage approvals for medical facilities and a modification to a previous zoning commitment regarding privacy fencing.
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The City of Orlando approved a Wayfinding Sign System Plan designed to guide motorists and pedestrians to key public facilities including civic, cultural, visitor, and recreational destinations throughout the city. The resolution endorses the evaluation criteria, preliminary sign location master plan, and signage design developed by city staff, with further requirements to be developed after approval by the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT). The resolution became effective immediately upon adoption.
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The Downtown Design Review Board met on September 5, 2024, in Fort Worth, Texas, with six of seven members present. The board approved the August 1, 2024 meeting minutes unanimously and reviewed a new case (DG24-010) for 969 Commerce Street, which requested a Certificate of Appropriateness for a comprehensive building signage plan including five signs and two waivers from the Downtown Urban Design District Standards and Guidelines to allow multiple signs per canopy and other modifications.
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The Downtown Design Review Board met on March 7, 2024, in Fort Worth with seven members present to review downtown design applications. The board approved the February 1, 2024 meeting minutes unanimously (7-0) and heard a new case (DG24-002) regarding 500 Throckmorton Street, where the applicant Reata Restaurant Management requested a Certificate of Appropriateness to install new awnings and repair existing ones, as well as install two non-illuminated wall signs with a waiver from standard sign area allocation requirements for ground floor storefronts.
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The Huntsville Town Planning Commission held its regular public meeting on April 28, 2022, at the Huntsville Library, with items on the agenda including approval of prior meeting minutes, discussions on property expansion and land use permits for a greenhouse and signage, updates to the General Plan, and potential changes to zoning regulations for C-1 and A-3 zones. The meeting also covered an Annexation Policy Plan update and an Allowable Use Table revision. The meeting was open to public comment and available via Zoom and the Town YouTube Channel.
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