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14 results for “street amendment” · other

  • Oakland, CA Code of Ordinances -,) THE CHARTER OF THE CITY OF OAKLAND

    Oakland, CA
    Other

    The Oakland City Charter, adopted by voters on November 5, 1968, ratified by California's Secretary of State, and effective January 28, 1969, establishes the fundamental governing structure and powers of the City of Oakland. The charter organizes city government into twelve major articles covering powers and form of government, the City Council, the Mayor, city officers, the City Manager, administrative organization, the Port of Oakland, fiscal administration, personnel administration, franchises and licenses, elections, and general provisions. The document also includes appendices addressing specific funds and systems, including the KIDS FIRST! Oakland Children's Fund, police and fire relief and pension funds, the Oakland Municipal Employees' Retirement System, and off-street vehicular parking regulations. The charter has been amended through November 2014 and establishes that Oakland maintains perpetual succession as a body corporate under California's state constitution.

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  • Tallahassee-Leon County Comprehensive Plan

Tallahassee, FL
Other

The Tallahassee-Leon County Comprehensive Plan, adopted July 16, 1990, with a planning horizon through 2030, serves as the long-range land use and development guide for the jurisdiction. The plan is a dynamic document amended annually, with this version containing amendments effective through November 22, 2025. The plan is organized into major sections including Land Use and Mobility, with specific goals and objectives addressing regional planning priorities such as the Southeast Sector Plan and Southside Action Plan (effective August 5, 2023). The Planning Department, located at Frenchtown Renaissance Center, 435 N. Macomb Street, Tallahassee FL 32301, manages the comprehensive plan and amendment process.

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land use planningcomprehensive planregional developmentzoningmobility planning
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  • Knoxville-Knox County Planning | KnoxPlanning.org

    Knoxville, TN
    Other

    This document establishes the administrative rules and procedures of the Knoxville-Knox County Planning Commission, located at 400 Main Street, Suite 403, Knoxville, TN 37902, as amended through December 11, 2025. The rules govern public notice requirements through newspaper advertisement, signage, mail, and the planning website; application procedures for rezoning, special use permits, subdivisions, and street or subdivision name changes; and the handling of sequential applications and supplemental information. The document also defines land divisions excluded from regulation, including partitions among owners and divisions of land into tracts of five or more acres that are not subdivisions, and addresses staff recommendations and appeals processes.

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    zoningplanning commissionland subdivision
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  • Calendar • City Council

    Billings, MT
    Other

    This is a City Council calendar for Billings, Montana, listing seven scheduled events for April 2026. The calendar includes two regular City Council business meetings on April 13 and April 27, both at 5:30 PM in City Hall Council Chambers (316 North 26th Street, 5th Floor); a City Council work session on April 20 at 5:30 PM; two tours of Signal Peak Energy Arena on April 15 and 16 at 3:00 PM at Amend Park Recreation Campus (5101 King Ave E); a COVID-19 memorial plaque dedication on April 17 from 12:00–1:00 PM featuring remarks by former Mayor Cole and a moment of silence; and a public hearing on amendments to Montana Administrative Rules on April 21 from 11:00 AM–4:30 PM in Helena. The calendar allows users to search by date range, subscribe to notifications, and view past events.

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  • april-23-2019-township-board-meeting- ...

    Lansing, MI
    Other

    The Charter Township of Meridian held a regular board meeting on April 23, 2019 at 6:00 pm at Township Hall (5151 Marsh Road, Okemos, MI 48864). The agenda included a consent agenda with items such as approval of minutes from the April 9, 2019 meeting, bills, and a Resolution Establishing Authorized Signatories for MERS; hearings on the Kansas Road Sewer SAD #52 Reapportionment; action items including final adoption of Time Limitations for Vending and a Fireworks Ordinance; and board discussion items covering zoning amendments, mixed-use development proposals, street improvement programs, and fire code adoption. Communications submitted to the board included a statement from Stephen Boyd opposing a Woda-Cooper Companies rezoning request for property behind the Whole Foods store at 2750 E. Grand River Ave, which would change zoning from "One and Two Family Residential" to "Multiple Family—14 dwellings per acre" to permit a 53-unit townhome development for low to moderate income renters.

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    township board meetingzoningsewer infrastructureordinance adoptionfireworks
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  • Scranton Proposed Ordinance and Exhibit A – Zoning Amendment | PDF

    Scranton, PA
    Other

    This ordinance amends Scranton's zoning code to clarify regulations for hospitals and off-street parking. The amendment redefines off-street parking as an open or enclosed area used for automobile parking, whether free, fee-based, or provided as customer accommodation. Two areas of the city zoning map are rezoned from Town-City Institutional to Civic designation: one bounded by Mulberry Street, Colfax Avenue, Vine Street, and Okell Court, and another bounded by Linden Street, Colfax Avenue, Roselynn Street, and Sherwood Court. Hospital uses are expanded to explicitly include medical research, short and long-term care, hospice, medical testing, operating rooms, dental offices, nursing homes, ambulatory surgery centers, and off-street parking facilities. Off-lot parking for principal uses is permitted if the parking lot is within 400 feet of the principal use and both are under common ownership.

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  • 17 North Second Street 12th Floor Harrisburg, PA 17101-1601 717-731-1970 Main

    Jim Thorpe, PA
    Other

    This document is a letter from Post & Schell law firm dated June 6, 2024, requesting corrections to a Letter of Notification filed by PPL Electric Utilities Corporation with the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission on March 26, 2024 (Docket No. A-2024-3047924). The notification concerns PPL's proposal to rebuild existing double-circuit transmission lines connecting the Harwood 230-69 kV Substation in Carbon County and the Siegfried 230-138-69kV Substation in Northampton County. PPL identified inadvertent errors requiring amendments, including: correcting the number of CORTEN® lattice structures supporting the Harwood-East Palmerton Transmission Lines from 178 to 179, and revising the tower replacement numbers from 232 existing towers to 237 existing structures with 232 proposed new structures. The existing transmission lines, originally constructed in the early 1970s, span approximately 40.2 miles and consist of 220 weathering-steel CORTEN® lattice structures.

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  • LETTERHEAD - Wilmington City Council

    Wilmington, DE
    Other

    The Wilmington City Council's Public Works & Transportation Committee held a meeting on November 19, 2018, to address street infrastructure changes requested by the Riverfront Development Corporation. The primary agenda items included approving the removal of a portion of Garasches Lane from the Official City Map while accepting dedication of a new unnamed city street connecting South Walnut Street and Garasches Lane, and declaring the removed portion of Garasches Lane as surplus property for disposition to the Riverfront Development Corporation. The meeting also included discussion of amendments to city code regarding wireless telecommunications facilities in public rights of way and a presentation on solar technology by Sun Edge LLC, with public comment limited to three minutes per agenda item.

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    street infrastructurepublic workswireless telecommunicationssolar technologyproperty disposition
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  • RICHFIELD TOWNSHIP ZONING RESOLUTION - Ohio.gov

    Toledo, OH
    Other

    Richfield Township in Lucas County, Ohio adopted this comprehensive zoning resolution on May 7, 1961, with the 2021 version reflecting numerous text amendments through May 2019. The document establishes zoning districts (agricultural, commercial, and industrial), defines permitted and conditional uses, sets dimensional requirements for buildings and dwellings, and regulates off-street parking, accessory structures, and supplementary uses such as home occupations and manufactured homes. The resolution is administered by a Board of Trustees, Zoning Commission, Zoning Board of Appeals, and Zoning Inspector, with support from the Toledo-Lucas County Plan Commission.

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    zoningland usebuilding regulationszoning districtszoning administration
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  • Planning Commission | City of Virginia Beach

    Virginia Beach, VA
    Other

    The Virginia Beach Planning Commission is an 11-member body appointed by City Council to review land use, zoning, conditional use permits, street closures, and plan amendments. The Commission holds public hearings on the second Wednesday of each month at noon in the City Council chamber, with staff briefings at 9 a.m., and forwards recommendations to City Council for final decisions. The City is currently updating the Interfacility Traffic Area (ITA) Master Plan, exploring sports tourism, Innovation Park expansion, and municipal services, with a public meeting held on April 29, 2026 at Building 19 and a public comment deadline of May 31. Related April–May 2026 events include the Thalia Creek Greenway Phase III ribbon cutting on May 7 at 1 p.m., a Parks & Recreation Commission meeting on May 7 at 3 p.m., and a Transition Area/ITA Citizens Advisory Committee meeting on May 7 at 5:30 p.m.

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    zoningland use planningpublic hearings
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  • Amendments after adoption of revised map

    Wilmington, DE
    Other

    This document presents the City of Wilmington's zoning map and associated amendments following the adoption of a revised map on July 16, 2018 (Ordinance 18-018). The map designates various zoning districts including residential (R-1 through R-5-C), commercial (C-1 through C-6), manufacturing/industrial (M-1, M-2), waterfront (W-1 through W-4), and open space categories, with district boundaries measured from street sidelines and lot lines according to City Code 48-6. The document also lists 20 zoning revision ordinances adopted between 2005 and 2018 that modified the map, with a note that the map is supplemented by additional materials for flood and historic districts.

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    zoning map amendmentszoning districtsland use designations
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  • City of Wilmington

    Wilmington, DE
    Other

    The Wilmington Community Development & Urban Planning Committee held a revised meeting on May 9, 2024, to consider four agenda items including authorization for the Mayor to file federal housing and community development funding applications (Community Development Block Grant, HOME Investment Partnerships, Emergency Solutions Grants, and Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS programs), approval of street and alley removal from the official city map, a major subdivision plan for St. Cyprian's Holdings, LLC, and amendments to Chapter 14 regarding historic markers. Public comment was limited to three minutes per agenda item, with the meeting offered both in-person and virtually via Zoom.

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    community developmenthousing fundingstreet removalsubdivision planninghistoric preservation
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  • BALTIMORE CITY DEPARTMENT OF PLANNING 417 East Fayette Street, 8th Floor

    Baltimore, MD
    Other

    This document outlines Baltimore City's zoning framework as administered by the Department of Planning under Director Douglas B. McCoach, III. Baltimore City's Zoning Ordinance was established following Ordinance #1051 in 1971 and organizes land uses into four basic categories: residential, office-residential, business, and manufacturing. The City has ten residential districts designated with "R" followed by a number, with density increasing proportionally to the number designation. Single-family residential districts include R-1 (maximum 5.9 units per acre), R-3 (maximum 8.7 units per acre), R-1A (maximum 3 units per acre, created in 1992), and R-1B (maximum 2 units per acre, created in 1992), with examples including Ten Hills, Hunting Ridge, Guilford, Mt. Washington, Ashburton, and Harford-Echodale. The Planning Commission is required by Article 66B of the State Charter to review and make recommendations on all zoning changes and text amendments within 100 days of introduction, and holds public hearings on proposed changes.

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    zoningland useresidential districts
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  • CITY OF WORCESTER REVISED ORDINANCES OF 2008

    Worcester, MA
    Other

    The City of Worcester Revised Ordinances of 2008 is a comprehensive municipal code document ordained by the City Council on June 24, 2008, and amended through February 24, 2026. The document organizes regulatory ordinances into five main categories: Organizational (general provisions, administrative, and personnel), Environmental (recycling, sewers, wetlands, and water), Public Safety (health, safety, fire, and licenses), Public Streets (streets, traffic, and vendors), and Enforcement (fines and penalties). The ordinances establish foundational definitions and construction rules for Worcester's municipal governance, including definitions of key terms such as "city," "city council," "city manager," and relevant agencies and departments.

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