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

3 results for “tax levies” · agenda

  • Select Committee on the Library Levy — Agenda 4/8/2026

    Apr 8, 2026

    ·Seattle, WA
    Agenda

    This agenda document announces a meeting of the Seattle City Council's Select Committee on the Library Levy scheduled for April 8, 2026 at 9:30 AM in the Council Chamber. The committee, chaired by Maritza Rivera, will convene to discuss an ordinance relating to regular property tax, though the full details of the ordinance are not included in this agenda excerpt. The meeting will include standard procedural items (call to order, agenda approval), public comment, and business items, with provisions for both remote and in-person public participation.

    AI summary

    library levyproperty taxpublic funding
    View PDFSource

Posted: October 4, 2024 Initial: Anita Liskey Board Agenda October 10, 2024

Oct 4, 2024

·Naperville, IL
Agenda

The Wheatland Township Board of Trustees scheduled a board meeting for October 10, 2024, at 7:30 PM to address new business including approval of an insurance program, energy aggregation program, and three resolutions honoring Kevin Martinich, Paul Marquardt, and Amber Markham. The agenda also included approval of two tax levy ordinances for the township and road district, review of bills and claims, and reports from various township officials including the Senior Administrator, Assessor, Highway Commissioner, and other department heads. The next regular meeting was scheduled for November 14, 2024.

AI summary

board meetingtax levyinsurance programenergy aggregationroad district
View PDFSource
  • A G E N D A Meeting Type: kJ D : L s bio p D ate O T

    Charlotte, NC
    Agenda

    On July 13, 1998, the City of Charlotte City Council held a meeting in Room 267 with a workshop agenda covering several items including a General Obligation Bond Referendum for Storm Water. The council discussed the 1997 resolution to transition the Storm Water program to a true Enterprise fund, phasing out the city's property tax contribution and using revenue bonds as a funding source for capital investment. A key issue involved state law constraints on storm water fee authorization when two government entities provide services through an interlocal agreement with Mecklenburg County, which created uncertainty for bond buyers regarding revenue guarantees, prompting the council to consider legislation authorizing the city to levy adequate storm water fees to service revenue bonds.

    AI summary

    storm water infrastructurebond referendumenterprise fundinterlocal agreementrevenue bonds
    View PDFSource