30 results for “tax records”
30 results for “tax records”
This document is an informational webpage for the Town Clerk's office of Wilmington, NY, listing office hours, services provided, and links to legal notices and town records. The Town Clerk's office serves as the general information center and is responsible for recording and maintaining town records, and provides services including DEC sporting licenses, transfer station tickets, handicap parking permits, dog licensing, notary services, and tax collection. The page also includes contact information for community resources such as the Jay Wilmington Ecumenical Food Pantry and HEAP Energy Assistance, along with links to board minutes and previous legal postings related to tax warrants, assessment rolls, and town laws.
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The Land Records & Licenses Division of the Circuit Court for Baltimore City provides document recording, licensing, and related services at 100 North Calvert Street, Room 610, Baltimore. Chapter 538 of the 2020 Maryland General Assembly continued a $40 surcharge on recordable instruments effective July 1, 2020. The division charges $20 for basic document recording (up to 9 pages) with the $40 surcharge, $85 for marriage applications (cash only), and tiered copy fees of $0.50 per page for standard copies or $5.00 per certified instrument. Operating hours vary by service: Recording/Lien Section and Marriage & Business Licenses operate Monday–Friday 8:30 a.m.–4:00 p.m., while the Library extends to 6:15 p.m. Monday–Thursday. The division also collects state transfer taxes at ½% of consideration or assessed value, and provides notary commissions for $11.00 (new) or $8.00 (change of name/address).
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This webpage describes the Office of the Recorder | County Clerk for San Diego County, led by Jordan Z. Marks, which is responsible for accepting and recording legal documents upon payment of fees and taxes, and maintaining birth, marriage, and death records for the county. The office provides common services including birth, death, and marriage certificates; marriage licenses and civil ceremonies; recording of documents; fictitious business name filings; and notary public oath and bond filings. The office posts California Environmental Quality Act documents received within the past 30 days and directs the public to San Diego Superior Court for adoption, will, and divorce records. Contact information is available at (619) 237-0502 or via email at ARCCRecorderCountyClerk.FGG@sdcounty.ca.gov.
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The Jackson County Chancery Clerk's Land Records office is responsible for creating and maintaining public land record indexes and volumes, receiving filing fees, and processing tax property redemption payments. The office charges recording fees for various document types, including $26.00 for the first five pages of warranty deeds, deeds of trust, and similar documents, with $1.00 per additional page, and $27.00 for assignments and releases with the same additional page cost structure. Oil and gas recording fees follow a similar tiered structure at $26.00 for the first five pages, while mineral stamp fees for leases range from $0.03 per acre for 0–10 year terms to $0.08 per acre for terms over 20 years. The office also provides certified copies at $1.00 per document and copy services ranging from $0.25 to $2.00 per page depending on the method.
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Baltimore County maintains public records pursuant to Maryland's Public Information Act § 4-101, which establishes presumptive public access to government documents created or received by county agencies. The county's records span ten categories: court records (civil, criminal, traffic, and family cases from the Circuit Court), property records (deeds, mortgages, liens, plats, and tax assessments), vital records (birth certificates from 1939-present, death certificates, marriage licenses, and divorce decrees), business records (licenses, permits, and fictitious business registrations), tax records, voting records from the Board of Elections, government proceedings (Council meeting minutes, agendas, and video recordings), financial documents (budgets, expenditure reports, and statements), law enforcement records (with restrictions), and land use records (zoning maps, building permits, and development plans). The Baltimore County Circuit Court Clerk's Office maintains court and land records, while the State Department of Assessments and Taxation and Maryland Department of Health Division of Vital Records hold respective property and vital records. Baltimore County complies with Maryland's Open Meetings Act and operates a public information portal and dedicated request process to provide digital access to commonly requested documents.
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The Newark Department of Finance oversees all fiscal operations and asset management for the city, including employee and vendor payments, revenue collection, tax billing, and financial reporting, under the leadership of the Director of Finance/Chief Financial Officer. The department comprises several divisions: the Director's Office maintains custody of city assets including cash, investments, and capital authorizations; the Employee's Retirement Systems manages pension enrollment and retiree payments; the Office of Tax Abatement and Special Taxes collects and enforces revenue from payroll taxes, parking, hotel occupancy, and business licenses and permits; Assessments determines real property and personal property taxability and maintains tax maps; Accounts and Control records financial transactions across all city funds; and Revenue Collections handles property tax billing and citywide revenue collection and reporting.
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Oklahoma County operates as an open records county under the Oklahoma Open Records Act (51 O.S. §§ 24A.1-24A.31), which establishes the public's right to access government records with limited exceptions. The county maintains nine categories of public records across multiple departments: property records through the Assessor and County Clerk; court records through the Court Clerk; vital records with limited access; business records; election records through the Election Board; tax records through the Treasurer; law enforcement records through the Sheriff's Office; land records; and meeting records from county boards and commissions. County agencies are required to provide prompt and reasonable access during regular business hours, designate record custodians, and charge only reasonable fees for document searches and copies. The Oklahoma County Clerk maintains a public records portal to facilitate access to many county records.
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This explainer by Signal Cleveland Staff (April 12, 2026) describes how residents can request public records from Cleveland government agencies. Public records—including emails, contracts, police body camera video, and spending records—are legally accessible in Ohio and enable residents to monitor tax spending and hold officials accountable. Records are available through three channels: online databases (City Hall legislation, court records, county property data), in-person at City Hall (601 Lakeside Ave.), or by filing a request through the Cleveland Public Records Center, which requires creating an account and specifying a time frame and department. The Cleveland Metropolitan School District maintains a separate public records request system. Effective requests should be specific and time-bound rather than broad.
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This document describes Lehigh County, Pennsylvania's public records system and compliance with state transparency laws. It defines public records according to Pennsylvania's Right-to-Know Law (RTKL) and outlines the major categories of accessible records, including court documents, property records, vital records, business licenses, tax information, and budget documents, with responsibility distributed among various county offices such as the Clerk of Judicial Records and Recorder of Deeds. The document confirms that Lehigh County operates as an open records jurisdiction, fully complying with the RTKL's presumption of openness and the Sunshine Act's public meeting requirements, with designated Open Records Officers in each department to facilitate citizen access to government information.
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This document describes the meeting structure and public participation procedures for the Salt Lake City Community Reinvestment Agency (CRA). The Board of Directors meets on the second Tuesday of each month as the policy-making body, the Reinvestment Advisory Committee meets on the first Wednesday of each month to provide advisory input, and the Finance Committee meets as needed to review loan applications, tax increment reimbursement agreements, and land write-downs. All meetings are held at City Hall (451 S. State Street) with virtual attendance options, and agendas are posted at least 24 hours in advance. Upcoming meetings include Board meetings on November 18 and December 9, and RAC meetings on December 3 (with the November 5 RAC meeting cancelled). Meeting materials, recordings, and minutes are archived with the Salt Lake City Recorder's Office.
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This document is the webpage for the Town Clerk's office in Wilmington, Vermont, providing contact information, office hours, and access to various town clerk services. The page includes details on services such as land records searches, civil marriages, dog licenses, voter registration, vital records filing, motor vehicle registration, tax appeals, and liquor licensing. Key contact information lists Town Clerk Therese Lounsbury and Assistant Town Clerk Eithne Eldred, with office hours from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. at 2 East Main Street, and notes that the town's online land record index has been moved to RecordHub as of June 30, 2023.
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The Town of Stamford, Vermont's Annual Report for the year ending December 31, 2022 provides a comprehensive overview of municipal operations, including town officers, voting information, vital records, and financial statements. The report covers revenue and expenses, tax information, delinquent taxes, and various departmental reports including the fire department, library, cemetery, and school operations. The document serves as an official record of the town's governance, budget allocations, and service delivery across municipal departments and facilities.
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Norfolk County, Virginia operates as an independent city and maintains public records under Virginia's Freedom of Information Act (§ 2.2-3700 et seq.), with all records defined as writings, papers, maps, photographs, and other documentary materials prepared or retained by public bodies in conducting public business. The city adheres to Virginia's open records framework, requiring all public bodies to respond to records requests within five working days of receipt under § 2.2-3704. Public records available include court filings (maintained by Norfolk Circuit Court Clerk and General District Court serving the 4th Judicial District), property records (deeds, mortgages, assessments via the Circuit Court Clerk and City Assessor), vital records (managed by Virginia Department of Health and Circuit Court Clerk), business licenses and permits (held by Commissioner of the Revenue and State Corporation Commission), tax records (maintained by City Treasurer and Commissioner of the Revenue), election data (Norfolk City Registrar), meeting minutes and agendas (City Clerk), budgets and audits (Department of Finance), law enforcement records (Police Department), and zoning permits (Department of Planning and Community Development). Public bodies must provide access during regular office hours without requiring requesters to state a reason for seeking records, except in limited circumstances.
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Prosper Portland's Board of Commissioners holds regular meetings generally on the third Wednesday of each month, with meetings open to public attendance and testimony. The Board is authorized by the City Charter to adopt policies through resolutions at public meetings, with agendas and reports posted in advance on the agency's website. Recent meetings in 2026 have addressed matters including tax increment finance district progress reports, modifications to small business loan programs, a commercial property loan of up to $10.8 million, and approval of the Cully Action Plan, with all meetings recorded and available via live stream on YouTube and rebroadcast on Comcast Cable.
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This is the 2023 annual report for the Town of Stamford, Vermont, covering the fiscal year ending December 31, 2023. The document contains town governance information, voting details, town officer listings, and comprehensive financial statements including revenue and expenses, tax information, and reports from various departments and funds such as the fire department, library, cemetery, and equipment replacement funds. The report serves as an official public record of the town's operations, finances, and departmental activities for the calendar year.
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The Duval County Clerk of Courts in Jacksonville, Florida, located at 501 West Adams Street, maintains official court records, issues marriage licenses, processes payments, and provides online access to court records through its Online Records Portal. The office operates Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and can be reached at 904-255-2000. Services include marriage license issuance, official records searches covering court records, deed records, marriage certificates, and tax lien records since 1988, along with jury duty assistance and passport services. The Clerk's office operates a branch location at Atlantic Boulevard in Neptune Beach, approximately 14.8 miles away.
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This document describes Worcester County, Massachusetts's public records system and compliance framework rather than summarizing a specific budget, policy decision, or government action. It defines categories of accessible public records (court records, property deeds, vital records, business licenses, tax records, election data, meeting minutes, financial documents, law enforcement reports, and zoning records) and identifies custodian agencies including the Worcester City Clerk's Office, Worcester Registry of Deeds, and Massachusetts Trial Court system. Worcester County operates under Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 66, § 10, which requires records custodians to provide requested documents within 10 business days, and the county complies with state open meeting laws under Chapter 30A, §§ 18-25. The document does not contain specific budget figures, named initiatives, votes, dates, or quantitative metrics beyond the 10-business-day response requirement.
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This document is an informational resource page describing public records available in Providence County, Rhode Island. It defines public records under state law, lists the major types of records maintained by various county agencies (including court, property, vital, business, tax, and law enforcement records), and confirms that Providence County adheres to Rhode Island's Access to Public Records Act, which guarantees public access to government records with certain statutory exceptions. The page does not discuss any meetings, budget decisions, or policy changes.
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Greenville County, South Carolina maintains public records across ten categories—including property records, court records, vital records, tax records, voter registration, law enforcement, GIS data, business records, government meeting records, and financial records—pursuant to South Carolina's Public Records Act (Title 30 of the South Carolina Code of Laws). The county operates as an open records jurisdiction under South Carolina's Freedom of Information Act and Public Records Act, governed by principles established in S.C. Code Ann. § 30-4-15 that emphasize transparent public business. Greenville County facilitates public access through a dedicated Public Records Office offering both in-person and online access, with statutory response timeframes of 15 business days for records less than 24 months old and 30 business days for older records. Certain exemptions and restrictions apply under S.C. Code Ann. § 30-4-40, though the document does not detail specific exemptions.
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This document provides property records and market data for Tamaqua, Pennsylvania, located in Schuylkill County. It contains information on 2,866 properties with a median sale price of $125,000, average annual property taxes of $2,200, and median assessed market value of $64,500; most homes were built between 1900 and 1976 and average 1,727 square feet on 0.229-acre lots. The average sale price in Tamaqua is 32% higher than the surrounding Schuylkill County average, ranking sixth among comparable municipalities in the region.
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This document describes the public records system in East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana, outlining the types of records maintained and their custodians under Louisiana Revised Statutes § 44:1-41. Public records encompass court records (civil, criminal, probate, and family), property records (deeds, mortgages, liens), vital records (birth and death certificates), business licenses, tax records, voting records, meeting minutes, budgets, law enforcement records, and land use documents maintained by the Parish Clerk of Court and specialized departments. East Baton Rouge Parish complies fully with Louisiana Public Records Law, which under Louisiana Revised Statutes § 44:31 grants any adult the right to inspect, copy, and obtain public records during regular business hours.
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Hartford County, Connecticut maintains public records through its 29 municipalities and state agencies, as county government was abolished in 1960. Public records—including court documents, property deeds, vital records, business licenses, tax records, and meeting minutes—are defined under Connecticut General Statutes § 1-200 and distributed among town clerks, assessors, and state agencies. Hartford County operates under Connecticut's comprehensive Freedom of Information Act, which requires public agencies to make records available for inspection and copying during regular office hours with a strong presumption favoring disclosure.
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This document is a property records search tool and informational guide for Akron, Ohio residential real estate. Akron contains 84,192 properties with an average sale price of $125,000, median assessed market value of $111,000, and average annual property tax of $2,100. The typical home offers 2–4 bedrooms, 1–2 bathrooms, and 1,300 square feet on 0.152-acre lots, with most buildings constructed between 1922 and 1968. Akron's average sale price is 29% lower than the Summit County average of $175,000, and ranks 11th among 12 surrounding communities by sale price, with Copley, Ohio ranking highest at $320,000.
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Carbon County Tax Claim Bureau announced an Upset Tax Sale scheduled for September 26, 2022, at 10:00 A.M. at the Carbon County Courthouse in Jim Thorpe, Pennsylvania. Prospective bidders must register in person at the Tax Claim Bureau by September 16, 2022, with a notarized affidavit and a non-refundable $50 registration fee; the minimum bid price will include deed preparation, realty transfer tax, recording fees, and 2022 taxes and municipal liens. All properties are sold "as is" without warranty, and the county website provides the upset sale list, conditions of sale, and additional documentation including a questions and answers sheet for potential buyers.
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The 2024-2025 Texas Budget, signed by Governor Abbott on June 18, 2023, allocates approximately $321 billion from all funds and $144 billion in general revenue for the two-year period from September 1, 2023, to August 31, 2025. The Legislature began the session with $188.2 billion in general revenue, including a record $32.7 billion carryover balance and $23.5 billion in the state's rainy-day fund. While the budget shows 10% and 6% increases in general revenue and all funds respectively compared to the previous biennium, the analysis notes that after adjusting for inflation and population growth, actual spending increases are considerably smaller, and lawmakers prioritized property tax cuts over long-overdue investments in public education and health care despite the surplus opportunity.
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NULL The document is an informational guide about Leon County's public records system and compliance with Florida's Public Records Law. It contains no discussion of decisions, budget figures, policy changes, or meeting context—only explanatory content about what constitutes public records, which agencies maintain them, and the county's adherence to state open records requirements.
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This document describes the types of public records maintained by Kanawha County, West Virginia, and outlines the county's compliance with the West Virginia Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). Public records in Kanawha County, as defined by §29B-1-2, include court documents, property records, vital records, business filings, tax records, election data, meeting minutes, financial documents, law enforcement records, zoning materials, and school records, with the County Clerk serving as the primary custodian for many of these records. The county operates under West Virginia's FOIA statute (§29B-1-3), which establishes a presumption of public access to government records.
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