30 results for “transportation policy”
30 results for “transportation policy”
This is an agenda document for the Seattle City Council's Transportation, Waterfront, and Seattle Center Committee meeting scheduled for April 16, 2026 at 9:30 AM in the Council Chamber at City Hall. The document provides logistical information including committee membership (chaired by Rob Saka with four members), contact details, meeting location and remote access options, and instructions for public comment registration both remotely and in-person. No specific agenda items, budget figures, or policy decisions are listed in the provided content.
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The Seattle Governance and Utilities Committee met on February 12, 2026, and recommended passage of three ordinances. CB 121155 transfers partial jurisdiction of Seattle Public Utilities' Bitter Lake Reservoir property to the Seattle Department of Transportation for street and sidewalk purposes, approved 4–0 by the committee. CB 121160 authorizes Seattle Public Utilities' General Manager and CEO to enter an interlocal agreement with the regional Water Supply Forum to coordinate drinking water supply issues across King, Snohomish, and Pierce counties, approved 3–0. CB 121161 amends Secondary Use Policies for the Cedar River Municipal Watershed to permit limited application of the herbicide imazapyr to treat invasive knotweed species, approved 3–0. The committee also heard a Comcast Franchise Renewal presentation as an information item.
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The Seattle Land Use Committee met on October 31, 2025, with three members present (Mark Solomon, Debora Juarez, Alexis Mercedes Rinck) to confirm five appointments to the Equitable Development Initiative Advisory Board. All five appointees—Stephanie Lachman (term to February 28, 2026), Eric Alipio (term to February 28, 2027), Amira Beasley (term to February 29, 2028), Ernesto Oliva (term to February 29, 2028), and E.N. West (term to February 29, 2028)—were approved unanimously 3–0 by the committee and recommended for City Council confirmation. The committee also held a public hearing on and discussed Council Bill 121093, which amends Seattle Municipal Code provisions related to land use, zoning, environmental review thresholds, transportation requirements, and cultural resource preservation, and heard an information item on State Environmental Policy Act threshold exemptions for transportation management plans.
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The Denver Regional Council of Governments Board of Directors meeting is scheduled for May 21, 2025, from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. in Denver. The agenda includes approval of the Fiscal Year 2025/26 Budget, discussion of the Building Policy Collaborative Jurisdictional Support Subaward Program, informational briefings on the Transportation Improvement Program and Regional Multimodal Freight Plan, and committee reports from state transportation and regional bodies.
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The Seattle Transportation Committee met on May 6, 2025, with five members present (Saka, Hollingsworth, Kettle, Rinck, Strauss) and unanimously recommended passage of three ordinances. CB 120971 expands the use of automated traffic safety cameras and authorizes civilian employees to review camera-detected violations while updating related finance and fund policies. CB 120972 modifies appropriations and a proviso for the Seattle Department of Transportation in the 2025 Budget. CB 120945 vacates an alley in Block 52 of the First Hill neighborhood and accepts a Property Use and Development Agreement on petition of North Block Spring Street Development LLC. All three bills passed 5–0.
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The Seattle Select Budget Committee convened on October 13, 2023, to review proposed budget adjustments for fiscal 2024, with Central Staff identifying potential budget issues and policy options relative to the 2024 Endorsed Budget. Three Information Items were heard: Inf 2341 for the Seattle Department of Transportation (SDOT), Inf 2342 for the Community Safety and Communication Center (CSCC) and Community Assisted Response and Engagement (CARE), and Inf 2343 for the Seattle Police Department (SPD). Nine committee members were present during the morning session beginning at 10:02 a.m., and seven members were present during the afternoon session beginning at 2:00 p.m. after a one-hour recess. The meeting adjourned at 4:32 p.m.
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The Transportation and Seattle Public Utilities Committee met on August 15, 2023, and recommended passage of four items to City Council. The committee voted 3–0 (with Councilmembers Pedersen, Herbold, and Morales present) to approve CB 120639, authorizing Seattle Public Utilities to accept loans to finance the South Thornton Natural Drainage System Project. The committee also voted 3–0 to grant CF 314496, a petition by the Central Puget Sound Regional Transit Authority to vacate a portion of an alley at 1000 NE 45th Street, as conditioned. Two ordinances relating to automated traffic safety cameras—CB 120625 and CB 120638, which establish additional uses for the cameras and establish financial policies for their revenue—each received unanimous 3–0 recommendations for passage, with CB 120625 approved as amended. The committee also heard the Seattle Transit Measure Annual Report as an information item.
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This June 20, 2023 Seattle City Council meeting agenda, chaired by Alex Pedersen, addresses two items in the Transportation and Seattle Public Utilities committee. The first item, CB 120595, is an ordinance amending Secondary Use Policies for the Cedar River Municipal Watershed to permit limited application of the herbicide imazapyr to treat invasive knotweed species, with presenters Andrew Lee (General Manager and CEO) and Zoe Loutos from Seattle Public Utilities. A second ordinance relating to Seattle Public Utilities and its General Manager and Chief Executive Officer appears on the agenda but is incomplete in the provided document. The meeting was scheduled for 9:30 AM at the Council Chamber, City Hall, 600 4th Avenue, with provisions for both remote and in-person public comment.
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The Housing, Land Use, & Transportation Committee of St. Petersburg held a meeting on February 9, 2023, to address three main items: the creation of community eviction standards for City-owned and City-subsidized housing, alignment of the City's Tenant Bill of Rights with Pinellas County's version, and re-approval of Jerri Evans to the St. Petersburg Housing Authority board. The committee also reviewed informational materials on the City's 10-year housing plan, vacant property reports, and transit authority updates, with a future meeting scheduled for March 9, 2023, to discuss implementation of a City-maintained Landlord Registry.
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Seattle's Select Budget Committee held budget hearings on October 13, 2022, presided by Councilmember Mosqueda, with 9 of 11 members present (Lisa Herbold and Kshama Sawant arrived late). The committee reviewed four Information Items focusing on the Mayor's 2023 and 2024 proposed budgets: the Seattle Department of Transportation (Inf 2156), a proposed Parking Enforcement Officer Transfer (Inf 2157), the Seattle Police Department (Inf 2158), and the Community Safety and Communications Center (Inf 2163). The meeting ran from 9:31 a.m. to 5:14 p.m., with a recess from 1:02 p.m. to 2:00 p.m. Central Staff identified potential budget issues and policy options related to the proposals, with department representatives discussing significant changes or reductions compared to the 2022 budget.
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The Finance and Housing Committee met on June 15, 2022, with five members present (Mosqueda, Herbold, Pedersen, Nelson, Lewis) and unanimously recommended four items to City Council. The committee confirmed the appointment of Cara Kadoshima Vallier to the Housing Levy Oversight Committee for a term ending December 31, 2023 (5–0). The committee also recommended passage of three ordinances: CB 120343 adopting amended Housing Funding Policies for low-income housing programs; CB 120340 authorizing a real property lease negotiation between the Department of Finance and Administrative Services and the Washington State Department of Transportation; and CB 120338 authorizing the Human Services Department to accept specified grants and amend 2022 Budget appropriations (all 5–0). The meeting was held at City Hall, 600 4th Avenue, Seattle, and adjourned at 11:38 a.m.
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The Hartford Court of Common Council met on May 10, 2004, and approved several mayoral appointments to local commissions including the Human Relations Commission, Advisory Commission on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Issues, Commission on Aging, and Advisory Commission on Food Policy. The council also passed resolutions authorizing the city to solicit funds from the Keep Kids Safe License Plate Grant Fund for smoke detectors and carbon monoxide alarms, and approved the appointment of John F. Palmieri as Director of Development Services. Several items were referred to committees for further review, including a parking license agreement with Colt Gateway LLC and a proposal to increase public transportation fares.
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The Board of Public Works met on January 23, 2013, to review and approve items organized under three main agendas: Secretary's Agenda (covering agriculture, wetlands, housing, school construction, and program open space), Department of Transportation Agenda (including construction contracts, architect/engineer contracts, maintenance and service contracts, and leases), and Department of General Services Agenda (covering construction modifications, maintenance, real property, and capital grants). The meeting minutes document included detailed agenda items and supporting materials across multiple appendices and supplements addressing budgetary and policy matters across various state departments and programs.
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The City of St. Petersburg Housing, Land Use, & Transportation Committee held meetings on October 12 and November 9, 2023, to address housing and land use matters. During the October 12 meeting, the committee discussed a proposed administrative policy for city-owned land management covering both buildable and unbuildable properties, including disposal processes, unsolicited proposals, and conveyance considerations, with a requirement that properties developed with more than four residential units include 30 percent workforce or affordable housing. The November 9 agenda included discussion of city-wide discrimination issues including housing discrimination, with participation from the Assistant City Attorney and the Director of the Pinellas County Office of Human Rights, along with review of the 10-Year Housing Plan and accomplishment matrices.
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This document is the State of New Jersey's FY2024 Budget in Brief, prepared by Governor Philip D. Murphy's Office of Management and Budget in February 2023. The budget document outlines the governor's spending and policy priorities across multiple areas including pre-K-12 education, higher education, economic growth, healthcare, transportation, and infrastructure. The document serves as a comprehensive overview of the state's fiscal plan, with detailed sections addressing affordability, responsibility, and various departmental initiatives, though specific budget figures and detailed policy changes are not visible in the provided excerpts.
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NULL The document is a highway and transportation map of Des Moines County, Iowa, prepared in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Transportation as of January 1, 2025. It displays road classifications, county and township boundaries, railways, pipelines, and hydrological features, but contains no budget information, policy decisions, financial allocations, or comparable governance facts suitable for a public transparency platform.
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On September 12, 2022, the DOTI Advisory Board approved minutes from the prior meeting and voted to submit letters supporting micro-mobility initiatives and a USDOT multi-modal funding grant. The board held an extensive discussion on the South Broadway & I-25 Improvement Projects, with members expressing concerns that the current plan, based on 2008 environmental assessments, prioritizes automobile travel over pedestrian safety and ease of motion; the board noted that segment 4 (requiring home purchases on Lincoln Street) lacks current funding. The board also addressed meeting scheduling conflicts with City Council meetings for 2023 and reported on ongoing work by its committees on projects, budget and finance, policy, and community engagement.
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