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3 results for “utilities authority” · other

  • Municipal Authority - Government

    Carlisle, PA
    Other

    The Carlisle Borough Municipal Authority, established in 1948, is responsible for acquiring, constructing, maintaining, and financing the Borough's waterworks and water distribution systems. The five-member Authority, appointed by Borough Council for five-year terms, plans policy, discusses system improvements and expansions, and makes recommendations to Council; it also finances projects through tax-exempt bond issuance for qualifying tax-exempt entities within the Borough. The Authority finances infrastructure through bond issues while the Borough operates facilities and handles routine maintenance, with water sales revenue covering bond payment costs.

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    water infrastructuremunicipal authoritybond financingwater distributionpublic utilities
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  • Board Meetings | Jackson County Utility Authority

    Jackson, MS
    Other

    This page provides the Jackson County Utility Authority's board meeting schedule and related information. Meetings are held on the second and fourth Mondays of each month at 4:00 p.m. at the Administration Building located at 1225 Jackson Avenue, Pascagoula, MS 39567, with scheduled dates from October 2025 through September 2026. The page includes links to meeting minutes dating back to November 2025 and provides a contact number for questions: (228) 762-0119 Ext. 5321.

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  • CITY CREEK: SALT LAKE CITY’S FIRST WATER SUPPLY By LeRoy W. Hooton, Jr.

    Salt Lake City, UT
    Other

    This historical document describes City Creek as Salt Lake City's original water supply since 1847, when Mormon pioneers led by Brigham Young settled the region. City Creek Canyon drains 19.2 square miles of watershed into a 14.5-mile-long stream that provided both irrigation and domestic water to early settlers who transformed the arid valley through agricultural irrigation. The document, originally authored in May 1975 by LeRoy W. Hooton Jr., Director of the Salt Lake City Department of Public Utilities, traces how City Creek's water enabled settlement survival despite initial skepticism about the valley's agricultural viability, with the creek continuing today to supply water by gravity flow to the Avenues, Ensign Downs, and downtown areas.

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