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8 results for “utilities infrastructure” · other

  • Responses to City Council – February 10, 2026 | PDF

    Feb 10, 2026

    ·Scranton, PA
    Other

    On February 10, 2026, the City Council received responses to questions from a February 3 meeting, primarily addressing pave cut inspections for the Green Ridge water company project and ARPA grant allocation. The city confirmed that Pennoni conducts weekly inspections of utility work, documents findings in reports tied to specific permits, and notifies utilities of deficiencies—with violations issued if issues are not timely addressed; temporary cold patch repairs are being used due to winter weather conditions preventing hot-mix asphalt installation. The administration also provided details on ARPA grant tracking through subrecipient check-ins and quarterly reports, and listed specific allocations to organizations including NeighborWorks (business façade, home buyer, and home rehabilitation programs totaling approximately $865,881) and United Neighborhood Centers (business façade and disaster relief totaling approximately $129,930).

    AI summary

    water infrastructuregrant allocationroad maintenanceutility inspection
arpa funding
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  • 1 History of the State College Water System By Albert R. Jarrett 1892 to 2021

    State College, PA
    Other

    This document is a comprehensive historical narrative of State College's water system from 1892 to 2021, tracing the evolution through four organizational entities: the State College Water Company (1892–1936), State College Water Works (1936–1941), State College Borough Authority (1941–1989), and State College Borough Water Authority (1989–2021). The 120-page history covers the development of water infrastructure including well fields named Thomas, Grays Woods, Harter, Nixon, and Kocher, with chapters organized chronologically addressing system expansion, treatment plant construction, water quality initiatives, and leadership structure. The document includes appendices detailing board members, consultants, population data for the Centre Region, and annual water pumping volumes.

    AI summary

    water infrastructurewater qualitymunicipal utility
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  • Letter of Support - Greater Houston Partnership

    Houston, TX
    Other

    The Greater Houston Partnership, representing the 12-county Houston business community, wrote to the Texas State Legislature on February 14, 2023, to request state funding for improvements to the Lake Houston dam. The letter explains that the 1953-built dam was overwhelmed during Hurricane Harvey and that the City of Houston has already utilized $48 million in federal funds to begin planning and phase one of the project, which includes adding 11 new tainter gates to increase water discharge capacity and reduce flooding risk for over 5,000 structures. The Partnership asks for additional state appropriations to cover the total project costs beyond existing federal funding allocations.

    AI summary

    water infrastructureflood mitigationstate fundingdam improvements
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  • 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.

    AI summary

    water infrastructuremunicipal authoritybond financingwater distributionpublic utilities
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  • Mesa Transportation Master Plan - Phase I Public Outreach ...

    Mesa, AZ
    Other

    The Mesa Transportation Master Plan Phase I conducted public outreach from January to April 2023 to gather community input on transportation challenges and needs through an online survey, mapping exercise, and informational booths at community events. The city utilized multiple engagement methods including a project website (TomorrowsMesa.com), social media, press releases, and flyers to reach residents, visitors, and employers. Key feedback themes included requests for additional bike paths and protected bike facilities, safety and comfort enhancements along canal paths and bike routes, and improved roadway and canal path maintenance.

    AI summary

    transportation planningbike infrastructurepublic engagementroad maintenancecanal paths
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  • Annual Budget Process and Timeline | City of Boise

    Boise, ID
    Other

    The City of Boise follows an annual budget development process that runs from January through early fall, with the fiscal year operating from October 1st through September 30th. The budget funds essential services including police and fire departments, emergency medical services, libraries, parks, and utilities, as well as major capital investments like water line replacement and airport expansion. The process involves multiple stages: early planning (December–February), department budget requests and public input (March–May), department presentations (May–June), draft budget release and public workshops (June), public hearings and final adoption (July–September), and publication of the final budget before the fiscal year begins.

    AI summary

    budgetpublic safetywater infrastructureparks and recreationcapital projects
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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.

    AI summary

    board meetingsutility authoritywater infrastructure
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  • This is a word document of pages (5-8) of the Knoxville-Farragut-Knox

    Knoxville, TN
    Other

    The Knox County Growth Policy Coordinating Committee updated the Knoxville-Farragut-Knox County Growth Policy Plan, originally developed in 2001, to incorporate findings from a two-year integrated land use and transportation planning process completed in 2021. The revised plan updates rural and planned growth areas based on current conditions, infrastructure, and input from government departments, utilities, emergency services, and the school board, while introducing updated terminology such as "placetypes" for land use categorization and maintaining existing urban growth boundaries for Knoxville (47.5 square miles) and Farragut. The policy recommendations address unincorporated Knox County development while complying with Tennessee's Public Chapter 1101 annexation and growth management law.

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