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Last indexed Apr 12, 2026
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Most recent record is from 2024-08-28 — this township may not have been scraped recently. Request an update.
Aug 28, 2024
The Metropolitan Transit Commission held meetings on May 29, 2024, and scheduled another for August 28, 2024, with agendas covering monthly statistics on transit safety, ridership, and sales tax; informational updates on microtransit services; and action items including approval of a Second Amended & Restated Transit Governance Interlocal Agreement and Mint Hill STS Service changes. The Commission includes representatives from Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, and surrounding municipalities, with leadership from Interim Chief Executive Officer Brent Cagle.
AI summary
The City of Charlotte City Council held a workshop on May 3, 1999, to discuss government restructuring and economic development initiatives. The agenda included presentation of 1999 City Services Survey results conducted by Marketwise between January 20 and February 11, 1999, to establish benchmarks for service quality and inform FY 2000 business plans. The workshop also covered the Southpark Small Area Plan and a recommendation for extra-territorial jurisdiction public process, followed by a Citizens' Forum to nominate and appoint a replacement member to the Housing Stakeholders Task Force.
AI summary
On February 1, 1988, the City of Charlotte Mayor and City Council held a workshop agenda covering three main topics: the Independence Freeway Project (including state construction plans, right-of-way acquisition funding from Pecan to Morningside, and high occupancy vehicle lanes), means of collaborating with the county on additional city transportation funding, and the operating budget (including a status report on FY 1988 operations, potential changes to FY 1989 operations, and debt-related issues). The meeting included discussion of the Independence Boulevard corridor as a major heavily-traveled and congested non-freeway route in north Charlotte, with the Independence Corridor Freeway/Expressway/Busway identified as the preferred alternative following environmental and transportation studies.
AI summary
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