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Last indexed Apr 14, 2026
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On July 14, 2025, Carroll Township's Board of Supervisors approved several items including authorization for a license plate reader system at the U.S. Route 15/Spring Lane Road/Ore Bank Road intersection at a cost of $7,500 annually over five years, and approval of the Treasurer's Report showing an open bill list of $212,730.01 through July 9, 2025. The board tabled discussion of a 2026-2029 Police Services Agreement with Franklintown Borough until an August 4 work session. The meeting also included review of June 2025 fire and police reports.
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On June 9, 2025, the Carroll Township Board of Supervisors approved the Treasurer's Report showing $224,198.44 in bills through June 3, 2025, and ratified the May 2025 bill list. The board also received reports on police and fire services, including that Cadet Christopher Migatulski will graduate from the Police Academy on June 23, 2025, and that five new police vehicles have been received with equipment installation underway. Previous meeting minutes from May 5 and May 12 were approved as submitted.
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Apr 28, 2014
This Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission Damage Prevention Committee meeting agenda outlines an omnibus session reviewing 13 damage cases involving excavation incidents occurring between September 2022 and February 2023. The cases involve various utility facility owners including PECO, UGI Utilities, PPL Electric, water authorities, and telecommunications companies, paired with different contractors and excavators across multiple Pennsylvania municipalities. The meeting includes a scheduled 45-minute lunch break from 12:00 PM to 12:45 PM, with case reviews resuming afterward.
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This legislation amends Pennsylvania's Second Class Township Code to establish and clarify tax levy authorities for second-class townships. The amendments modify Section 3205 regarding township and special tax levies, allowing township boards of supervisors to levy taxes on real property for various purposes, including general township operations (up to fourteen mills, potentially increased to nineteen mills by court petition), highway lighting (five mills), public buildings (fifty percent of general tax rate), fire protection (three mills with provisions for employee compensation), fire hydrants (two mills), parks and recreation, and debt service. The act was passed on December 1, 2004, as House Bill 250 and represents updates to taxation authority originally established in 1933.
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The Center Township Board of Supervisors held a regular meeting on June 12, 2024, at the Unionville Volunteer Fire Company Firehall in Butler, Pennsylvania. During the public comment period, a resident questioned the timber ordinance's prohibition on portable sawmills; the board decided to amend the ordinance to specify "no commercial portable sawmills" to allow private property owners to use portable sawmills on their own land. The board approved previous meeting minutes, the May 2024 Treasurer's Report, two warrant lists, and appointed Ryan Crawford as Step-Up Foreman of the Road Crew; May zoning report data showed construction costs of $2,290,000 with $2,943.29 in fees collected.
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This document presents a comprehensive tax rate schedule for multiple school districts and municipalities in Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, listing earned income tax rates (ranging from 0.50% to 0.60%), local services tax rates (ranging from 0.90% to 1.50%), combined rates, and non-resident school district fees (typically $5.00 to $52.00). The table organizes tax information across nine school district regions including Big Springs, Camp Hill, Carlisle, Cumberland Valley, East Pennsboro, Mechanicsburg, Shippensburg, South Middleton, and West Shore, with specific codes assigned to each municipality or township within those districts.
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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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This report documents vehicle inspection stations suspended across multiple Pennsylvania counties (Adams, Allegheny, Beaver, Berks, and Bucks) for various safety and emissions violations. Suspension reasons include faulty inspections, improper record keeping, fraud, discontinuance of business, and failures to produce required documentation, with suspension periods ranging from several months to over two years. The report serves as a regulatory enforcement document tracking non-compliant inspection facilities as of the document date.
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The 2023 Annual Report for Monroe County Planning Commission documents staff leadership and organizational structure, including the passing of former Director John Woodling in October 2023 and the retirement of Commissioner John Moyer after 12 years of service. The report highlights the Planning Commission's continued work with local municipalities on planning and mapping services, and notes the county's key initiatives including the Monroe 2030 Vision Statement, Farmland Preservation programs, and Open Space Mini Grant program. The report is presented under Director Christine Meinhart-Fritz's leadership and includes the composition of the 2024 Planning Commission Board and Agricultural Land Preservation Board.
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This document is a search results page listing Pennsylvania Commonwealth budget documents and publications from the Office of the Budget, spanning fiscal years 2008-09 through 2024-25. The page includes references to multiple governors' executive budgets and "Budget in Brief" summaries, with notable items such as $87.6 million allocated for Pennsylvania Pre-K Counts in 2008-09 and property tax relief measures discussed in the 2010-11 budget. The Commonwealth budgets referenced were signed by Governor Wolf across multiple fiscal years, with specific signing dates provided for several budget approvals.
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Carroll Township, Perry County does not levy a real estate tax on residents, instead funding services through earned income tax (1.70%), fire tax (0.034 mills), per capita tax ($5.00), and real estate transfer tax (1.0%). The Spring 2023 newsletter announced a Spring Cleanup event scheduled for May 13, 2023, accepting tires, metal, and bulk trash with specific limits and fees, and noted that the Community Center is undergoing repairs funded by COVID relief funds, with furnaces installed and roof replaced, pending water system permitting.
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Carlisle Borough Council held a meeting on June 10, 2021, which was conducted both in-person and via Zoom. The primary agenda item was a public hearing on the proposed Grace United Methodist Map Amendment Ordinance. The meeting included provisions for public participation through email submissions and accommodations for individuals with disabilities.
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This document is an informational web page from the Pennsylvania Office of Open Records (OOR) explaining how to request records from the OOR itself. It clarifies that the OOR handles appeals of denied right-to-know requests and only maintains records related to its own operations, not general government records. The page provides multiple submission methods for record requests, contact information for the Open Records Officer (Janelle Sostar), and notes that responses are typically issued within five business days, with a possible thirty-day extension available under Pennsylvania's Right-to-Know Law.
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This document is an informational reference page about Carlisle, Pennsylvania, providing basic administrative details and general information for residents and visitors. It includes contact information for Carlisle Borough Hall (located at 501 Garland Drive), identifies Mayor Brenda Landis, and notes the official website as carlislepa.org. The page also contains demographic and geographic details, such as Carlisle's location in Cumberland County approximately 20 miles west of Harrisburg, median home prices around $200,000, and information about local services including the Building Code Department for construction permits.
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