Official website ↗Pop. 467,665
Last indexed Apr 12, 2026
Queued for update soon
Most recent record is from 2024-12-02 — this township may not have been scraped recently. Request an update.
The Tredyffrin Township Board of Supervisors held a public meeting on December 2, 2024, to consider ordinances creating a Public Arts Commission and authorizing the acquisition of a 0.777-acre parcel at 595 Park Ridge Drive through a PEMA Hazard Mitigation Grant Program. The meeting agenda included approval of escrow releases totaling approximately $700,521 for various properties, authorization of proposals for the West Valley Road storm and sanitary pipe upgrade project, and announcements regarding ongoing stormwater projects at Strafford Park and Bair Road, as well as infrastructure repairs including the Contention Lane Bridge closure in January.
AI summary
The City of Raleigh proposed its 2022 City Council meeting schedule on December 7, 2021, establishing regular Tuesday meetings held both during the day (1:00 PM) and evening (7:00 PM), along with work sessions scheduled at various times throughout the year. The schedule includes a break in July and August, with municipal elections scheduled for November 8, 2022. All meetings were to be conducted remotely through March 31, 2022, due to an ongoing State of Emergency, after which in-person meetings would resume at the Council Chamber in the Raleigh Municipal Building.
AI summary
The Housing Authority of the City of Raleigh Board of Commissioners held a special meeting on July 24, 2025, with seven of nine commissioners present, along with staff, legal representatives, and community partners. The board approved consent agenda items including charge-off of delinquent resident accounts for June 2025, an occupancy report as of July 18, and minutes from the June 26 regular meeting. During public comments, resident Paula Coppola raised concerns about maintenance issues at Walnut Terrace, including trash collection, tree trimming obstructing windows, and air quality problems related to nearby fire station emissions and mold.
AI summary
The City of Raleigh adopted a FY25 budget of $732.2 million (13.1% increase from FY24) with a proposed tax rate of 35.50 cents per $100 of assessed value, an increase of 3.80 cents. The budget prioritizes affordable housing, transit and transportation, public safety, and growth management, with dedicated funding for employee cost-of-living adjustments and deferred capital maintenance. The city conducted enhanced community engagement beginning in October 2023, including listening sessions and participatory budgeting initiatives, to ensure resident priorities shaped spending decisions.
AI summary
The City of Raleigh's FY 2024 Proposed Budget document outlines the city's spending and financial plan, with the document spanning 439 pages and carrying the theme "Connecting our Community." The budget was developed under the direction of City Manager Marchell Adams-David and the city's Chief Financial Officer Allison Bradsher, with significant contributions from the Finance and Communications Departments and various budget analysis and management teams. This document serves as Raleigh City Council's comprehensive proposal for fiscal year 2024, covering city government operations and resource allocation under Mayor Mary-Ann Baldwin's administration.
AI summary
The FY2023 Proposed Budget document for the City of Raleigh presents the municipal budget submitted to City Council, which is led by Mayor Mary-Ann Baldwin and includes at-large and district representatives. The document outlines the budget development process, which was coordinated by the Budget and Management Services, Finance, and Communications departments under the direction of City Manager Marchell Adams-David. The budget includes sections on revenue and expenditure summaries, financial policies, a strategic plan for FY21-FY25, and various operational frameworks, though the document excerpt does not provide specific budget figures or policy details.
AI summary
The City of Raleigh adopted its 2025 annual schedule of regular City Council meetings, which includes regular City Council sessions held on the first Tuesday of each month at 1:00 PM and 7:00 PM, supplemented by work sessions and public comment periods on other Tuesdays. The schedule includes a July/August break, one Wednesday meeting on November 12 due to Veterans Day observance, and specifies that all meetings will be held in the Council Chamber at the Raleigh Municipal Building, along with designated committee meeting times for Economic Development & Innovation, Growth & Natural Resources, Safe, Vibrant & Healthy Community, and Transportation & Transit.
AI summary
The City of Raleigh provides a public records transparency system designed to make government information accessible while reducing costs and administrative burden. Many commonly requested records are available through self-service options, including City Council meeting minutes, open data portals, planning and development permits, public safety reports, and utilities information, with additional records available through other agencies like Wake County. For records not available online, residents can submit formal public records requests through the city's Public Records Portal, which processes requests in order and provides updates through the portal as requests progress.
AI summary
This webpage provides information about Raleigh's boards and commissions, which advise City Council on various community topics and are established through the City Charter, North Carolina General Assembly, or City Council. The page lists over 25 boards and commissions covering areas such as arts, planning, housing, transit, and environmental management, and explains that residents can apply to serve two-year terms with a maximum of six consecutive years on any single board and no more than two boards simultaneously. City Council members nominate and appoint candidates, requiring five votes for appointment, with additional details and vacancy information available through individual board pages, a dashboard, or the City Clerk's Office at 919-996-3040.
AI summary
This document is a form and procedural guide for citizens wishing to petition the Raleigh City Council. It outlines that citizen requests are heard during regular Council sessions on the first Tuesday at 7 P.M. and the third Tuesday at 1 P.M. (but not before 2 P.M.), with remarks limited to three minutes. The form requires citizen contact information, organization representation details, and a statement of the presentation topic and desired Council action, and must be submitted by noon two weeks prior to the scheduled meeting to the City Clerk's office.
AI summary
The Raleigh Planning Commission met on May 13, 2025, to review case TCZ-51-24 for a zoning text change at 9308 Fairbanks Drive involving approximately 2.67 acres. The proposed amendments would prohibit certain uses (schools, telecommunication towers, fuel sales, detention centers, etc.), limit dwelling units to 60, and cap office and retail uses at 65,000 square feet each, while removing previous conditions on stormwater controls, height limits, and tree preservation. The applicant requested deferral of the case to the June 10, 2025 meeting to address boundary line concerns identified in GIS data, with commissioners also raising questions about bicycle facilities, sidewalks, and the removal of density and tree protection conditions.
AI summary
The City of Raleigh FY2023 Adopted Budget document outlines the city's fiscal plan for the 2023 fiscal year, with governance by Mayor Mary-Ann Baldwin and a nine-member City Council representing at-large and district positions. The budget document includes comprehensive sections covering the adopted budget message, city profile, revenue and expenditure summaries, financial policies, and the FY21-FY25 strategic plan, prepared by the Budget and Management Services Department, Finance Department, and Communications Department under the direction of City Manager Marchell Adams-David and supporting executive staff.
AI summary
The Raleigh City Council met on September 19, 2023, and adopted a resolution consenting to the Wake County Housing Authority's issuance of bonds to finance the rehabilitation of seven affordable housing developments, five of which are located within Raleigh: Avonlea, Jeffries Ridge, Madison Glen, Ripley Station, and Tryon Grove. These five Raleigh properties collectively provide 292 units of affordable housing for households earning no more than 60% of the area median income and had previously received gap financing from the City. The consent agenda and the housing authority resolution were both approved unanimously on 8-0 votes.
AI summary
The City of Raleigh provides a public records request system designed to increase transparency and reduce costs by making commonly requested documents available online through self-service portals and an open data system. Records accessible include City Council meeting minutes, planning and development permits, public safety reports, utilities information, and vital records, with additional requests processed through a dedicated Public Records Portal in the order received. Residents are directed to check online resources first, review the FAQ section, and submit formal requests only for documents not available through existing self-service options.
AI summary
The Raleigh City Council adopted the Fiscal Year 2020 budget on June 10, 2019, based on the city manager's recommendation from May 21, 2019. The 317-page budget document emphasizes strengthening the city's foundation in workforce, operations, and infrastructure. The budget was developed collaboratively by multiple city departments including Budget and Management Services, Finance, and Information Technology, with Council leadership under Mayor Nancy McFarlane and seven council members representing the city's at-large and district positions.
AI summary
The Housing Authority of the City of Raleigh Board of Commissioners held a regular meeting on October 26, 2023, with eight commissioners present and nine absent. During public comment, residents and community advocates raised concerns including a maintenance issue at Walnut Terrace, lease documentation processes, and requests for greater transparency such as uploading meeting recordings to YouTube and enabling Zoom chat features, with commissioners committing to follow up on these transparency requests.
AI summary
The City of Raleigh's 2024 annual meeting schedule, proposed in December 2023, establishes regular City Council meetings held primarily on Tuesdays throughout the year, with most sessions beginning at 1:00 PM and 7:00 PM. The schedule includes monthly work sessions, public comment periods, and a summer break in July and August, with a special Wednesday meeting on November 6, 2024 due to Election Day on November 5. Committee meetings for Economic Development & Innovation, Growth & Natural Resources, Safe Vibrant & Healthy Community, and Transportation & Transit are scheduled on fourth Tuesdays or Thursdays at specified times in the Council Chamber.
AI summary