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Last indexed Apr 18, 2026
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Most recent record is from 2024-12-07 — this township may not have been scraped recently. Request an update.
On December 7, 2024, the Town of Wilmington held a special town meeting with a quorum present, during which Town Moderator Jonathan Eaton called the meeting to order and the board voted to dispense with reading the full warrant. The primary article addressed was Article 1, which proposed amending the Town's Zoning By-law to create a new MBTA Communities Multi-family Overlay District (MOD) covering approximately 65 acres. This overlay district is designed to allow multifamily housing and mixed-use development as-of-right in accordance with Massachusetts General Law Chapter 40A, with four designated sub-districts: Main Street Mixed Use, Burlington Avenue, Deming Way, and West Street, while maintaining underlying zoning provisions for non-specified uses.
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The Tredyffrin Township Board of Supervisors held a public meeting on December 2, 2024, to consider adoption of ordinance HR-484 establishing a new Public Arts Commission and Historic Resource Overlay District, and ordinance HR-485 authorizing acquisition of a 0.777-acre parcel at 595 Park Ridge Drive through a PEMA Hazard Mitigation Grant Program. The meeting agenda also included approval of various township business items, including ratification of a Local Share Account grant application for park upgrades, approval of proposals for the West Valley Road Storm and Sanitary Pipe Upgrade project, escrow releases totaling approximately $700,520.86, and announcements regarding ongoing stormwater projects at Strafford Park and Bair Road, bridge repairs, and community events.
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The Town of Wilmington held a work session meeting on September 25, 2024, to discuss several items including the October 2024 budget calendar, a New York State grant for a sedimentation and flood remediation study of the AuSable River in partnership with the AuSable River Association, playground matters, and employee handbook updates. The meeting also included time for public comment and an executive session to address personnel-related matters.
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The Westtown Township Board of Supervisors held a regular meeting on September 3, 2024, where they approved previous meeting minutes and received departmental reports on infrastructure projects and maintenance activities. The Public Works Department reported on ongoing projects including the nearly-completed athletic core project, the Thorne Drive Basin Retrofit project, the Londonderry Wickerton sewer sliplining project completion, and scheduled road maintenance including pipe replacements, milling and paving in late September, an Aqua water main replacement on Blenheim Road, and a Pleasant Grove force main replacement beginning September 16. The Planning Commission discussed a sign ordinance amendment request from Westminster Presbyterian and Advent Lutheran churches to replace manual changeable signs with digital displays, and the Board also conducted an executive session workshop addressing personnel, real estate, legal matters, grant funding for Crebilly land acquisition, bond parameters ordinance, and preliminary 2025 budget discussions.
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The Wilmington Annual Town Meeting convened on May 4, 2024, with a quorum present, where Moderator Jonathan Eaton opened proceedings with recognitions of the Minutemen, military service members, and six long-time volunteer town officials. The meeting adopted a consent agenda process to expedite voting on routine and non-controversial articles, including approvals for building committee reports, compensating balance agreements, MS4 compliance funding of $75,000, and other miscellaneous articles. The warrant reading was dispensed with by unanimous vote, and the Moderator noted that all articles were pre-approved by the Finance Committee and Planning Board unless otherwise indicated.
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This is an agenda for a Town of Wilmington work session held on April 24, 2024, at 4:00 pm at the Community Center. The session included a presentation from the Wilmington Youth Commission and discussions on multiple topics including policy updates, spring cleanup, summer beach operations, port-a-john installations at trail heads, and vacant board positions. The meeting concluded with public comment and an executive session to address personnel and legal matters.
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The City of Wilmington, Delaware proposed its Fiscal Year 2026 budget on March 20, 2025, under Mayor John Carney's administration, prepared by the Office of Management and Budget. The budget document outlines the city's financial plan across multiple fund categories including the General Fund, Special Funds, and Water/Sewer Fund, with detailed budget highlights and revenue/expenditure summaries. The proposal was submitted to City Council for review and approval, with city leadership and departmental officials identified for budget oversight and implementation.
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This document is the City of Wilmington, Delaware's Approved Budget for Fiscal Year 2022, approved by City Council on May 20, 2021. The budget was prepared by the Office of Management and Budget under Mayor Michael S. Purzycki and received the Government Finance Officers Association's Distinguished Budget Presentation Award for meeting criteria as a policy document, operations guide, financial plan, and communication device. The document includes listings of city administration, council members, and city officials, with the detailed budget information appearing in subsequent sections referenced in the table of contents.
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On February 3rd, 2025, Wilmington Township Supervisors met and approved various expenses totaling approximately $54,456.14 across multiple funds (General Fund, Payroll, Marti Park, State Fund, and Realty Transfer), as well as a salt contract for 250 tons and authorized advertisement for bids on the Phillips School Road Culvert Replacement Project. During public comment, residents raised concerns about traffic accidents at high-traffic intersections on State Route 18 and other roads, prompting supervisors to commit to contacting PennDOT about incorporating safety improvements into planned construction work for 2025–2026. The meeting also included approval of prior meeting minutes and a resolution regarding 2024 tax information for Infocon.
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The City of Wilmington, Delaware approved its Fiscal Year 2017 budget under Mayor Dennis P. Williams, with the document approved by City Council on May 25, 2016. The city had previously received a Distinguished Budget Presentation Award from the Government Finance Officers Association for its FY 2015 budget and was resubmitting the current budget for award eligibility consideration. The budget document was prepared by the Office of Management and Budget and serves as a policy document, operations guide, financial plan, and communication device for city administration.
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The October 2, 2025 Wilmington City Council meeting included recognition and sympathy resolutions honoring community members and organizations, including Black Restaurant Week 2025, the Innocence Project Delaware, and several individuals. The legislative agenda featured two ordinances: one to amend zoning code Chapter 48 to permit commercial recreation and public assembly as permitted uses in the M-1 (Light Manufacturing) district with established parking requirements, and another to establish a temporary moratorium on foreclosures for property owners on tax payment plans. The virtual meeting with in-person participation allowed public comment following the non-legislative business portion.
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This is the City of Wilmington, Delaware's Fiscal Year 2011 Annual Budget, approved by City Council on May 13, 2010, under Mayor James M. Baker. The document is a comprehensive 298-page budget prepared by the Office of Management and Budget that includes budget highlights, financial policies, departmental information, and the city's strategic plan, though specific budget figures and policy changes are not visible in the provided excerpt.
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The Wilmington Planning Board meeting scheduled for July 1, 2025, will address multiple development applications including Form A filings for properties on Cross Street and Ballardvale Street, continued public hearings on subdivision and stormwater management permits for projects on Bruning Road, Gowing Road Extension, Safford Street, Salem Street, and Eagleview Drive, with action deadlines ranging from July 20 to September 18, 2025. The agenda also includes Board of Appeals cases for properties on Nelson Way, Main Street, and Industrial Way, along with old business regarding a site plan review endorsement for Concord Street.
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The City of Wilmington established tax rates for Fiscal Year 2022 across eight revenue categories. The rates include a 1.25% wage tax on resident and non-resident earned income, a 1.25% net profit tax, a property tax of $1.995 per $100 of assessed value (based on 1983 valuations), a $15 monthly head tax per employee (for businesses with 6+ employees), a 1.50% real estate transfer tax, franchise taxes of 2% on electricity and 5% on cable television, a 2% natural gas tax, and a 2% lodging tax on hotel room rentals within city limits.
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