Official website ↗Pop. 226,610
Last indexed Apr 18, 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 adopting ordinance HR-484 creating 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 included approval of minutes, authorization of a Local Share Account grant application for Friendship Park upgrades, approval of proposals for the West Valley Road Storm and Sanitary Pipe Upgrade project, and approval of multiple escrow releases totaling approximately $700,521. The township also announced several infrastructure projects underway, including stormwater work at Strafford Park and Bair Road, and the upcoming closure of Contention Lane Bridge in January for repairs.
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The Town of Richmond Selectboard will hold a public informational meeting on February 24, 2025, at 7:00 PM to discuss Australian ballot articles for the 2025 Town Meeting. The agenda focuses on three main items: review of Article 7 regarding a proposed $4,870,565 fiscal year 2026 budget, Article 8 concerning a one-cent municipal tax rate increase to fund the Conservation Reserve Fund, and Articles 9-17 regarding charitable appropriations. The meeting will be held at the Town Center (203 Bridge Street) and accessible remotely via Zoom.
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The Public Schools Records Consortium (PSRC) held a virtual meeting on December 10, 2025, with representatives from multiple Virginia public school systems and the Library of Virginia to discuss records and information management. The agenda included presentations on document management and storage platforms by Instructure, updates on the GS-21 records system from the Library of Virginia's Records and Information Management Analyst, and remarks from the Virginia Coalition for Open Government. The consortium established a four-meeting schedule for school year 2025-26, with meetings scheduled for October, December, February, and April, held at the Library of Virginia in Richmond with both virtual and hybrid attendance options.
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The Town of Richmond, Vermont's Development Review Board meets on the second and fourth Wednesdays of each month at 7 pm, with meetings held online, via conference call, and in-person at Town Hall's 3rd Floor. The document provides an archive of DRB meetings and documents dating back to 2012, with recent meeting records available since June 1, 2022, including agendas, packets, and minutes. Meeting videos are also available through mtmansfieldctv.org.
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The Virginia Small Business Financing Authority Board of Directors met on January 8, 2019, to approve minutes from the previous meeting and consider modifications to three tax-exempt bond issues. The board unanimously approved changes to Educational Facilities Revenue Refunding Bonds for Church Schools in the Diocese of Virginia (Series 2017F and 2017G) regarding financial reporting requirements, modifications to Hospital Revenue Bonds for Carillion Medical Center in Roanoke (Series 2008A and 2008B) involving interest rate mode changes, and an amendment to revenue bonds for Marymount University student and faculty housing in Arlington.
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This webpage describes the Richmond Township Clerk's office in Illinois, which serves as the official record keeper for the Township and clerk for the Board of Trustees. Key responsibilities include maintaining Board meeting records and voting procedures, serving as the local Election Authority, publishing legal notices, and overseeing bid processes. The page provides links to meeting agendas, minutes, and financial documents, with a complete schedule of Township Board meetings listed for 2025 and 2026, including a regular annual town meeting held each April.
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This document outlines Governor Warner's estimated budget impact on Richmond (City) for fiscal years 2005 and 2006, detailing direct state payments across multiple categories including administration, education, health and human resources, and finance. Major funding areas include aid to local school divisions ($112.0 million in FY2005, $113.3 million in FY2006), Medicaid payments to providers ($221.1 million in FY2005, $243.1 million in FY2006), and personal property tax relief reimbursement ($19.2 million in FY2005, $21.9 million in FY2006). The budget reflects modest increases in most direct payment categories between the two fiscal years, with notable growth in car tax relief, Medicaid funding, and services for at-risk youth.
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The Proposed FY 2025 Budget for Richmond emphasizes strengthening customer service and municipal governance through accountability, equity, and innovation, with a total budget of $2.9 billion ($1.0 billion General Fund). Key allocations include $15.8 million for Richmond Public Schools, $40.0 million for affordable housing (FY 2025-2028), $4.2 million for homeless services, $21.0 million for traffic calming and Complete Streets, $15.6 million for the Fall Line Trail, and $13.0 million for the Shockoe Project, alongside employee wage increases including a $20.00 minimum wage and 4-7% pay raises across city departments. The budget leverages local, state, and federal funding to build a sustainable, progressive city while ensuring quality municipal services for residents, businesses, and organizations.
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The Virginia Growth and Opportunity Board Regional Council Committee met on May 29, 2025, to discuss planning grant effectiveness and policy improvements. The Department of Housing and Community Development presented a Planning Grant Impact Analysis covering 115 grants awarded since 2018, evaluating their success in transitioning to implementation projects, in response to a Governance and Policy Committee request to inform discussions on Board Policy #3. The committee also reviewed a JLARC recommendation to increase planning grant caps from the current $250,000 annual limit and $100,000 per-grant maximum, allowing regions to allocate up to 25 percent of annually allocated per capita funds for planning grants.
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This document is the welcome page for Richmond County, Virginia's official local government website. It announces the launch of a new email notification system allowing citizens to receive updates about county meetings and agendas for boards including the Board of Supervisors, Planning Commission, and Board of Zoning Appeals, with signup available by emailing lhylan@co.richmond.va.us or calling 804-333-3415. The website serves as a portal for county information and services, with updates also posted on the county's Facebook page.
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The City of Richmond, Virginia FY2027 Department Budget Submission Workbook documents agency-level revenue and expenditure estimates submitted by city departments, boards, commissions, and the School Board prior to the January 15 deadline, in compliance with Ordinance 2025-100. The workbook presents preliminary departmental budget requests reflecting personnel, operating, and programmatic resource needs to support transparency in budget formulation and decision-making by city leadership. The document includes multiple disclaimers noting that FY2026 adopted budget figures reflect only those amounts as of July 1, 2025, FY2025 actuals remain unaudited, and personnel data, personnel requests, and operating expenditure estimates are subject to revision as recruitment activity, healthcare rates, benefit costs, and other factors are finalized throughout the budget development process.
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The Richmond Regional Transportation Planning Organization (RRTPO) Executive Committee met on November 2, 2023, to address administrative and planning matters affecting the nine-jurisdiction region. The committee approved previous meeting minutes and received updates on MPO administrator recruitment and changes to the SmartScale process, which will limit the number of applications to allow more projects to be adequately prepared for evaluation. The meeting was conducted in-person and via Zoom with public access and recording available on PlanRVA's YouTube channel.
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This document is a catalog of microfilm records held by the Library of Virginia for Richmond County, which was formed in 1692 from the former Rappahannock County. The catalog lists available microfilm copies of various county records spanning from 1692 to the mid-20th century, including court records, administrative documents, land records, wills, and business records, with notes indicating which items are available for interlibrary loan. The document notes that some historical records were lost, including will books prior to 1699, order books from 1794–1816, and numerous loose records prior to 1781 that were destroyed or damaged through unknown causes.
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The Central Virginia Transportation Authority (CVTA) Finance Committee met on June 8, 2022, with all members present, chaired by Mayor Levar M. Stoney. The committee unanimously approved the previous meeting's minutes and the meeting agenda, and received reports on state transportation funding including allocations for regional trails and the I-64 widening project. Key discussion items included the need for a timeline on Fall Line Trail fund dispersal to determine investment strategies and the progress of draft design guidelines for the trail that were expected to be distributed to localities.
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Richmond's officially adopted budget totals $3,028,928,656, with the General Fund comprising 35% ($1,056,511,879) of total spending. Major budget allocations include Richmond Public Schools ($248,880,792), Public Safety ($220,666,139), and a Capital Improvement Plan ($549,592,657), funded primarily through real estate taxes ($515,809,767) and other local taxes ($216,962,729). The budget overview shows real estate tax valuations growing from $1.4 billion in 2016 to $2.3 billion by 2023, reflecting significant property value increases in the city.
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On March 19, 2024, the Richmond Township Board held a meeting that included a public budget hearing for the 2024-25 fiscal year covering the General Fund, Road Millage, and Water/Sewer budgets, with no public questions raised. The board approved salary resolutions for 2024-25, setting compensation at $16,656 for Supervisor, $23,052 for Clerk, $22,662 for Treasurer, and $2,388 for Trustee, all by unanimous roll call votes. Additional agenda items included updates on the 220th Project (approved by MDOT and proceeding to bidding with a special meeting scheduled for March 28 to determine bonding), Planning Commission officer elections, and an AT&T Metro Act Right of Way permit.
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The Town of Richmond Planning Commission held a meeting on November 18, 2020, conducted online via Zoom due to COVID-19 restrictions, with agenda items including approval of previous minutes, discussion of wetlands regulations, and review of a community outreach work plan for a proposed expansion of the Residential/Commercial District on West Main Street, Jericho Road, and Depot Street to be presented on December 2nd. The meeting also addressed Federal Aviation Administration requirements and zoning regulations, and included a recommendation regarding an open Planning Commission seat.
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