What happened on Wednesday, 20 August 2025
Coconino County, Arizona
Block presents application for zoning change to allow productive use of disused property.
Granville Village, Licking County, Ohio
Council members and police discussed standards and outreach after an uptick in complaints about electric bicycles, with police advising that e-bikes on sidewalks must be in pedal‑only mode and officials considering further local restrictions.
Arlington Heights SD 25, School Boards, Illinois
The school board approved a policy change that clarifies prohibited use of personal transportation devices on school property, discussed a Sept. 10 community safety night, and approved street crossing guard locations for the year. Officials also reviewed standard response protocol trainings completed for staff.
Kenilworth, Union County, New Jersey
The Kenilworth Borough Council adopted a $2,298,500 bond ordinance to fund multiple capital projects and equipment purchases, and council members detailed roughly $820,000 in grant support from state and county sources.
SHELDON ISD, School Districts, Texas
The board received notification of federal Title grants totaling roughly $3.98 million and reviewed monthly financial reports; the meeting adjourned to closed session under Texas Government Code provisions.
Rowan County, School Boards, Kentucky
At its Aug. 19 meeting, the Round County Board of Education heard an instructional update reporting a two‑day leadership retreat, expanded mentorship for new hires, an advisory period added at the secondary level, early data returns for teachers and a preschool program awarded a five‑star rating.
Linden City, Union County, New Jersey
Public commenters raised concerns at the Aug. 19 Linden council meeting about recurring trash left on sidewalks, food deliveries left in apartment lobbies, business impacts from Wonder Group expansion, flooding buyout meeting dates and local cleanup needs.
SHELDON ISD, School Districts, Texas
A community organizer asked the board and community members to contribute time and expertise to a regional literacy action plan covering Channelview, Crosby, DeLuxe Park and Sheldon districts.
Linden City, Union County, New Jersey
The Linden City Council approved consent agenda items including payment of $2,598,665.21 in bills, departmental revenue reports, community events and multiple personnel appointments and resignations across departments.
Sebring, Highlands County, Florida
The council adopted Ordinance 15-53 to amend the city's purchasing code (including payment bonds, deleting vendor local-preference certification and raising competitive-bid thresholds) and also approved Resolution 2025-15 to adopt an updated official purchasing policy prepared by staff.
Linden City, Union County, New Jersey
At its Aug. 19 meeting the Linden City Council voted to table ordinances 69-28 and 69-29 and advanced multiple amendments to Chapter 7 (traffic), including new school pick-up/drop-off rules, bus-stop and handicap-parking changes, and a 'don't block the box' critical intersection designation.
Linden City, Union County, New Jersey
The Linden City Council and mayor issued a proclamation declaring Sept. 26, 2025, Mesothelioma Awareness Day after a longtime resident, John Anderson, described his wife’s death from the disease and the local impact of asbestos exposure.
Auburn Public Schools, School Boards, Massachusetts
The committee voted to adjourn into executive session under Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 30A, Section 21(a)(2) to conduct a grievance hearing filed by the Auburn Educational Association and did not plan to return to open session.
Wichita County, Texas
The Commissioners Court issued a proclamation declaring Aug. 19, 2025, Wichita County Photography Day and recognized a courthouse photography exhibit featuring work by local photographers and students.
Arlington Heights SD 25, School Boards, Illinois
District 25 updated its medication management procedures to add parental consent for over‑the‑counter drugs in annual registration, new verification steps for altered prescription formats and documented controlled‑substance checks and disposal rules.
Sebring, Highlands County, Florida
Council authorized a quitclaim deed to return a retention pond the city acquired inadvertently when purchasing property behind Lowe’s; staff said Lowe’s and the prior owner retain use of the pond and the city did not intend to own it.
SHELDON ISD, School Districts, Texas
Board and foundation representatives discussed whether foundation bylaws should require that all donated funds be used for student scholarships, and the board authorized expenditures tied to an awarded contract; bylaws revision was not adopted at the meeting.
Wichita County, Texas
County staff reported the Wichita County courthouse annex is on target to open in early September, with final operational work including restroom ADA compliance, signage, and IT hookups to follow.
Sebring, Highlands County, Florida
The council approved a second amendment to the Eagle Lake subdivision development agreement that extends the development order and reiterates requirements for updated traffic studies, potential turn lanes or deceleration lanes and final site-plan review before building permits.
Auburn Public Schools, School Boards, Massachusetts
The committee approved revised handbook language recommended by counsel and guidance from MASC after a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision; the changes address dress code standards and a process for families seeking curriculum accommodations consistent with Massachusetts regulations.
Arlington Heights SD 25, School Boards, Illinois
Business officials presented the tentative 2025–26 budget showing roughly $107 million in total revenue, a projected operating position within board targets and a planned spenddown of capital funds. District staff warned fund allocations may change when final tax extension figures arrive.
SHELDON ISD, School Districts, Texas
At a recent Sheldon ISD board meeting, the district introduced several newly hired and promoted campus leaders and recognized early learning, fine arts and school‑based safety achievements.
Auburn Public Schools, School Boards, Massachusetts
The Auburn School Committee on Aug. 20 approved a superintendent job description and moved the application deadline to Oct. 31, 2025, after members reviewed a community survey that named strong communication, academic excellence and student mental health as top priorities.
Arlington Heights SD 25, School Boards, Illinois
The NSSEO cooperative presented a draft amendment to its articles of agreement to add an operational board composed of member-district superintendents. Arlington Heights School District 25 board members indicated they will send the draft back for formal review and possible ratification.
Wichita County, Texas
The Commissioners Court on Aug. 19 proposed a tax rate of 0.521303 per $100 valuation to satisfy public notice requirements for the 2026 budget; the court approved the proposal 5-0 and said the rate remains subject to change before final adoption.
Cary, McHenry County, Illinois
The Village of Cary Zoning Board of Appeals voted 5-1 Aug. 14 to recommend denial of a homeowner's request to allow an in-ground pool to remain 6 feet 3 inches from an interior side property line instead of the 8-foot setback required by the Unified Development Ordinance. The matter will go to the Village Board of Trustees for a final decision.
Sebring, Highlands County, Florida
On second reading the Sebring City Council approved Ordinance 15-52 to annex roughly 4.63 acres in the Lake Jackson Boulevard subdivision, completing a shopping-center parcel already partly inside city limits.
Park County, Colorado
Jeff Lindsay, the newly elected district attorney for the 11th Judicial District, told Park County commissioners he has rebuilt staffing and procedures, prioritized discovery and body‑worn camera management, and identified IT and internet bandwidth limits that slow evidence handling.
WEBSTER CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
The board approved a tax certiorari resolution to settle claims for three parcels in the Webster Plaza area, with refunds to be paid from the district's tax certiorari reserve; district counsel and plaintiff reached agreement, the presenter said.
Park County, Colorado
A Park County resident asked commissioners to prioritize road repairs in the Upper Valley of the Sun neighborhood, citing exposed rocks, washboards and repeated tows of stranded vehicles; county staff said they will follow up.
Sebring, Highlands County, Florida
City council approved a motion allowing staff to work with Cottage Market organizers to explore moving the market closer to the downtown circle (including potential street or SunTrust parking-lot locations) and to finalize an appropriate start date.
Killeen, Bell County, Texas
Staff recommended denying an operating authority application for a limo company because the applicant failed to provide proof of insurance despite repeated notices; council discussed refunding the $300 application fee and placed the denial on the consent agenda.
WEBSTER CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
The board voted to approve June financial reports and reserve transfers to close out 2024-25, including pre-approval to use $1.5 million from ERS and TRS reserves in 2025-26 as documented for audit.
Laguna Niguel City, Orange County, California
Council members and county contractors reported findings from a town hall on a recent fish die‑off at the Laguna Niguel Regional Lake, saying experts believe low dissolved oxygen — not pesticides or poisons — caused most deaths and that the county plans steps to reduce recurrence.
Park County, Colorado
Park County commissioners voted 2–1 to appoint County Clerk Mel Castle as the customer project manager under section 5.2 of the county's Dominion Voting Systems contract ahead of a scheduled equipment upgrade, after a lengthy debate over whether the board can make the appointment given state election rules.
WEBSTER CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
The board approved changes to a multi-district cooperative agreement (referred to as ASH 1) clarifying withdrawal and membership procedures; all member districts must approve the same changes by Dec. 31 to finalize them.
Killeen, Bell County, Texas
Public works staff presented change order No. 1 — a final, $86,542 increase — for the sidewalk and ADA ramp improvements contract to cover additional quantities and required alterations to meet PROWAG standards; staff said the change is funded from the child-safety fund and the contractor will complete remaining punch-list items.
Cranford, Union County, New Jersey
Planning board members spent part of the Aug. 27 hearing pressing Wonder Foods to provide written documentation of operational changes since the facility’s prior approvals and to clarify how many employees are on site per shift and how parking will be accommodated.
Wichita County, Texas
Sheriff David Duke submitted a letter of retirement after 44 years of county service, and the Commissioners Court reviewed the statutory process for appointing an interim sheriff and the election timeline that will follow.
Laguna Niguel City, Orange County, California
The City Council unanimously adopted a resolution updating the city's false‑alarm fee to $209 per occurrence to align with an Orange County cost study and Board of Supervisors action.
Cranford, Union County, New Jersey
Residents and board members asked detailed safety questions about hundreds of small canisters currently stored at the site and the applicant’s plan to replace them with two large modified-atmosphere (MAP) gas tanks; the applicant agreed to provide material safety data sheets and engineering testimony.
Killeen, Bell County, Texas
Staff recommended a contract amendment of $82,173.76 to Kimley‑Horn for design work extending a 12‑inch water line tied to the Featherline Road reconstruction project to the intersection of W.S. Young; the work is funded from bond monies for water projects, not the road budget.
WEBSTER CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
The board adopted 2025-26 code of conduct changes focused on a new distraction-free learning approach to limit personal electronic device use in classrooms; the district plans teaching, outreach and restorative enforcement.
Ouray County, Colorado
County staff outlined the 2026 budget calendar and commissioners discussed lodging-tax ballot timing, the need for a public FAQ and budgetary information required for the TABOR ballot 'blue book.' Staff agreed to work on an FAQ, place polling and match-funding ideas in the 2026 budget, and route guidance on campaign activities.
Cranford, Union County, New Jersey
Board members asked the applicant to run decibel tests on the facility generator and to meet state/local noise limits when the generator is exercised; the applicant agreed to test and explore noise mitigation measures.
Laguna Niguel City, Orange County, California
Two nearby homeowners told the City Council that a developer’s removal of long‑standing drainage has diverted runoff into a six‑foot, algae‑covered pit at The Cove development, creating a persistent safety and nuisance problem they say the city has not adequately addressed.
Killeen, Bell County, Texas
City staff presented a memorandum resolution recommending a $300,000 HOME-funded subrecipient agreement with Families in Crisis to administer tenant-based rental assistance (TBRA) to eligible households; staff said the award could assist up to 15 households for up to 24 months.
WEBSTER CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
The Webster School District board approved the 2025-26 tax warrant and set tax rates after hearing a presentation on levy, town assessments and state equalization changes that most affect Penfield residents.
Ouray County, Colorado
Commissioners were briefed on a CDOT speed and safety study for the Billy Creek Narrows segment of Highway 550 and agreed to ask staff to draft a formal letter requesting expedited action and an in-person briefing from CDOT.
Cranford, Union County, New Jersey
At the hearing, Wonder Foods told the board it will bar commercial deliveries outside prescribed hours, tell purveyors not to idle on Moen or Jackson and plan to replace 8-yard dumpsters with enclosed compactors to reduce noise.
Ouray County, Colorado
A facilities study prepared by KLJ and Reynolds Ash recommended a 30,000-square-foot consolidated building for county administration, with parking and stormwater needs; commissioners asked staff to identify potential sites and to research nontraditional options for EMS, including seeking small BLM parcels for a satellite EMS facility.
Killeen, Bell County, Texas
Killeen Economic Development Corporation reported new tenants at Killeen Business Park, a 16‑acre 'Blue Acre' flex project, Wolf Technology Park planning, and a signed letter of no objection supporting a foreign trade zone application tied to a prospective company; staff noted potential hiring of up to 12 at that company by Q1 2026.
Michigan City, LaPorte County, Indiana
Committee members discussed a proposed municipal motor vehicle excise surtax (referred to in meeting materials as a 'will' or 'wheel' tax) and heard that Senate Bill 1 and changes to county LIT collections are expected to reduce city revenues, with further analysis to follow from municipal advisers.
Asheville City, Buncombe County, North Carolina
City staff told the committee they will prioritize a $17 million CDBG‑DR small‑business support program and will use competitive NOFOs to select subrecipients who will administer grants, forgivable loans and technical assistance to qualifying local businesses.
Ouray County, Colorado
Trust for Land Restoration told the county it has a signed contract to buy 104 acres of historical mining claims on Brown Mountain and plans to donate the land to Ouray County for preservation.
Killeen, Bell County, Texas
City staff presented the revised FY2026 proposed budget, showing total expenses of about $297 million and specific personnel and program changes; council set Sept. 2 as the date to consider final adoption.
Asheville City, Buncombe County, North Carolina
Staff presented options to alter the city’s commercial-noise rules, including temporarily increasing the 30-event cap for 'level 3' venues as a time-bound pilot and reviewing the commercial-noise ordinance versus neighborhood concerns; members asked for Noise Advisory Board input and data on noise complaints before moving to council.
Michigan City, LaPorte County, Indiana
The Michigan City Finance Committee approved the Aug. 19 claims docket totaling $314,928.25 and received an update from the controller on riverboat fund balances, monitoring of transfers, and the 2026 budget timeline and workshops.
Cranford, Union County, New Jersey
At a Cranford Planning Board hearing, Wonder Foods’ representative described new measures including overnight security, posted personnel rules and decibel meters to address residents’ complaints about music, idling trucks and late-shift noise at the company’s 42 Jackson facility.
Ouray County, Colorado
At a work session, commissioners and staff agreed to move toward action-only written minutes while keeping full meeting video and transcripts archived; staff were directed to formalize backup plans, pursue an IT policy on AI-generated transcripts, and continue using CivicPlus with backups to Google Drive and Vimeo for redundancy.
Killeen, Bell County, Texas
Facing new state rules (SB 840, SB 15 and HB 24) that take effect Sept. 1, the Killeen City Council amended Chapter 31 to allow multifamily in commercial districts, add signage and website-notification requirements, and to regulate small lots; council approved the ordinance with a change requiring alley-loaded rear access for lots under 40 feet.
Cumberland County, Maine
A local appeals panel denied Connie Allen’s request to lower the 2024 assessment on her waterfront property at 46 Island Pond Road, concluding the applicant did not prove the assessor’s $315,000 valuation was manifestly wrong.
Larimer County, Colorado
The Larimer County Planning Commission approved a location-and-extent review allowing the City of Loveland to create a trail loop and a small parking area at the Firefly Meadows open space on unincorporated land, but neighbors raised concerns about wildlife habitat, road safety and private-road maintenance.
Asheville City, Buncombe County, North Carolina
Planning staff said food trucks can operate downtown under specific permits or as part of outdoor special events; staff is surveying vendors and suggested pilots, electrical hookups and streamlined outreach to test demand for late-night vending and activation of quieter blocks.
Michigan City, LaPorte County, Indiana
Park and zoo officials presented a request to appropriate concession-fund cash to complete a temperature-controlled enclosure for the aviary to extend season, reduce stress during transfers and meet USDA standards; the ordinance was introduced on first reading and carried to the next meeting for further consideration.
Killeen, Bell County, Texas
Carl Sherman of the Carl Sherman Group presented to the Killeen City Council about recruiting grocery retailers to North Killeen, citing $393.8 million in grocery leakage; council members pressed him on profitability, timelines and what his firm would do differently from prior efforts.
Michigan City, LaPorte County, Indiana
Multiple residents used public comment to press the council for clearer information about a proposed data center — asking whether it will be a cloud, AI or cryptocurrency facility, and seeking details on noise, cooling, power, water use and the project's end user — and cited health and environmental concerns.
Larimer County, Colorado
Larimer County staff presented the draft update to the county transportation plan and safety action plan but, after receiving a federal memorandum on nondiscrimination and funding risks, the Planning Commission voted to table adoption and asked staff to seek Board of County Commissioners input before final action.
Norwalk City, Fairfield, Connecticut
The Common Council approved, with amendments, the Charter Revision Commission's final report and authorized publication and explanatory materials ahead of the November referendum.
Southaven, DeSoto County, Mississippi
In his report the mayor said the tourism-funded soccer tournaments continue to grow (80 teams expected), construction began on a combined bike-track and skate-park at Cherry Valley, and the Rasco/Highway 51 brick wall will be rebuilt with higher-quality materials and a limestone insert.
Asheville City, Buncombe County, North Carolina
Parking staff outlined current fees, voucher options and legal limits on selective waivers; committee asked staff to return with concrete voucher outreach, Sunday-parking options and monthly permit expansions for workforce support.
Michigan City, LaPorte County, Indiana
The council voted 9-0 to approve a Plan Commission order that accepts a Redevelopment Commission declaratory resolution establishing a consolidated economic development area to support bond financing and a TIF for a solar project.
Norwalk City, Fairfield, Connecticut
After discussion about question grouping and voter clarity, the council approved a three-question ballot format and adopted specific language to describe the charter revisions that will appear on the Nov. 4, 2025 referendum.
Larimer County, Colorado
Larimer County reported APS spending at roughly 140% of its allocation for SFY24–25 and said higher acuity among older adults and limited federal/state funding are driving overspend; staff reassignment and policy reviews are under way.
Southaven, DeSoto County, Mississippi
Facilities staff recommended, and the board approved, a professional services contract with Cummins for maintenance of 22 city generators after receiving two quotes; Cummins submitted the low proposal at $50,602.
Asheville City, Buncombe County, North Carolina
City events staff described permitting steps, expenses, and support programs for open-streets events; committee members expressed broad support for making open streets easier, asked staff to address specific barriers such as Sunday parking charges and micro-mobility rules, and recommended moving proposals to full council.
Michigan City, LaPorte County, Indiana
The council approved a Redevelopment Commission resolution to expand the riverboat-related downtown alcohol-license area to match changes in state law and to implement a $2,500 annual fee for each license to seed a new downtown fund, the Redevelopment Commission and attorney said.
Norwalk City, Fairfield, Connecticut
The council voted to remove a new geographic-balance requirement for the Board of Estimate and Taxation (BET), keeping the commission's existing appointment structure.
Southaven, DeSoto County, Mississippi
The mayor revisited options for the city’s opioid-settlement payments—roughly estimated at $34,000–$61,000 per year depending on settlement—and recommended allocating funds to a local provider with a record on addiction services rather than funding court operations.
Larimer County, Colorado
Larimer County approved the 2024 building-code updates, including the Colorado Wildfire Resiliency Code, and separately voted to remove a state-law exemption that would have exempted 35-acre parcels with a single residence from wildfire-code permit requirements.
Michigan City, LaPorte County, Indiana
The council voted 9-0 Aug. 19 to adopt a municipal motor-vehicle excise surtax and a municipal wheel tax after a presentation from the mayor about declining riverboat revenues and state changes to local funding. The measures create new annual revenues the city says will help fund streets and reduce reliance on riverboat transfers.
Asheville City, Buncombe County, North Carolina
City staff recommended an event-based pilot for state-authorized social districts as one possible downtown activation tool; committee members signaled support for a limited, pilot and event-based approach but asked for more targeted outreach and mapping before moving a permanent ordinance forward.
Southaven, DeSoto County, Mississippi
The board adopted a resolution naming the city’s new hummingbird garden for the late master gardener June Wheeler and authorized acceptance of a $10,000 donation from the Maddox Foundation for the garden.
Mason City, School Districts, Ohio
District administrators announced a new procedure for large athletic events: students in eighth grade and below must attend with an adult and will be given wristbands upon entry; administrators said the change is meant to improve safety at large community events.
Norwalk City, Fairfield, Connecticut
After extended debate, the Common Council voted against removing the charter provision that would create four-year terms for mayor, council and town clerk and agreed to put the measure before voters.
Larimer County, Colorado
Larimer County child-welfare leaders reported multi-million-dollar overspending driven by placement costs, higher acuity and underfunded allocation formulas; the department plans staff reductions and cuts to contracted prevention services.
BRIGHTON CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
At its Aug. 20 meeting the Brighton board approved the district’s 2025–26 strategic plan, a professional development plan, tenure appointments and an agreement to participate in the Rochester-area school health plan; several administrative items and gifts were also approved.
Southaven, DeSoto County, Mississippi
A parcel on Goodman Road that was zoned agricultural was rezoned to neighborhood commercial (C-1) after planning staff said no agricultural use remained and the change fits the corridor’s commercial character.
Mason City, School Districts, Ohio
Foundation leaders told the board that a summer drive supplied almost 1,000 students with school supplies — nearly 10% of the district — and that planning is underway for a fundraising gala Oct. 25.
Norwalk City, Fairfield, Connecticut
After debate and a failed motion to remove compensation language, the council approved placing a compensation question (3% of the mayor's budgeted salary) on the Nov. 4 ballot.
Larimer County, Colorado
The Larimer County Planning Commission recommended that the Board of County Commissioners approve a planned land division and rezoning that would allow 18 multifamily units in three buildings on an 11.36-acre parcel north of East Mulberry Street, subject to conditions and reduced wetland and right-of-way setbacks.
BRIGHTON CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
At an Aug. 20 hearing, district staff explained changes to the student code of conduct aligning it with a recently adopted district policy that restricts internet-enabled devices in school; the board will consider final adoption in September.
Southaven, DeSoto County, Mississippi
The board granted a conditional use permit for a motor-vehicle repair/tire shop at 1810 Stateline Road, a long-standing use made subject to the city’s new zoning rules; planning staff said prior exterior storage problems were addressed before the hearing.
Larimer County, Colorado
Department leaders said state and federal funding rules, rising caseloads and program mandates left several Human Services allocations under pressure in FY24–25; county staff described overspending in county administration and child welfare and a continued freeze on child care assistance.
Norwalk City, Fairfield, Connecticut
The Common Council voted to remove proposed changes that would have added two council members and altered their mode of election, restoring the existing 15-member, five at-large structure.
Mason City, School Districts, Ohio
Superintendent Doctor Cooper told the board that House Bill 8 codifies parental notification when a student’s physical or mental-services plan changes, and the district is implementing a law-limited ban on phones during instruction with limited exceptions for experiential learning.
Southaven, DeSoto County, Mississippi
The Board voted to table a routine agreement with Walgreens for employee flu shots after aldermen asked staff to consult a local vendor who said it could provide the same service at no out-of-pocket cost to the city.
Larimer County, Colorado
Larimer County human services leaders outlined how HR1’s changes to work requirements, eligibility and federal matches will shift costs and workload to counties; some SNAP and Medicaid recipients could lose benefits starting in fall 2026, officials said.
BRIGHTON CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
At an Aug. 20 public hearing, district staff outlined a revised districtwide safety plan emphasizing response, reunification and real-time communication tools; the board will consider formal adoption in September.
Wasco County, Oregon
A county-supported youth retail assessment found only 23% of downtown businesses were appealing to youth and that many storefronts contained adult-oriented imagery or products at child eye level; youth recommended signage, merchandising changes and designated youth-friendly spaces.
Fort Atkinson, Jefferson County, Wisconsin
During public comment, resident John House urged the city to address purple loosestrife along the riverbank and offered decades of personal experience; no action was taken at the meeting.
Southaven, DeSoto County, Mississippi
The Board authorized a Southaven Police Department internship for college students to support the crime-scene investigation unit; department leaders said the program includes waivers, standards and could help recruiting.
Mason City, School Districts, Ohio
The board approved a large personnel slate, multiple vendor agreements (including residency-verification software from Thomson Reuters), continuation of transportation and nutrition incentives, and a budgeted purchase of Google licenses after decommissioning protections ended.
Wasco County, Oregon
Wasco County approved renewal of a contract with Comprehensive Family Counseling to continue school-based prevention programming and authorized a first amendment to a grant-backed agreement with NORC to support youth screening and SBIRT work.
Mason City, School Districts, Ohio
The Mason City Schools board recognized the boys tennis team and coach Mike Reed after a state championship; coach described a strategic lineup change and singled out state singles champion Greg Bernaski.
Sussex County, New Jersey
The county held a ribbon cutting for a new mobile health clinic purchased with American Rescue Plan Act funds and the board approved a letter of support for Sussex County Community College's $3.385 million HEF grant to convert Horton Mansion classroom space.
Hot Springs City, Garland County, Arkansas
Federal funding of $31.6 million through the Great American Outdoors Act Legacy Restoration Fund will pay for a full remodel of the Maurice Bathhouse on Bathhouse Row, project leaders said; the work is expected to return all bathhouses on the row to operational use.
Southaven, DeSoto County, Mississippi
The board approved a one-year CivicPlus contract to centralize archiving of city social media; initial implementation was quoted at $10,225 with an annual fee of $9,431.60 and added charges for extra accounts.
Fort Atkinson, Jefferson County, Wisconsin
Council approved a $9,500 invoice for initial HVAC work and authorized a commercial HVAC maintenance contract with Total Mechanical for the Public Works and Parks operations facility, with the contract auto-renewing annually and a 4% escalation.
Southaven, DeSoto County, Mississippi
The Southaven Board of Aldermen approved a resolution to add a $1 Crime Stoppers assessment to municipal court costs and to hold those funds in an escrow account while the program’s future is determined.
Wasco County, Oregon
Wasco County appointed Jamie Kerr to the 4 Rivers Early Learning Hub, approved Noah Estes as a cities’ representative to the Mid Columbia Economic Development District board and ratified a routine intergovernmental agreement with Mid Columbia EDD to staff the county’s Economic Development Commission.
Mason City, School Districts, Ohio
The Mason City Schools board heard details of a new, yearlong professional-learning program called Staff Journeys that offers 14 pathways and includes a grant-funded keynote on engaging learners and AI.
Sussex County, New Jersey
The Sussex County Board of County Commissioners adopted a resolution to enter executive session under New Jersey statute to discuss matters including collective bargaining agreements and PBA contracts; the public portion closed for a session the board estimated would last about 20 minutes.
Hot Springs City, Garland County, Arkansas
The city’s June 30 financials show general fund revenues over expenditures of $2.83 million (down from $5.05 million last year), increased transfers for the new fire station and debt service, reduced interest revenue in enterprise funds, and higher paving expenditures in the street fund.
Fort Atkinson, Jefferson County, Wisconsin
The council authorized a five-year contract with Associated Appraisal at $63,000 per year to provide full-value maintenance assessment services for assessment years 2026–2030 to keep the city in compliance with Wisconsin statute 70.05.
Mineral Wells, Palo Pinto County, Texas
After an executive session under Texas Government Code Sec. 551.074, the council approved an amendment to the city manager's employment agreement and authorized execution; the motion passed 6-0 in open session.
Wasco County, Oregon
Wasco County approved an intergovernmental agreement with the City of the Dells to accept a $25,000 contribution to fund YouThink youth programs; the county requested $35,000 but accepted the award and committed to cover the remainder from other resources.
Wasco County, Oregon
Wasco County renewed biennial contracts with Bridges to Change and associated partners to continue transitional housing and stabilization services for frequent system utilizers, including fathers working toward reunification with children.
Sussex County, New Jersey
The Board authorized county counsel to join a national tort action targeting insulin manufacturers and noted this year's opioid settlement distribution; commissioners said the funds will continue to support local programs.
Senate, Legislative, Texas
The Texas Senate received a message from the House and referred House Bill 4 — "relating to the composition of districts for election of members of the United States House of Representatives from the state of Texas" — to the special committee on congressional redistricting, then adjourned until 7 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 21.
Atascadero Unified, School Districts, California
Trustees approved a county grant‑funded contract to bring two contracted wellness coaches to Atascadero Middle School and Atascadero High School; staff said the program is grant‑funded and intended to build Medi‑Cal billing capacity for sustainability.
Wasco County, Oregon
Wasco County planning staff described an application to use a county-owned site near The Dalles for temporary emergency housing for Rowena fire survivors. Staff said the request will require a full Columbia River Gorge scenic-area review and cultural-resource surveys and may take months to resolve.
Hot Springs City, Garland County, Arkansas
The board approved Resolution R-25-159 awarding a $4,770,271.90 contract to Redstone Construction Group Inc. for phase 2 of the taxiway A/B shift at Hot Springs Memorial Field. The FAA grant will cover 95% of the project; the state will contribute up to $250,000 and the local share is $115,655.
Mineral Wells, Palo Pinto County, Texas
The council voted 6-0 to approve an interlocal agreement with Mineral Wells ISD on the school resource officer (SRO) program. The agreement clarifies hours of coverage, excludes extracurricular hours from the city-paid portion, and allows some SRO positions to work fewer than 2,080 hours while maintaining TMRS eligibility.
Sussex County, New Jersey
The Sussex County Board of County Commissioners read a proclamation recognizing International Overdose Awareness Day and heard remarks about the county's overdose fatality review work and local prevention initiatives.
Fort Atkinson, Jefferson County, Wisconsin
Council authorized up to $11,241.54 for the library to reupholster and reconfigure teen-room seating through CJ and Associates, funded from the Library Trust; library staff said reupholstery preserves existing high-quality furniture.
Committee on Judiciary & Civil Jurisprudence, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Legislative, Texas
The Committee on Judiciary & Civil Jurisprudence adopted a committee substitute for House Bill 16, approved a motion to report the bill favorably to the full House by a 10-0 tally and heard testimony about court creation dates, a new Maverick County court and concerns from court reporters about delayed anti‑SLAPP appeals.
Wasco County, Oregon
The Wasco County Board of Commissioners approved an outdoor mass gathering permit for Harvest Festival 2025 at Azure Standard Farm, approving staff-recommended conditions after agency reviews on public safety, water and traffic.
Hot Springs City, Garland County, Arkansas
The Hot Springs Board of Directors voted unanimously to adopt ordinance O-25-32 to amend local zoning rules for accessory dwelling units, aligning the city code with recent state law changes in Act 313 (formerly House Bill 1503).
Sussex County, New Jersey
After public comments and testimony from prosecutor's office staff about cramped, mold-prone workspaces, the Sussex County Board of Commissioners voted to table a resolution that would move the county closer to auctioning the Keogh Dwyer building, the county jail.
Fort Atkinson, Jefferson County, Wisconsin
City council approved up to $87,550 to replace a damaged rooftop condenser at the Fort Atkinson Public Library, to be paid from the Library Trust at Edward Jones; library staff called the purchase an emergency to preserve materials and maintain the library's role as a county cooling shelter.
Atascadero Unified, School Districts, California
Atascadero Unified trustees asked the superintendent to collect more information and stakeholder input on a proposed ACE (independent study) pilot at Carissa Plains, seeking answers on staffing, student eligibility, scheduling, and safeguards before any pilot is launched.
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Legislative, Texas
The Texas House passed House Bill 4 to redraw the states 38 U.S. House districts after a daylong debate that featured repeated claims the plan is both lawful partisan redistricting and a discriminatory effort to dilute minority voting power. Final passage was 88-52.
Deerfield Beach City, Broward County, Florida
Commission unanimously approved a staff-supported waiver of pier admission fees through Dec. 31, 2025, to encourage public use after a prolonged closure. Parks staff said they are prepared to implement the temporary waiver; estimated revenue loss is roughly $10,000–$15,000 for the remainder of the year.
Sussex County, New Jersey
A Barnlight Studios representative proposed forming a Sussex County Film Commission to market locations, coordinate permitting and build a local production workforce; county leaders signaled support and a sample resolution may be placed on the next agenda.
Hot Springs City, Garland County, Arkansas
A lightning strike about midnight at Birchwood Harbor Apartments triggered a fire that burned one unit beyond repair and displaced roughly 21 residents from six units, city officials said at the Hot Springs Board of Directors meeting.
Penobscot County, Maine
The county approved a local adult-use retail cannabis license application for an operator with an established medical dispensary; applicants will pay a $500 application fee now and, upon final licensure, an annual $5,000 local license fee. State licensure and compliance remain under the Office of Cannabis Planning.
Mineral Wells, Palo Pinto County, Texas
City staff presented the proposed FY2026 budget for Tax Increment Reinvestment Zone No. 2, outlining participation rates, developer payments, a $3.5 million loan for plaza and streets projects, and construction plans with bids already received.
Fort Atkinson, Jefferson County, Wisconsin
The city authorized Donahue and Associates to conduct a solar feasibility study for the wastewater treatment plant, including production modeling, battery storage analysis and coordination with We Energies; staff said borrowed funds from 2024 will pay study costs.
Deerfield Beach City, Broward County, Florida
The commission awarded a five-year, $1.5 million contract to Calvin Giordano & Associates for code compliance services after negotiating a larger, more structured team, mandatory certifications, expanded evening coverage and vacancy credits to address performance and service complaints.
Penobscot County, Maine
Penobscot County commissioners on Aug. 20 approved routine minutes and a string of operational measures including a local adult-use cannabis license, naming of an unnamed road in Greenfield, repurposing a UT pickup for regional animal control, the purchase of a DA office copier and placement of short-term CDs for TIF funds.
Fort Atkinson, Jefferson County, Wisconsin
The council approved purchase and installation of two on-site Generac generators for Sherman Avenue and Water Street wastewater lift stations to avoid manual transport of portable generators during outages; staff said the units will improve safety and reduce basement flooding risk.
Fort Atkinson, Jefferson County, Wisconsin
The Fort Atkinson City Council adopted resolutions to extend Tax Increment Districts (TIDs) 6 and 7 for one year so their 2026 increment can be placed into an affordable housing fund; staff said policies and programs to spend the money are not yet adopted.
Mineral Wells, Palo Pinto County, Texas
City staff presented options for a new Hilltop water treatment plant — including microfiltration and reverse osmosis (RO) — and said a final landowner easement must be secured before bidding on the RO components. Staff described site visits, a tracer study and next steps; no formal council action was taken.
Mineral Wells, Palo Pinto County, Texas
City Manager Jason Weeks and staff described a worst-case utility-rate proposal that would raise a typical in-city residential water and sewer monthly bill by about 29.8% and outlined debt issuances, including a proposed Texas Water Development Board loan for Hilltop projects and open-market borrowing.
Township HSD 211, School Boards, Illinois
Several public commenters at the District 211 board meeting criticized books they called pornographic in district libraries and said teachers who questioned social-justice practices were punished; speakers urged the board to prioritize academic proficiency and parental rights.
Baker County, Oregon
At its Aug. 25 meeting the Baker County Board of Commissioners recorded unanimous approvals for minutes, personnel policies, grant agreements, contract actions and procedural orders. This summary lists motions and outcomes taken during the session.
Henry County, Georgia
At a public hearing Aug. 19, Henry County officials reviewed the FY26 budget and explained a proposed county millage rate of 15.733 mills, described exemptions that limit tax increases for many homeowners and said final adoption is scheduled for the board's meeting tonight at 6:30 p.m.
Deerfield Beach City, Broward County, Florida
Deerfield Beach commissioners on Aug. 19 sent a contested RFP for building services back for commission-level reranking after residents and commissioners raised long-running customer-service concerns about the incumbent and sought greater transparency in the procurement record.
Baker County, Oregon
During citizen participation, Nora Aspieth said she resigned as mayor of Pathway effective Aug. 14 because of health issues and asked county communications go to the city's recorder going forward.
Suwannee County, Florida
The board granted preliminary plat approval for Parker Estates, a proposed four-lot major subdivision on 21.29 acres at the intersection of 90 Sixth Street and 160 Ninth Road, with shared driveways shown between lot pairs; final plat will return after the 30-day period.
Deerfield Beach City, Broward County, Florida
The commission rezoned 0.869 acres at Southwest First Street and Second Terrace from single-family to multi-family and approved a plat amendment allowing up to eight townhouse units (amended plat limits to 16 in final approval), despite residents' worries about parking, traffic and neighborhood compatibility.
Township HSD 211, School Boards, Illinois
At a Township High School District 211 Board of Education meeting, dozens of residents, students and elected officials used the board’s public-comment period to debate whether a student assigned male at birth should be allowed to play on a girls volleyball team and use girls locker-room facilities.
Cleveland Metropolitan School District, School Districts, Ohio
A representative of Montessori Development Partnerships and the Montessori Advisory Council told the Cleveland Board of Education the district should safeguard five core components of Montessori instruction, flagging teacher reassignments, truncated age spans and students walking to other buildings for lunch as specific concerns.
Baker County, Oregon
The county approved a memorandum of agreement reflecting a $5‑per‑day rate increase from Canyon County detention (now $240/day) and noted rising juvenile detention costs to date.
Deerfield Beach City, Broward County, Florida
After months of litigation and county approvals, Deerfield Beach and Coconut Creek negotiated a settlement with Waste Management and Broward County that limits vertical height to 325 feet, sets a closure horizon of about 25 years, and adds monitoring, odor and traffic controls plus limited annual payments to nearby cities.
Mineral Wells, Palo Pinto County, Texas
City Manager Jason Weeks presented a FY2026 budget that holds the tax rate effectively flat but projects multi-year deficits unless revenue or expense changes are made; the general fund ends FY2026 with a proposed 28.8% fund balance but long-range projections turn negative in later years.
Baker County, Oregon
The board rescinded a 2013 resolution that added county limitations to tax‑foreclosure reacquisition, adopted a revised reacquisition application and approved a quick‑claim deed to return 1047 Rose Street to the prior owner under ORS 275.180.
Cleveland Metropolitan School District, School Districts, Ohio
The Board of Education of the Cleveland Municipal School District on Monday began monthly progress monitoring of its board-approved goals and guardrails, with Interim CEO Dr. Morgan reporting that only a little over 3% of the district's 2025 graduating cohort were proficient on the CTE assessment.
Deerfield Beach City, Broward County, Florida
Deerfield Beach city leaders and Broward Sheriff’s Office officials clashed publicly over a proposed 2026 compensation increase that BSO says is needed to retain staff; the city said BSO’s initial request exceeded its contract cap and that BSO issued a termination notice rather than accept the city’s request for revised costs.
Township HSD 211, School Boards, Illinois
A district parent urged the board to expand the volleyball program and make scheduling and gym allocation changes so volleyball can grow among boys, arguing volleyball teaches resilience and is lower cost than basketball.
Baker County, Oregon
Following a public hearing, the commissioners adopted an updated county fee schedule covering multiple departments and agreed to a corrected effective date to allow some services to begin immediately.
Suwannee County, Florida
County staff said a vendor is interested in building a roughly 150-foot communications tower on the Palmerall property north of the fairgrounds; commissioners asked the vendor to provide a site plan and proposed lease/rate terms and scheduled the proposal for the second September meeting.
Mineral Wells, Palo Pinto County, Texas
City staff reported that a 36-inch pipeline installed beneath the Brazos River remains sized for projected demand and described plans for a pump station housing what the speaker called "five 500-horsepower variable-frequency-drive pumps." No formal vote or timeline was recorded in the transcript.
Township HSD 211, School Boards, Illinois
In closed session the board approved multiple personnel actions: two suspensions without pay, withdrawal of a teaching contract, and termination of two employees. Notices were to be provided by the board secretary.
Baker County, Oregon
Commissioners voted to submit a VOCA application (~$36,994) and a CACF application ($204,620.20) for the District Attorney's office and approved a St. Alphonsus services agreement to provide exam services under Carly’s Law.
Hollywood Park, Bexar County, Texas
At the Aug. 19 meeting, resident Dwayne Hall said he obtained and posted a tree-removal permit but later received a summons and paid a fine; he also told council he found many other properties with brush pickup that lacked permits and raised concerns about open-records responses and frequent executive sessions.
Town of Brookline, Norfolk County, Massachusetts
The Select Board unanimously adopted three information-technology policies Aug. 19, covering acceptable IT resource use, a new generative-AI use policy and a Written Information Security Policy that sets governance for data protection.
Township HSD 211, School Boards, Illinois
The superintendent of the Northwest Suburban Special Education Organization (NSSEO) proposed adding an operational board of member‑district superintendents to the current elected governing board. District 211 received a memo and draft revised articles of organization; NSSEO plans a 90‑day public comment period before a December vote.
Mineral Wells, Palo Pinto County, Texas
Staff reported the city collects hotel‑motel tax from 12 hotels at a local 7% rate (total combined rate 13% including state). A revised agreement with the Chamber of Commerce would increase city oversight of tourism funds, put a city representative on the tourism advisory board, and change payment timing; the Chamber has hired a tourism director.
Baker County, Oregon
Facing requirements for independent‑contractor documentation, commissioners approved a 90‑day memorandum of understanding to continue forensic interviewing services while the county and contractor work to meet insurance and business‑status requirements.
Hollywood Park, Bexar County, Texas
Council member Pierce reported the Green Ribbon campaign collected $3,532 for flood relief after a July 25 ribbon drive; the city administration will send the check to the Salvation Army, which the campaign identified as the collector for the designated local flood-relief fund.
Baker County, Oregon
The board signed a three‑year Pheasants Forever grant to fund the county Sage‑grouse local implementation coordinator and approved an Oregon Watershed Enhancement Board grant to map raven subsidy sites in ArcGIS.
Hollywood Park, Bexar County, Texas
City Treasurer reported June financials and confirmed the council will hold a public hearing Sept. 16 to discuss and set the 2025 tax rate; the treasurer recited the 2024 rate and a statutory maximum for 2025, and presented cash and interest figures.
Township HSD 211, School Boards, Illinois
The Board of Education approved a tentative 2025–26 budget that projects an $8.3 million deficit across all funds, citing delayed property tax receipts, higher utilities, and rising employee benefit costs. Board members pressed administrators on energy costs, capital spending and long‑term projections.
Town of Brookline, Norfolk County, Massachusetts
Town sustainability staff briefed the Select Board on the states new Climate Leaders Communities program and said Brookline will seek certification after completing a municipal decarbonization roadmap and a strengthened zero-emission vehicle procurement policy.
Suwannee County, Florida
County attorney said Suwannee Iron Works and the Capparellis filed for a special permit under zoning rules; the board agreed to notice a quasi-judicial hearing for Sept. 2 at 6:30 p.m. and to keep the agenda concise to avoid inconvenience to other attendees.
Baker County, Oregon
Justice Court staff described progress toward a customized case-management system that will support e‑filing, automated dockets and virtual court appearances; officials said the change should boost collections and reduce manual work.
Hollywood Park, Bexar County, Texas
The fire chief told council members the department logged fewer mutual-aid requests in July, completed 240 hours of training, certified a new paramedic and will continue Blue Card command training funded by a grant.
Mineral Wells, Palo Pinto County, Texas
Palapinto County Municipal Water District No. 1 reported SWIFT funding paperwork in progress and a schedule that opens construction bids Aug. 29, resumes brush clearing Sept. 1, and will interview finalist contractors in mid‑ to late‑September.
Town of Brookline, Norfolk County, Massachusetts
The Select Board approved an alteration of premises to add a 1,000-square-foot roof deck and 45 outdoor seats for Esmes (d/b/a Hops & Scotch) at 1306 Beacon Street. The board noted that an entertainment license covering outdoor music will be a separate application to the licensing panel.
Moraine City Council, Moraine, Montgomery County, Ohio
Members of the city Tree Board said they will prepare a Tree City USA application expected to open in September 2025, described a recent 33-sign entryway project and reviewed the Turkish filbert as the board’s education topic.
Moraine City Council, Moraine, Montgomery County, Ohio
Staff reviewed the city beautification nominations and described how winners will be selected, and outlined fall events including a Boo Bash at the Civic Center, a community Halloween party after trick-or-treat and a tentative Christmas tree lighting location.
Hollywood Park, Bexar County, Texas
Police Chief Pritchard told the City Council on Aug. 19 that officers investigated an identity-fraud scheme that led to about $11,000 in fraudulent purchases, recovered stolen property through pawn-shop searches, arrested juveniles in vehicle break-ins and passed evidence to the ATF after finding modified firearms.
Mineral Wells, Palo Pinto County, Texas
City staff announced initiation of Phase 2 engineering with HDR to design a new pipeline and pump-station upgrades and described treatment-plant preliminary engineering work required by the Texas Water Development Board’s State Revolving Fund program. No formal council vote was recorded during the presentation.
Moraine City Council, Moraine, Montgomery County, Ohio
City Parks and Recreation staff presented a capital-project prioritization that includes a splash pad at the Civic Center, an amphitheater planned for 2027, a parks rebrand, parking expansion at Deer Meadow ahead of a dog park, and immediate playground repairs after an inspector flagged safety issues.
Town of Brookline, Norfolk County, Massachusetts
The Brookline Select Board voted Aug. 19 to ask MassHousing to approve a project-eligibility letter for 429 Harvard Street only if the proposed design is consistent with the Harvard Street four-story scale constraints and includes mitigation for the sites significant tree loss.
Kershaw 01, School Districts, South Carolina
A parent and certified swim official urged the board to support YMCA construction of an eight-lane competition pool, citing rapid growth in high school swimming, drowning incidents in 2025, and the facility’s potential for water-safety instruction and hosting meets.
Cloverdale City, Sonoma County, California
Members agreed to hold two regular Joint City–CUSD Subcommittee meetings per year (near school start and near school end) and to convene additional meetings on an as‑needed basis; staff will schedule a late‑April meeting and maintain as‑needed capability.
Kershaw 01, School Districts, South Carolina
The Kershaw County School Board approved a minority-business enterprise (MBE) plan that sets a 10% aspirational goal for district procurement from certified minority-owned firms; presenters said the goal is recommended by state procurement guidance and is not a binding quota.
Planning Board , Saco City, York County, Maine
Planning staff presented a draft standard‑operating‑procedure update Aug. 19 proposing an earlier deadline for materials (Wednesday 5 p.m.), chair/vice‑chair pre‑review of after‑the‑fact items and an acknowledgement process for required board training; the board asked staff to return the SOP for formal adoption at a future meeting.
Suwannee County, Florida
The board authorized the county attorney to provide 30 days' notice to terminate the contract with Dr. Spindell and prepare for transition to a new medical director, Dr. Barker; motion passed 5-0.
Cloverdale City, Sonoma County, California
Police staffing for local schools will increase: one school resource officer (SRO) starts tomorrow, and two additional hires are in the academy with anticipated field‑training completion next spring.
Keller, Tarrant County, Texas
On Aug. 19 the Keller City Council approved consent agenda items including vehicle and backhoe purchases and a sanitary sewer relocation contract, set a maximum tax rate of 2.87 for the proposed FY2026 budget, and amended the city secretary’s employment agreement after executive session.
Town of Brookline, Norfolk County, Massachusetts
After extended public comment and debate over safety and transparency, the Brookline Select Board voted to assign the towns right of first refusal for 16 William Street to Victory Programs. The assignment includes explicit obligations referencing the towns lodging-house rules and signals forthcoming licensing conditions.
Mineral Wells, Palo Pinto County, Texas
City staff presented the proposed fiscal 2026 budget, highlighting street materials, water and sewer capital needs, water‑meter replacement costs, staffing changes in water distribution and proposed transfers from insurance and CIP funds.
Cloverdale City, Sonoma County, California
City staff reported Alexander Valley’s development is advancing and the developer will extend Washington Street to Citrus Fair; the city will share some costs for final design and circulation improvements benefiting nearby schools.
Keller, Tarrant County, Texas
Council postponed a decision on a proposed electric-vehicle charging station at Keller Town Center to Sept. 16 after business owners complained the planned stalls would eliminate prime parking; the applicant asked for more time to relocate chargers and coordinate with the utility.
Planning Board , Saco City, York County, Maine
The board voted Aug. 19 to send a positive recommendation to City Council on proposed updates to the Technical Design & Construction Standards Manual (TDCSM), while asking staff to address comments about secondary metering and to consider referencing the CMP handbook for electrical service details.
Suwannee County, Florida
The commission voted 5-0 to appoint Assistant County Administrator Mr. Furry as acting County Administrator effective Sept. 27 until the board appoints a permanent county administrator.
Cloverdale City, Sonoma County, California
The subcommittee discussed a city‑hosted career fair concept, endorsed supporting a youth 'perspective' panel at Citrus Fair, and formally approved two student liaisons and a $1,000 scholarship each (delivery and outreach to be completed before the fall term).
Riverwoods, Lake County, Illinois
Dennis Sears, a 19-year law enforcement veteran with multiple instructor certifications and tactical credentials, was sworn in as a full-time Riverwoods police officer during the board meeting.
Keller, Tarrant County, Texas
City staff and a council subcommittee presented revisions to user agreements for Keller Sports Park on Aug. 19, including new resident/nonresident fees, rental rates, scheduling deadlines and tournament rules; council discussed implementation timing and maintenance responsibilities and encouraged clearer resident-priority windows.
Mineral Wells, Palo Pinto County, Texas
The Mineral Wells City Council voted to set a proposed 2025 property tax rate of 0.5717881 (the voter-approval rate) and scheduled public hearings on the fiscal year 2026 budget and tax rate, with adoption planned for Sept. 16.
Riverwoods, Lake County, Illinois
Trustees approved a $42,213 purchase and installation of a Shure wireless microphone system for the boardroom, a $6,520 sidewalk repair contract and $14,760.70 to replace attic insulation at the police station; capital budget funds were identified to cover the AV purchase.
RSU 04, School Districts, Maine
At the RSU 04 organizational meeting the board elected Nicole Russell as chair and Christie as vice chair, set committee assignments, approved minutes and summer hires, elected Stephanie Weber as director of technology, and approved the district emergency management plan and budget vote record.
Planning Board , Saco City, York County, Maine
The Planning Board approved Aug. 19 an amendment to a conditional‑use permit allowing collocated adult‑use cannabis manufacturing at 74 Industrial Park Road, subject to conditions the board adopted.
Cloverdale City, Sonoma County, California
City staff were directed to prepare a WTrans scope for a permanent ADA-compliant crosswalk on Jefferson Boulevard near Jefferson Elementary and to include temporary traffic-calming measures while construction is pending.
Suwannee County, Florida
After previously approving a commercial-can rate increase, commissioners agreed to instruct staff to draft a resolution to delay or cancel the October rate hike and instead notify commercial customers of the county's plan to exit the commercial dumpster business, giving customers time to arrange private service.
Riverwoods, Lake County, Illinois
Village staff and engineers recommended closing Saunders Road to through traffic for about two days near late August to replace a water main and limit overall disruption tied to nearby lift-station work; residents and emergency services will be notified in advance.
Suwannee County, Florida
Suwannee County Sheriff's Office told commissioners the EMPG grant likely will not be renewed, creating a projected $172,161 shortfall to operate the Emergency Operations Center; county match of $54,940 was also cited and staff said the EOC budget will need to be standalone if grant funding disappears.
RSU 04, School Districts, Maine
At its organizational meeting, RSU 04 board heard a detailed proposal to join the Maine Department of Education's cohort 2 to provide special‑education services to 4‑year‑olds for 2025'26 and phase in 3‑year‑olds in 2026'27; staff said the program would be fully state funded and would require new coordinator and related staffing.
Planning Board , Saco City, York County, Maine
The Planning Board approved a site‑plan amendment Aug. 19 to allow pantograph chargers for electric buses at the transit center (138 Main Street), requiring a decommissioning plan and a lease amendment for city property. One board member voted against the approval citing safety and aesthetic concerns.
MSD Southwest Allen County Schools, School Boards, Indiana
The Southwest Allen County Schools board received monthly financial reports for July and approved the 2025–26 school‑sponsored camps and programs.
Riverwoods, Lake County, Illinois
The board approved an ordinance updating the village water rate (5% increase to $10.37 per 1,000 gallons), raised the monthly minimum to $20, and updated the police extra-duty hourly rate to $107; the actions were taken by roll-call vote.
Planning Board , Saco City, York County, Maine
The Planning Board continued review of the Waterfall Drive residential development, a multi‑phase proposal for up to 195 dwelling units, and directed the applicant to narrow final‑phase technical items before returning for preliminary approval. The public hearing was continued to Sept. 16.
Suwannee County, Florida
The Suwannee County commission voted 5-0 to request a FEMA Community Recovery Plan; FEMA outlined a small committee, a community kickoff meeting and a 3–4 month timeline, and public commenters expressed wariness about FEMA involvement.
Gulfport, Harrison County, Mississippi
At a special called meeting, the Gulfport City Council unanimously approved a resolution to set a public hearing for the city's proposed FY2026 budget on Sept. 2 at 5:15 p.m.; councilmembers used the hearing-setting vote to discuss items they want added during later budget review.
MSD Southwest Allen County Schools, School Boards, Indiana
The board authorized staff to proceed with a purchase agreement and 180‑day inspection period for a roughly 58‑acre parcel on Knowyer (Noyor) Road and approved lease amendment and bond resolutions to allow issuance of up to $85 million in first mortgage bonds and appropriation of up to $100 million in bond proceeds and interest.
Riverwoods, Lake County, Illinois
Village leaders heard extended discussion about the pending dissolution of the South Lake Mosquito Abatement District, potential impacts on village budgets and public health, and possible alternatives including contracting with North Shore Mosquito Abatement District or pursuing a referendum.
Planning Board , Saco City, York County, Maine
The Planning Board approved site‑plan review Aug. 19 for CMP/Avangrid’s planned upgrade and expansion of the Factory Island substation at 109 Main Street, subject to conditions including revised electrical supervision language and coordination on a sidewalk easement or license agreement that may require Public Utilities Commission approval.
HAUPPAUGE UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
A community member asked about co‑curricular offerings and why Bretton Woods was absent from a list; district staff said Bretton Woods was approved at a prior meeting and described the wide range of clubs offered.
HAUPPAUGE UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
After a public hearing with no public comments, the board approved the district’s 2025–26 code of conduct on the superintendent’s recommendation, 5‑0.
Dunn County, North Dakota
Representatives of the North Dakota Cowboy Hall of Fame asked the commission for financial support for a $12.5 million modernization project in Medora. Commissioners expressed support but tabled any funding decision until the next meeting to review county finances.
HAUPPAUGE UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
The board approved its annual update to Policy 6,700, the district purchasing policy, revising language to clarify application to federal grants and reformatting for clarity; motion passed 5‑0.
Laramie City Council, Laramie City, Albany County, Wyoming
The council approved on first reading an ordinance that would repeal Laramie Municipal Code Chapter 2.2 and remove the Board of Health as an official city board; staff said public health protections will remain in City operations.
Planning Board , Saco City, York County, Maine
The Planning Board granted conditional‑use approval Aug. 19 to Baruby Equipment Rental at 1040 Portland Road to add state vehicle inspection services, adopting conditions that restrict parking of placarded, loaded vehicles and require compliance with fire and environmental safety measures.
HAUPPAUGE UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
Superintendent Dr. Murphy told the Hovach School District board the district will soon publish bond project renderings, finalize a strategic plan, and welcome 18 new teachers during orientation before the Sept. 2 conference day.
HAUPPAUGE UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
The Hovach School District Board of Education unanimously adopted a resolution opposing Key Capture Energy’s proposed 79‑megawatt battery energy storage system at 220 Rabro Drive, citing safety and evacuation concerns and directing district attorneys to monitor town hearings.
MSD Southwest Allen County Schools, School Boards, Indiana
District staff told the board enrollment peaked in 2021–22 and has declined since; a four‑phase plan would first seek resident transfers, then nonresident transfers, and later expand CTE and elementary signature programming. Board set a community forum for Sept. 8 and discussed transportation, transfer criteria and potential fiscal impacts.
Planning Board , Saco City, York County, Maine
The Saco Planning Board voted Aug. 19 to find complete the Saco School Department’s site‑plan application for two new schools at Beth Johnston Way and scheduled a public hearing for Sept. 16.
Dunn County, North Dakota
The commission voted to table action on the county merit pay scale after debate about whether the system moves employees too quickly through pay ranges; one commissioner proposed a $4,000 flat bonus alternative.
Laramie City Council, Laramie City, Albany County, Wyoming
The council approved a resolution authorizing staff to apply to the State Loan and Investment Board for a 20-year, approximately $10.1 million loan to address capacity and structural issues at the Zone 1 tank (low-level reservoir).
Escambia, School Districts, Florida
The Escambia County School Board voted 2-3 to defeat a motion to amend School Board Resolution 2025-1 after members debated whether a referendum should appear on the primary or general election ballot.
Laramie City Council, Laramie City, Albany County, Wyoming
The council awarded a local contractor the bid to rebuild aging wellhead buildings and approved added construction management services; the projects are part of routine water system upgrades identified in the citys master plan.
DeKalb CUSD 428, School Boards, Illinois
DeKalb staff were invited to present at the CASEL SEL Exchange; the board discussed the professional development opportunity and learned attendees will be paid from a Stronger Connections grant.
Dunn County, North Dakota
A group of producers asked the commission to improve a roughly one-mile section line to restore livestock access. County staff and the county attorney said the right-of-way status is unclear and recommended civil court action to establish easement rights before the county undertakes improvements.
Narberth, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania
The Historic Preservation Commission recommended approval Thursday of a Certificate of Appropriateness for an Iona Avenue house after commissioners learned the front dormer had been enlarged and framed forward during construction without prior review.
Escambia, School Districts, Florida
A district employee group asked the board to clarify two-factor authentication rules after staff reported being required to use personal phones, daily texts, and possible replacement fees; speakers requested district-issued alternatives and written protections against searches.
Laramie City Council, Laramie City, Albany County, Wyoming
After hours of public testimony and council debate, the Laramie City Council voted 2–6 to reject a motion to repeal the citys surface water drainage ordinance on second reading; councilors and residents clashed over fee impacts, data quality and legal risk.
Kent, King County, Washington
A public commenter asked why industrial proposals were allowed for a 10‑acre downtown Meeker site and called for more community input; Council member Larimer said the Rediscover Downtown plan preview will be discussed at a September workshop with foot‑traffic data.
Dunn County, North Dakota
The commission approved pay estimates for several road contractors and heard project updates about easements, wetland disturbance and timelines for multiple county road projects. Commissioners also discussed a disputed access and potential future decisions about mitigation and right-of-way.
DeKalb CUSD 428, School Boards, Illinois
The board approved the addition of three full-time instructional assistant positions after district staff said new enrollments and additional individualized education program (IEP) requirements created urgent needs that risked noncompliance.
Escambia, School Districts, Florida
Multiple speakers asked the school board to adopt clear, written guidance for school staff on interactions with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents; the board's attorney said no ICE interactions at schools are known but suggested staff can review federal guidance on sensitive sites.
State Water Resources Control Board, Agencies under Office of the Governor, Executive, California
Speakers at the board's public forum raised coordination and equity issues for drinking-water funding, worker-safety and civil-rights complaints at regional waste facilities, and requested scheduling accommodations for tribal participants in upcoming hearings.
Grand Forks County, North Dakota
The commission amended county policy to allow travel reimbursements per travel occurrence rather than limiting reimbursements to one voucher per month; it also revised the hiring-freeze policy so the county administrator and HR may fill vacant positions without returning to the commission unless new headcount is requested.
Kent, King County, Washington
At the Aug. 19 council meeting, Gwen Allen Carson of the Kent Black Action Commission called on the city to clarify hiring background checks, improve disciplinary transparency and explore independent oversight; she tied public safety to housing, youth engagement and mental‑health services.
DeKalb CUSD 428, School Boards, Illinois
Teachers, families and a retired administrator urged the board to build a dedicated Early Learning and Development Center (ELDC) after describing inadequate facilities; board members discussed referendum and nonreferendum options and said they plan to decide within the year.
Escambia, School Districts, Florida
Multiple residents, educators and parents urged the Escambia County School Board to reverse mass book removals and restore the board'appointed review process after a federal judge ruled parts of Florida's HB 1069 unconstitutional.
Kent, King County, Washington
Deputy Chief Matt Stansfield told the council the FBI presented a director's certificate to Detective Andy Richardson for work connecting a series of violent home invasions that led to federal RICO charges. The department also honored long‑service peer support work and three officers for a June life‑saving response.
DeKalb CUSD 428, School Boards, Illinois
Superintendent Dr. Garcia Sanchez told the DeKalb CUSD 428 Board she will not seek renewal of her contract, effective at its June 30, 2026 expiration; the board accepted the notification and said it will begin a search and ensure operational continuity.
Grand Forks County, North Dakota
The commission approved an Altra Professional Services Agreement to provide an on-call physician for the county jail, and amended the motion to allow either the county chair or a designated official to sign the contract.
State Water Resources Control Board, Agencies under Office of the Governor, Executive, California
After hours of testimony and technical debate, the State Water Resources Control Board voted unanimously Aug. 19 to adopt the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund Intended Use Plan (DWSRF IUP). The board prioritized projects for systems designated as "failing" or "at risk," increased some grant caps for very small systems and directed staff to use a
Coffee County, School Districts, Tennessee
The board discussed a previously approved fee waiver for a staff‑led summer basketball program after concerns that participants paid a coach directly; the board directed staff to require withdrawal or resubmission under school support organization or athletic‑account rules and to consider rescinding the waiver if necessary.
Villa Rica, Carroll County, Georgia
The commission voted to rezone 15051 Veterans Memorial Highway from C-1 (commercial low density) to I-2 (industrial medium density) with a condition limiting the site to truck freight terminal and related logistics; the change aligns zoning with existing operations and preserves prior variance conditions for a 12-acre gravel truck storage area.
Grand Forks County, North Dakota
Red River Regional Council leaders told the commission a regionwide housing study identified a need for 4,800 additional units (excluding Grand Forks city) by 2030; they described local programs including the SPARC building initiative, a $1 million single-family rehab fund, and plans to pursue tax-credit and modular housing pilots.
State Water Resources Control Board, Agencies under Office of the Governor, Executive, California
During public comment at the Aug. 19 State Water Resources Control Board meeting, multiple speakers asked for stronger coordination of water funding, an inquiry into worker safety and environmental justice at several waste facilities, and scheduling changes to allow tribal participation.
Coffee County, School Districts, Tennessee
After discussing the state-funded $2,000 distribution to teachers, the board directed staff to prepare a budget amendment to supplement other employees who did not qualify for the state payment and bring it to the September meeting.
Kent, King County, Washington
Mayor Ralph addressed the city Wednesday after Kroger announced the East Hill Fred Meyer would close in October, saying the company cited operational reasons and crime. Public commenters and council members called for inward-looking policy review and more local economic development.
State Water Resources Control Board, Agencies under Office of the Governor, Executive, California
On Aug. 19 the State Water Resources Control Board unanimously adopted its Drinking Water State Revolving Fund intended‑use plan for fiscal 2025–26, directing federal capitalization grants, increasing some grant caps for small systems and giving Division of Financial Assistance (DFA) managers added flexibility to fund projects that address imminent
Winston Salem / Forsyth County Schools, School Districts, North Carolina
The school board voted 6–3 to implement a reduction-in-force plan tied to an auditor-identified budget shortfall. Speakers at a packed public-comment period urged the board to spare Exceptional Children staff; administrators said the cuts are needed to balance the 2025–26 budget.
Grand Forks County, North Dakota
Todd Leek told the commission the FAA determined UND Aerospace Foundation's plan at Gorman Field meets the FAA's airport definition and requires an FAA airspace review; the commission separately approved $2,825,000 in state funds for Grand Sky utility and apron work.
Coffee County, School Districts, Tennessee
Harpeth Research and Wold Architects presented five‑ and 10‑year enrollment projections showing county growth concentrated in Manchester and Tullahoma; consultants recommended two‑section renovations for several elementary schools and flagged larger growth after 2035 per state projections.
Huntersville, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina
The board unanimously amended its rules of procedure to reorder the agenda and to note that meetings are held on the first and third Tuesday of the month.
Huntersville, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina
The board voted 3-1 to approve a memorandum of understanding creating the Mecklenburg Public Transportation Authority and setting appointment rules for a 27-member authority; at least one commissioner said the structure underrepresents Huntersville and riders.
Sarasota, School Districts, Florida
Chair Tim Enos told the board he will step down to accept the position of chief of the Sarasota County Schools Police Department. Colleagues praised his calm leadership while some members and public speakers raised concerns about timing and transparency.
State Water Resources Control Board, Agencies under Office of the Governor, Executive, California
A public forum speaker criticized the State Water Board’s handling of public comments, alleging improper ex parte communications, deficiencies in the 2024 integrated report and nonresponsive staff, and asked for written answers to questions within 10 days.
Grand Forks County, North Dakota
The Grand Forks County Commission delayed action on a petition to vacate a section-line roadway easement in the Ford Subdivision after an adjacent landowner had not signed the required petition; staff said the North Dakota Century Code requires personal service before the commission may act.
Coffee County, School Districts, Tennessee
Board members discussed discrepancies between the newly hired director’s employment calendar and the contract language, and directed staff to place an amendment for the board’s September meeting so payroll and contract records match.
CHSD 94, School Boards, Illinois
The superintendent reported District 94 will participate in an ECRA consortium to obtain an English-language-proficiency growth model for $1,000 per year, with an option to pay $3,000 per year for disaggregated data.
CHSD 94, School Boards, Illinois
An electronic public comment from a community member raised concern about five district administrators leaving in one year and asked the board for an explanation of causes and steps to address turnover.
CHSD 94, School Boards, Illinois
District 94 approved contracts and invoices to repair facilities, remediate mold in the Bishop gym, refill chiller refrigerant and inspect/maintain fire extinguishers; trustees asked clarifying questions about scope and longevity.
CHSD 94, School Boards, Illinois
The board received a recommendation to hire Roy Ramos as communications and community relations coordinator after a short recruitment. Administrators highlighted his internal relationships and experience as a coach and dean’s assistant.
Sarasota, School Districts, Florida
Superintendent Terry Connor highlighted several consent-agenda items including new and renewed college affiliation agreements, a data-sharing agreement tied to a state-funded reading initiative, a district contract for $20 EKG athlete screenings, and large procurement bids for technology and flooring.
CHSD 94, School Boards, Illinois
After approving a consent agenda that included purging audio recordings older than 18 months, the board voted to reconsider that portion and postpone destruction pending advice from the district attorney and review of potential attorney general inquiries.
Biloxi, Harrison County, Mississippi
The Biloxi City Council failed to authorize the mayor to advertise a proposed three‑mill property tax increase intended to raise about $2 million to close a budget gap, after a 3‑3‑1 vote. Council members debated use of fund balance, capital projects and whether money should be set aside for economic development.
CHSD 94, School Boards, Illinois
After concerns about fairness and duration, the Board approved a 10-year intergovernmental agreement with West Chicago Elementary School District 33 governing use of baseball fields and reciprocal facility use.
CHSD 94, School Boards, Illinois
The Community High School District 94 Board of Education approved superintendent Joel Hansen’s 2025–26 goals and metrics, adding a metric to track racial disproportionality in student discipline after a lengthy discussion about data validity and use.
Sarasota, School Districts, Florida
Dozens of speakers urged the Sarasota County School Board to prioritize the district budget over policy fights, attributing a projected $45 million funding shortfall largely to statewide voucher expansion.
Biloxi, Harrison County, Mississippi
The council confirmed reappointments and new appointments for Meridian’s municipal court system and heard officials describe rehabilitation-focused programs and alternative sentencing successes.
State Water Resources Control Board, Agencies under Office of the Governor, Executive, California
Tribal leaders told the State Water Board that September hearing dates for the Bay‑Delta Plan update conflict with California Native American Day and with tribal ceremonies, and requested a 90‑day extension of comment deadlines and later hearing dates so tribes can participate.
Huntersville, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina
At its Aug. 19 meeting the Huntersville Town Board approved a rezoning for 12300 McCord Road and three text amendments to the town zoning ordinance, while a public commenter urged an end to single‑family zoning.
City Council Meetings, Newcastle, King County, Washington
Council directed staff to present revenue and expenditure forecasts at a Sept. 2 workshop but voted 4-3 against holding an additional budget-season town hall, after council members debated the event's likely value during an election season.
Sarasota, School Districts, Florida
After hours of public testimony, the Sarasota County School Board tabled proposed revisions to its nondiscrimination and student code-of-conduct policies that would have removed enumerated protected classes and split student and employee protections to align with recent legal guidance.
Palm Coast City, Flagler County, Florida
The City Council voted unanimously to transmit a comprehensive-plan amendment incorporating the Water Supply Facilities Work Plan, a 20-year utility plan that includes brackish-well exploration, conservation and infrastructure needs; staff and residents debated capacity, costs and infiltration issues.
BRIDGE CITY ISD, School Districts, Texas
One member of the public objected to last year's high school 'Old Act' play content and drill team uniforms and said she planned to donate Ten Commandments posters for classrooms; the remarks were made during the public forum and no board action was recorded.
West Palm Beach, Palm Beach County, Florida
The board unanimously approved a level-3 special review, variances and a parking waiver for a three-story, roughly 9,500-square-foot office building at 2711 Poinsettia (Curry Mixed-Use Edge). Staff recommended approval after the applicant reworked access to use a rear alley egress and provided a landscape and roof terrace mitigation strategy.
Palm Coast City, Flagler County, Florida
The Palm Coast City Council approved an amendment to a paint/color ordinance after public comment from homeowners who said the changes could force expensive repaints; the motion passed 4–1.
City Council Meetings, Newcastle, King County, Washington
The council unanimously adopted Ordinance 2025-672 to update Newcastle's general business license language to match state model language; the key change raises the out-of-city business exemption threshold from $2,000 to $4,000 and adds periodic CPI adjustments, effective Jan. 1.
Palm Coast City, Flagler County, Florida
Palm Coast council approved an interlocal agreement with Flagler County adopting airport protection zoning and overlay rules required by state statute; the vote split 3–2 after debate about retroactivity, sound contours and whether to create a joint board instead of an ILA.
West Palm Beach, Palm Beach County, Florida
The Planning Board voted Aug. 19 to recommend that the City Commission consider rezoning 5400 North Flagler to allow a 31-story, 97-unit residential tower, but staff urged denial unless the applicant better activates the Flagler Drive frontage and reduces the massing impacts created by requested setback waivers.
Palm Coast City, Flagler County, Florida
Council approved design amendments and state grant agreements for phases of the Matanzas Woods Parkway–Palm Coast Parkway loop road; staff said DOT will fully fund the current design increases while the city expects roughly $10 million in local costs and will continue to manage scope to fit the available appropriations.
BRIDGE CITY ISD, School Districts, Texas
Trustees approved a contracted service agreement between Region 5 Education Service Center and Rebecca Cullums to provide services to the district; motion carried unanimously.
West Palm Beach, Palm Beach County, Florida
The West Palm Beach Planning Board unanimously recommended that the City Commission approve a major amendment to Palm Beach Atlantic University's approved dorm/garage project, reducing the garage from 11 to 8.5 levels, approving a campus-themed decorative facade and granting a limited setback waiver along South Dixie Highway so decorative support columns can be placed within the landscaped strip, provided the change does not increase the current garage budget.
Palm Coast City, Flagler County, Florida
City council approved a group of roadway projects and associated contracts and agreements covering resurfacing, turn-lane extensions, signal work and span‑wire replacements; staff said most work is funded by state DOT, impact fees and the Streets Improvement Fund and will proceed this fiscal year and into 2026.
State Water Resources Control Board, Agencies under Office of the Governor, Executive, California
At public forum the State Water Board heard a request from California LULAC for the board to agendize sworn hearings into alleged long-term contamination and worker-safety problems affecting Latino waste workers at several Bay Area facilities, including Clover Flat Landfill in Napa County.
BRIDGE CITY ISD, School Districts, Texas
Claycomb Associate Architects provided a construction update on the Middle School building and Performing Arts Center; the item was informational and no board action was recorded.
City Council Meetings, Newcastle, King County, Washington
Council debated a motion to raise City Manager Scott Pingel's scheduled 3% pay increase to 5% after a positive performance review; the motion was moved, seconded and failed on a 3-4 vote.
Clearwater, Pinellas County, Florida
At its Aug. 19 meeting the Community Development Board nominated member Michelle Chenault to serve as the board's representative on the Affordable Housing Advisory Committee (AHAC). The AHAC will help prepare a local housing incentive strategy required under state SHIP rules; several public meetings are tentatively scheduled Sept-Nov.
Clinton City Schools, School Districts, North Carolina
Superintendent Wesley Johnson told the board Aug. 20 that the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction will conduct a virtual desk audit Aug. 18–Sept. 12 after the district exceeded an unspecified "extend 1" threshold, and he also flagged recent payroll processing problems tied to the Link system that have affected employees.
BRIDGE CITY ISD, School Districts, Texas
Board accepted several donations and a $3,000 Stark Foundation grant for student supplies, approved equipment donations for CTE and athletics, and received an Educational Foundation update including a mini-grants program and Oct. 25 golf fundraiser.
State Water Resources Control Board, Agencies under Office of the Governor, Executive, California
The State Water Resources Control Board on Aug. 19 adopted a revised Drinking Water State Revolving Fund (DWSRF) Intended Use Plan that prioritizes projects serving systems classified as "failing" or "at risk," raises some grant caps for small systems and directs staff to refine SAFER alignment and staff guidance before next year’s plan.
BRIDGE CITY ISD, School Districts, Texas
Trustees approved second-reading changes to multiple local policies recommended by TASB and approved library collection policy revisions to align with Senate Bill 13; changes were presented as a second reading and approved unanimously.
Clinton City Schools, School Districts, North Carolina
Facilities staff told the board on Aug. 20 that lead and water sample submissions under the Clean Classrooms for Carolina Kids program were completed and remediations limited; asbestos clearance for Butler Avenue multipurpose building requires additional documentation, and Sunset Avenue window deliveries were delayed.
Clearwater, Pinellas County, Florida
The Community Development Board approved a transfer of development rights on Aug. 19 to add five overnight accommodation units at the Holiday Inn/Edge complex at 521 South Gulfview Boulevard, increasing the hotel's authorized rooms from 389 to 394.
City Council Meetings, Newcastle, King County, Washington
A Newcastle high school student formally proposed a Newcastle Youth Council at the Aug. 18 City Council meeting and council members asked city staff to refine the proposal for possible council consideration at the Sept. 2 meeting.
BRIDGE CITY ISD, School Districts, Texas
Trustees approved the 2025–26 budget that spends $46,123,073 against $43,283,071 in projected revenue, adopted a decreased tax rate of 0.9490 and approved related resolutions; board also approved staff salary increases and a $48,750 starting teacher salary proposal.
Clinton City Schools, School Districts, North Carolina
Chief Anthony Davis briefed the school board on SRO staffing, training and incident statistics Aug. 20, reporting three full‑time SROs assigned to the district’s three major campuses, 104 campus reports last year and ongoing training with the North Carolina Association of School Resource Officers.
Kennedale, Tarrant County, Texas
After a sealed‑bid process, city consultants recommended switching the municipal employee medical plan from Blue Cross Blue Shield to UnitedHealthcare to reduce next year’s renewal costs; council approved the city manager to sign the agreements.
Morgan County Planning Commission, Morgan County Boards and Commissions, Morgan County, Utah
The commission approved a motion to transfer and assume the lease for hangar CC5; staff confirmed attachments and original lease documents were on file before the vote.
Newton County , School Districts, Georgia
Parents of students with Type 1 diabetes told the Newton County Board of Education the district is denying medically ordered remote monitoring of continuous glucose monitors; the superintendent said the district will pursue policy development and the board approved several routine items.
BUFFALO CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
At its Aug. 20 meeting the Buffalo Board of Education authorized the district to fully settle pending litigation in New York State Supreme Court (index no. 8088272016) in an amount not to exceed $80,000, and approved a district contribution not to exceed $2,000 to sponsor a Buffalo Prep fundraising table.
Morgan County Planning Commission, Morgan County Boards and Commissions, Morgan County, Utah
The commission postponed a $1,000 annual membership decision with the Utah Tourism Industry Association to allow review during the budget cycle; commissioners also reported on agritourism and astrotourism conferences and local destination-development ideas.
Clinton City Schools, School Districts, North Carolina
District staff told the board Aug. 20 that Clinton City Schools is implementing AVID (Advancement Via Individual Determination) across elementary, middle and high schools, with binders, planners, an AVID elective at the high school and site teams set to expand the program over multiple years.
Kennedale, Tarrant County, Texas
Waste Connections asked the Kennedale City Council to rezone five parcels on South Price Road from commercial and single‑family residential to industrial to allow an office, convenience drop‑off area and future access improvements; no vote was taken and the matter was continued to the council's next meeting.
Seabrook, Harris County, Texas
Two residents urged action during public comment: one questioned why a demolition grant for the Seabrook Pier was not pursued and warned of lost revenue; another asked the city to resume live‑streaming committee meetings and to reinstate and formalize the hotel‑occupancy‑tax committee after a contested dissolution.
Morgan County Planning Commission, Morgan County Boards and Commissions, Morgan County, Utah
The commission approved a budget adjustment moving $100,000 into the county's opioid fund expenditure line; staff said the adjustment establishes an expense line so the county can pay for radar signs and other opioid-related expenditures.
Piedmont Community Charter, School Districts, North Carolina
Board was told Bayada contract nurse hourly rate increased from $30 to $32 for students with nursing IEPs; a motion to approve the contract was made but the transcript does not record a final vote.
Leon Valley, Bexar County, Texas
After a public hearing, the City of Leon Valley Crime Control and Prevention District board approved a fiscal year 2026 budget that funds patrol and investigative positions, equipment contracts and vehicle purchases using a dedicated sales-tax fund.
BUFFALO CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
Dr. Pascal Mupanga presented a 100‑day entry plan at the Aug. 20 board meeting that emphasizes listening tours, four town halls, school visits (majority by Nov. 2025), organizational and financial review, program audits, and outreach to parents, faith and community groups.
Seabrook, Harris County, Texas
Design consultant Kimley‑Horn presented schematic plans to raise and restore the former wastewater treatment plant site as a nature‑focused Bayside Park, add a mobile restroom solution, vegetation‑based shoreline improvements and a phased Main Street streetscape with new parking and pedestrian features.
Morgan County Planning Commission, Morgan County Boards and Commissions, Morgan County, Utah
After hearing from staff and user groups, the commission asked staff to prepare written changes to the fairgrounds rental agreement to exempt 4-H, FFA, junior livestock and high-school rodeo uses from the cleaning/deposit requirement and to clarify deposit rules for major public events and fundraising activities.
Piedmont Community Charter, School Districts, North Carolina
School reported Cognia accreditation renewed for six years with a score of 335, a 10‑year charter renewal, and a community partnership involving a Real Time Crime Center ribbon cutting and tours on Sept. 4.
Leon Valley, Bexar County, Texas
The City of Leon Valley Council approved Aug. 19 a recommendation to award the fiscal year 2026 employee group insurance contract to UnitedHealthcare.
Piedmont Community Charter, School Districts, North Carolina
The board approved the Title I Parent and Family Engagement Policy and authorized submission of the North Carolina Continuous Comprehensive Improvement Plan after parent meetings produced no requested changes.
BUFFALO CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
At the Aug. 20 Buffalo Board of Education meeting district staff reported that economically disadvantaged sixth-graders’ I‑Ready math proficiency rose to 24% in 2025, one point below the 25% target, and described next steps including expanded ALEKS implementation, additional training, site visits and continued use of RTI periods and math coaches.
Morgan County Planning Commission, Morgan County Boards and Commissions, Morgan County, Utah
The commission voted to reallocate $40,000 in ARPA funds originally set aside for a code rewrite: $20,000 will go to the county attorney budget and $20,000 to non-departmental to cover a recent audit and outside attorney costs; the funds must be designated and spent within the ARPA timing rules discussed at the meeting.
Marion County, Arkansas
County Judge Jason Stuck read a proclamation declaring Aug. 31, 2025, International Overdose Awareness Day in Marion County, urging remembrance and community support and citing overdose deaths.
Holmdel Township School District, School Districts, New Jersey
The board discussed a proposed contract with Effective School Solutions to provide in‑district clinical services, psychiatric clearances and professional development aimed at keeping students in the least restrictive environment; a union representative urged hiring additional district social workers instead of outsourcing.
Leon Valley, Bexar County, Texas
Following direction from a recent council retreat, the City of Leon Valley will continue a more aggressive enforcement approach for traffic and code violations; staff reported a rise in citations for sidewalk blocking during the enforcement period and councilors acknowledged public concern while affirming enforcement within legal limits.
Piedmont Community Charter, School Districts, North Carolina
Board approved a personnel report listing hires at elementary and middle campuses, voting unanimously to accept the July and August personnel actions.
Marion County, Arkansas
Marion County Court voted to establish a unique fund, numbered 3408, to track revenues and expenses for a vehicle lease program for the Marion County Sheriff’s Department and declared the ordinance an emergency so the county can order replacement vehicles without losing its place in vendors’ queues.
Morgan County Planning Commission, Morgan County Boards and Commissions, Morgan County, Utah
Assessor Janelle Walker requested and the commission approved converting a part-time appraisal staffer to full time pending budget negotiations; Walker said the office recovered about $500,000 in rollback taxes this year through Greenbelt and short-term rental work and discussed a possible urban farm greenbelt option for parcels under 5 acres.
Leon Valley, Bexar County, Texas
City of Leon Valley staff presented the proposed fiscal year 2026 budget Aug. 19; councilors proposed a 2025 tax rate of 0.51504 and directed staff to assign funds for an ambulance, a potential pool grant and fire repairs while restoring park maintenance and adding a mass‑notification subscription.
Warren County, New York
The committee approved a memorandum of understanding to manage GIS software licensing and to accept payment from the Soil and Water Conservation District for additional licenses purchased with outside funding (about $1,600 annually per license).
Holmdel Township School District, School Districts, New Jersey
After reviewing historical senior parking usage and available spaces, Holmdel administrators told the board they expect to accommodate juniors who become eligible to drive this year and will monitor demand in early September.
Piedmont Community Charter, School Districts, North Carolina
Board voted to provide $100,000 from reserves, plus a 10% contingency, to convert a recently purchased house at 319 Oakland into school office space.
Warren County, New York
Planning staff described an active grants strategy including a $60,000 hamlet build‑out contract, a new Brownfield Opportunity Area (BOA) contract, North Creek wastewater funding efforts and multiple state grant applications; the committee approved a $60,000 contract and several grant application authorizations.
Holmdel Township School District, School Districts, New Jersey
District data show a small overall decline in HIB (harassment, intimidation and bullying) reports year to year, increased rate of substantiated (found) cases relative to unfounded reports, and primarily verbal incidents concentrated in middle grades.
Morgan County Planning Commission, Morgan County Boards and Commissions, Morgan County, Utah
Morgan County officials moved to add a proposed increase in the record-of-survey filing fee from $20 to $30 to the county fee schedule for public hearing, and discussed funding a trip or contract to retrieve missing townsite records from federal archives.
Leon Valley, Bexar County, Texas
Council approved an in‑kind grant waiving $975 in facility fees for the Leon Valley American Legion’s 9/11 remembrance on Sept. 11, 2025, and directed staff to work with the organization to share the cost in fiscal year 2027.
Holmdel Township School District, School Districts, New Jersey
District figures show roughly 86% of high-school students participate in at least one club or activity and large seasonal participation in athletics; board members described extracurriculars as a central $1 million budget item and a high-return investment in student engagement.
Warren County, New York
The committee approved a budget amendment moving ARPA funds to offset administrative salaries overseeing ARPA awards; staff said ARPA administration will be exhausted by 2026 and the county is reporting to the U.S. Treasury as required.
Piedmont Community Charter, School Districts, North Carolina
The board heard the treasurers June and July financial reports showing about $7.0 million in cash and investments, a midyear investor distribution and small year‑end budget variance.
Leon Valley, Bexar County, Texas
At a first reading Aug. 19, City of Leon Valley staff proposed raising the short‑term rental spacing to 300 feet and increasing the registration fee from $25 to $200; after legal consultation the council directed staff to retain the existing 200‑foot spacing and return the ordinance for action on Sept. 2.
Morgan County Planning Commission, Morgan County Boards and Commissions, Morgan County, Utah
The Morgan County Commission voted 3-1 to rezone 21.64 acres from A-20 (agriculture, 20-acre minimum) to RR-5 (ranch residential, 5-acre minimum) and to amend the county's future land use map after a public hearing and applicant explanation of access plans.
Holmdel Township School District, School Districts, New Jersey
The Holmdel board heard a summer review of grading and assessment changes that reclassify participation into minor assessments, move quizzes into minor categories, recommend three major assessments per marking period and standardize electronic due times and late-work penalties.
Harper Woods, Wayne County, Michigan
Council authorized the city manager to accept one residential tax-foreclosed property from Wayne County, exercising the city's first right of refusal at a price not to exceed $8,909.50; the buyer indicated the intent for owner occupancy but the city attorney advised the city cannot make the buyer legally bind owner-occupancy.
Warren County, New York
The committee approved a contract selection to support up to a dozen low-to-moderate‑income septic replacement projects funded by a $400,000 Community Development Block Grant award.
LAKE TRAVIS ISD, School Districts, Texas
A parent reported that required sixth-grade summer reading included the book Black Brother and said distribution was inconsistent across elementary schools; she urged the board to remove 'CRT' from required reading and asked to join an oversight committee.
Holmdel Township School District, School Districts, New Jersey
Holmdel Township School District and Holmdel Fire Department honored a student winner whose inscription will appear on a planned 9/11 monument using a donated piece of World Trade Center steel; the community is fundraising via engraved pavers to cover remaining costs.
Huntingdon Special School District, School Districts, Tennessee
Board members received updates from student board members, construction progress and enrollment figures, and were presented information about the upcoming TSBA Fall District Meeting.
Huntingdon Special School District, School Districts, Tennessee
The board approved an additional educational assistant position at HMS, acknowledged two resignations, confirmed three new educational-assistant hires, and set the 2026 graduation date and upcoming early-dismissal/PD days.
Huntingdon Special School District, School Districts, Tennessee
At its Aug. 20 meeting, the Huntingdon Special School District Board of Education approved multiple administrative items including the SAVE Act Compliance Package, a Cardiac Emergency Response Plan, an extended-contract program for 2025–26 and the district's 2023–24 finance audit.
Superior, Douglas County, Wisconsin
Mayor Payne reported the recent transfer of museum operations to the city is proceeding smoothly, announced plans for a public discussion of nonrepresented wage-setting in September, and reminded councilors the city is in its busiest road construction season.
Harper Woods, Wayne County, Michigan
Council approved two quarterly invoices from Wayne County totaling $714,331.50 for operation and maintenance of the Milk River Drain; staff said the county invoiced in two quarters and no interest was charged.
Warren County, New York
Gretchen, executive director of the Saratoga-Warren-Washington Workforce Development Board, told the committee on Aug. 21 that while adult and dislocated-worker measures are being met, all three career centers are underperforming on WIOA youth measures and the board is revising structure and priorities as federal guidance changes.
LAKE TRAVIS ISD, School Districts, Texas
The board approved local policy revisions implementing provisions of SB 13, including an option to establish a school library advisory committee (SLAC) and expanded parental access and collection oversight; staff clarified the policy's limited effect on classroom libraries and the board's retained final authority.
Bergen County, New Jersey
A resident who visited the county’s Legal Resource Center said the facility is primarily a paper library and suggested adding electronic databases and workstations to better serve self‑represented litigants; he and a colleague plan to visit Morristown’s setup for comparison.
Bergen County, New Jersey
Pedestrian safety advocates urged Bergen County to move from plan to action on priority intersections identified in the Local Safety Action Plan (LSAP), recommending low‑cost fixes such as leading pedestrian intervals and plastic delineators and requesting a dedicated county initiative rather than slow, ad hoc work.
Harper Woods, Wayne County, Michigan
The council approved termination and sale of a 10-by-200-foot easement under Building 1 of the Eastland Commerce Center to NP Eastland Commerce Center Industrial LLC for $1 after staff said the sanitary line was rerouted and Northpointe funded the work; council and legal review found no impediment.
Bergen County, New Jersey
A Green Team chair raised concerns that an inclusive playground in Saddle River Park may sit on an old gas station site with gasoline contamination; he also urged county help for flood mitigation and a reassessment of the Saddle River, including possible dredging.
Superior, Douglas County, Wisconsin
Council gave conditional approval for a Class A beer and Class C wine-and-liquor license and an original cigarette/tobacco/electronic vaping device retail license for WIC Store Incorporated at 406 Belknap Street, pending police, health and fire department approvals.
Warren County, New York
The committee approved a one-year renewal to help fund staff support for local mentoring through Big Brothers Big Sisters of the Southern Adirondacks, with the county contribution reduced to $10,000 for the coming year.
LAKE TRAVIS ISD, School Districts, Texas
Trustees approved the district's 2025'26 student code of conduct, incorporating changes from recent legislation including reduced mandatory disciplinary placements for first-time e-cigarette possession, a personal-communication-device policy aligned to House Bill 1481, and language addressing antisemitism.
Bergen County, New Jersey
A public commenter urged county attention to litter, odors and visible pollution in the Hackensack River; meeting speakers and later committee reports noted longtime cleanup work by Hackensack Riverkeeper volunteers and referenced available state ‘Clean Communities’ funding.
Superior, Douglas County, Wisconsin
The council approved a $9,936 small business grant for Shamrock Bar and Pizza to cover facade improvements, including covering (not removing) second-story windows; the planning commission recommended approval after a divided voice vote and the council approved the grant by voice vote.
Harper Woods, Wayne County, Michigan
Harper Woods — The City Council approved a $142,262.50 contract to Hartwell Cement Company for the 2025 sidewalk replacement program after residents urged the city to address unfinished sidewalk work and cleanup from prior projects.
Ulster County, New York
Ulster County legislators unanimously voted to refer a resolution opposing any countywide landfill to the Energy, Environment & Sustainability Committee and urged exploration of alternative waste-management solutions and diversion strategies.
Bergen County, New Jersey
The Bergen County Board of Commissioners adopted Ordinance 25-38 to guarantee the Bergen County Improvement Authority's County Guaranteed Pool Note Program, enabling up to $250 million in pooled financing for public works and infrastructure projects.
LAKE TRAVIS ISD, School Districts, Texas
District staff presented planned uses of ESSA, IDEA, Perkins and other federal funds and invited community feedback; staff sought comments on Title I, II, III and IV programming and encouraged nonprofits to request partnership funding.
Harper Woods, Wayne County, Michigan
Council voted to introduce, for first reading, an ordinance to regulate virtual-currency (cryptocurrency) ATM machines, including mandatory registration with police and transaction limits designed to deter scams. The measure was modeled on an ordinance adopted in Grosse Pointe Farms.
Urbandale, Polk County, Iowa
A neighborhood resident told the council she was unhappy with a new bike path near her home at Lakeview Park and with rising fees and perceived lack of responsiveness from the senior center; council and staff offered follow-up contact and noted prior public outreach on the Aurora project.
Superior, Douglas County, Wisconsin
Superior approved a resolution authorizing the city to sign on to settlements in national opioid litigation and to execute similar participation agreements in the future; staff reported three imminent payments totaling about $1,011,000.
Harper Woods, Wayne County, Michigan
A council motion to allow full liquor sales at the 2025 Blues in the Woods festival ended in a 3'to'3 tie and failed. Several councilmembers voiced safety and liability concerns; proponents cited last year's incident-free event and professional bartenders.
LAKE TRAVIS ISD, School Districts, Texas
Trustees approved final amendments to the 2024–25 budgets, reflecting increased local tax revenue, adjustments in state aid and settlements, and a balanced food-service fund; the district reported improved tax-collection performance compared with prior years.
Ulster County, New York
Bus riders and advocates told the Ulster County Legislature that UCAT was evicted from its Kingston Plaza hub and urged officials to halt planned route changes and keep a transfer hub in the city; speakers said the proposed relocation to the Town of Ulster would harm walkability and access.
Urbandale, Polk County, Iowa
After evaluating eight proposals, the council approved engaging SVPA Architects to provide professional design services for Fire Station 42 interior renovations at a recommended fee of $41,115; construction is expected in 2025.
LAKE TRAVIS ISD, School Districts, Texas
After a public hearing, the Lake Travis ISD Board of Trustees adopted the district's proposed 2025–26 general, debt-service and food-service budgets and approved a total tax rate of $1.0397 per $100 valuation. Board members also authorized a $248,775 set-aside for state compensatory programs.
Harper Woods, Wayne County, Michigan
Council approved employment agreements confirming the city manager's appointments of a finance director, deputy finance director and city treasurer, and a water billing manager promotion; members discussed titles, compensation and succession planning.
Superior, Douglas County, Wisconsin
The Superior Common Council approved a $25,000 grant to the Encouragement Clinic in East End after the finance committee recommended the amount; councilors said Douglas County has verbally agreed to provide a matching $25,000 contribution.
Urbandale, Polk County, Iowa
Council approved a preliminary plat for Timberline Village, an eight-lot single-family subdivision off Quail Ridge Drive; staff and the applicant said much of the tree clearing occurred years earlier and the lots are large (roughly 100-foot-wide lots).
Superior, Douglas County, Wisconsin
The Superior Common Council approved six Public Works Committee recommendations on Aug. 19 to buy equipment, improve bus stops and add pedestrian crosswalks.
Urbandale, Polk County, Iowa
Urbandale amended its zoning code to allow permeable pavement systems as an alternative to standard asphalt or concrete, enabling their use for stormwater retention where designs follow the Iowa Stormwater Management Manual (iSWMM/iSWIM) recommendations.
Weld County, Colorado
The Weld County Board certified hearing certificates from Aug. 6 covering the adoption of a final plan for commissioner district boundary lines under Colorado law and two land-use cases; the board approved certification by voice vote on Aug. 20.
Superior, Douglas County, Wisconsin
The Superior Common Council voted unanimously to postpone consideration of a contract with RAF Tillis, a consulting firm proposed to evaluate possible acquisition of utilities operated by Superior Water, Light and Power, until the first council meeting in September after members requested more information about scope, financing and risk.
Ulster County, New York
Ulster County approved a $194,000 contract with Ulster County Community Action Committee for weatherization/heat-pump work after debate about a comptroller audit and missing financial filings; resolution passed 16-6 following unsuccessful attempts to refer the matter back to committee.
Harper Woods, Wayne County, Michigan
City auditors Yo and Yo issued an unmodified opinion on the City of Harper Woods' 2024 financial statements. Council voted to receive and file the audit and a management report after a presentation and questions about pension and water-sewer reporting.
Volusia County, Florida
After public testimony and debate, Volusia County Council directed staff to study and return a trial plan for horseback riding on county beaches, focusing on the north shoreline near Ormond-by-the-Sea and other sites, with conditions including reservations, waste removal and seasonal limits.
Urbandale, Polk County, Iowa
Urbandale approved a voluntary annexation and a concurrent comprehensive-plan amendment for two parcels owned by the Schaeffer family, with staff noting a narrow 50-foot strip exclusion to preserve a connection to Grimes under an existing annexation moratorium agreement.
Urbandale, Polk County, Iowa
The council accepted low bids from Nagle Construction for two creek bank-stabilization projects: Walnut Creek (low bid $192,586) and Gulfview Creek (low bid $341,880). Staff recommended winter construction with completion targeted by May 2026 and noted permitting requirements.
Grosse Ile, Wayne County, Michigan
Deputy chief and staff reported July call volumes, a new officer starting next week, a generator project in procurement, animal-control workload and community programs including a book drive and training events.
Weld County, Colorado
The Weld County Board approved an extension to a temporary road closure on County Road 72 between County Roads 33 and 35 after the contractor said poor subsoil conditions and accommodations to property owners required additional materials and equipment.
Ulster County, New York
Ulster County Information Security Officer Alan Macaluso briefed legislators on aligning county IT with industry standards, ongoing IT service management implementation, cybersecurity framework adoption and pilot artificial intelligence projects including an internal large language model to index county documents.
Volusia County, Florida
Multiple residents told Volusia County Council they oppose a proposed Cross Creek rezoning in the Spruce Creek Fly-In area and warned of impacts to wetlands and downstream flooding; other speakers asked council to revoke a 2017 permit and lower Miller Lake water levels.
Grosse Ile, Wayne County, Michigan
Rosio police officials told the commission they are close to achieving accreditation and highlighted a Lexipol bronze-level training recognition; department staff have rewritten policies and completed substantial training to meet standards overseen by state professional bodies.
Urbandale, Polk County, Iowa
Urban Water staff described the planned ASR well site, timeline, and a proposed 24/7 drilling noise-mitigation approach using a temporary sound wall; staff said the project will add regional summer capacity and requested council guidance on public outreach and a future noise-variance request.
Volusia County, Florida
Volusia County aviation officials said JetBlue will begin daily nonstop service to JFK and Boston on Dec. 4 and Breeze will offer Akron/Canton service starting Sept. 3. County staff said the airport is adding airlines and exploring pad-ready sites for economic development.
Weld County, Colorado
The Weld County Board of Commissioners on Aug. 20 approved buying a 2026 heavy-haul tractor for the Public Works Trucking Division from TransWest using a Sourcewell cooperative contract at a total cost of $214,826 under a procurement exemption in county code.
Grosse Ile, Wayne County, Michigan
The Rosio Police Commission voted to post an internal-only job announcement for the police chief on Aug. 25 for a 30-day period after the current chief notified township management of an intended retirement effective Sept. 1.
Volusia County, Florida
A Volusia County internal audit found weaknesses in controls and safety problems at the Ocean Center parking operation run by LAZ Parking. County and contractor officials said immediate steps were taken, including replacing a parking manager and moving the Ocean Center toward cashless and automated parking systems.
Longmont, Boulder County, Colorado
Council members and staff told county representatives they want clearer ballot language, municipality-specific allocation rules and a sunset to prevent unfunded mandates and duplication of services if Boulder County’s proposed mental‑health sales tax goes to voters.
Volusia County, Florida
After a lengthy public and council debate, Volusia County Council voted to move many special-exception land uses from county-council level review to the Planning and Land Development Regulation Commission (PLDRC) or staff-level conditional review and asked staff to return a revised ordinance for final reading on Sept. 4.
Longmont, Boulder County, Colorado
Longmont officials told state legislators on Aug. 18 that inconsistent agency certification and unclear bill language left gaps in oversight after a local recovery residence accepted people on the state registry; staff called for legislative oversight and clearer definitions.
Urbandale, Polk County, Iowa
Urbandale council approved a resolution to forward an amended Iowa Reinvestment Act (IRA) application for the Merle Hay Reinvestment District to the state after incorporating an AECOM sales analysis and adjusting scope and milestone deadlines.
Ulster County, New York
The Ulster County Legislature voted 14-8 on Tuesday to amend the 2025 county budget and appropriate $50,000 to hire outside legal counsel to defend Acting County Clerk Taylor Brook against a lawsuit brought by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton.
Saint Charles City, St. Charles County, Illinois
At its Aug. 19 meeting the Plan Commission elected Peter Vraguj as chair and Jeff Funk as vice chair for the fiscal year and formally introduced new commissioner Rita Palitner, who filled a vacancy left by Laurel Mode.
Longmont, Boulder County, Colorado
State Sen. Katie Wallace and Rep. Karen McCormick told Longmont officials that changes in federal tax law (referred to in the meeting as HR 1) created an immediate revenue shortfall in Colorado; the special session will prioritize fixes to school-meal funding, health insurance premium assistance and other tax adjustments.
Decatur SD 61, School Boards, Illinois
The board approved the employment of Floyd Bolt as the district's director of buildings and grounds, effective Aug. 20, and Bolt thanked staff who attended the meeting.
Saint Charles City, St. Charles County, Illinois
The Plan Commission approved a PUD preliminary plan and final plat allowing about 474 parking stalls for McGrath Kia on a 4.8-acre parcel, and commissioners asked the applicant to confirm house‑side shielding on the light fixtures along Route 64 to reduce glare.
Clawson, Oakland County, Michigan
A Clawson resident asked the council to explore an overnight street‑parking permit program after city planning told her common solutions wouldn't be approved; councilmembers said the topic merited consideration.
Fort Bend County Court at Law No. 1, Texas Courts, Judicial, Texas
In a county criminal docket, the presiding judge heard status updates on several cases in which defendants have been offered or are pursuing pretrial diversion programs, directed resubmissions of mitigation materials, and set future status dates including Oct. 14.
Tompkins County, New York
The County adopted two administrative policy updates: responsible and ethical use of AI (policy 07-01) and a data-retention policy (07-11); IT staff said a technology review team and employee training will follow.
Decatur SD 61, School Boards, Illinois
The board approved the Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Program for eight schools, renewed Omnigo report-writing security software, ratified an MOU for extended-day nurses, and adopted the Macon-Piatt Special Education District FY2025–26 budget.
Decatur SD 61, School Boards, Illinois
Board members discussed restarting the Roadmap 2030 facilities and strategy process this fall, urged attention to teacher recruitment and retention, and said they want an expedited superintendent search to align staffing and facility decisions.
Tompkins County, New York
The legislature authorized relocation of Assessment and the County Office for the Aging to 31 Dutch Mill Road as temporary office space while the Center of Government project proceeds; the vote was 13-1 after extensive debate about access, parking and long-term strategy.
Duvall, King County, Washington
Public Works Director Steve Lanushevsky and consultants briefed council on the preferred Big Rock parcels for a new maintenance yard and presented trade‑offs for co‑locating or separating new city hall and police facilities.
Duvall, King County, Washington
City Administrator Cynthia McNabb presented a consolidated draft social‑media policy Aug. 19 that merges three older documents and establishes moderation rules and an appeal process for hidden content.
Decatur SD 61, School Boards, Illinois
A student and district staffers described attending the Ultimate Life Summit and Mindsets University in Orlando and suggested stronger, peer-led implementation in Decatur schools to improve fidelity and student engagement.
Clawson, Oakland County, Michigan
A Clawson resident urged the council to discontinue prayers at official meetings, calling the practice coercive and exclusionary; the comment drew public attention but no formal policy change at the Aug. 19 meeting.
Tompkins County, New York
Ithaca city officials told the county legislature they support a county-city navigation center and warned large investments will be needed for wastewater treatment and dam repairs, with estimates that could reach $100'$200 million and need state support.
Saint Charles City, St. Charles County, Illinois
The St. Charles Plan Commission recommended approval on Aug. 19 of a PUD amendment and preliminary plan for the River 504 Row Homes, asking that two diagonal parking spaces on South First Street be removed and replaced with planted islands and that staff resolve outstanding technical comments before council review.
Duvall, King County, Washington
City Administrator Cynthia McNabb opened a discussion Aug. 19 on HB 2015 — the state law authorizing a 0.1% local option sales tax for criminal‑justice and public‑safety purposes and a linked Criminal Justice Training Commission grant program.
Clawson, Oakland County, Michigan
At its Aug. 19 meeting the Clawson City Council approved carryover budget amendments, adopted Ordinance No. 792 (with one dissenting vote), and awarded contracts for several water and street projects, including a TMF grant investigation and two road reconstruction projects.
Decatur SD 61, School Boards, Illinois
Pershing Early Learning Center principal told the board the program returned about 420 children, has a waitlist of roughly 170 and needs six classrooms plus a gym and additional certified early childhood teachers and paraprofessionals to expand.
Warrenton City, Warren County, Missouri
The board approved the consent agenda (minutes, salt and rock bids), re-adopted the conflicts-of-interest ordinance (Bill 39-25), and authorized sale of surplus property; all actions passed unanimously.
Tompkins County, New York
A public speaker presented photos and an Ithaca Voice article alleging unsanitary conditions, deaths and theft at the Asteri shelter and asked the legislature to calculate taxpayer costs; the county chair clarified that Tompkins County has no financial stake or oversight of the facility.
Del Norte County, California
Following the resignation of public commissioner Michael Tompkins, staff asked the board to open recruitment with an Oct. 10 application deadline and intent to appoint at the Oct. 21 meeting; board discussed an agenda posting discrepancy but allowed the discussion to proceed.
Pike County, Kentucky
At its Aug. 18 meeting the Pike County Fiscal Court approved routine minutes, acknowledged tax settlements, adopted a road into the county system, authorized several grant filings, approved interfund transfers, awarded a landfill contract contingent on reimbursement, and acknowledged multiple hires and a resignation following executive session.
Tompkins County, New York
County administrator and finance staff narrowed a previously reported $11 million shortfall to about $4.5 million and plan to use reserves and one-time funds to limit the proposed levy increase to about 4'to 6%.
Decatur SD 61, School Boards, Illinois
After a live auction for electricity supply, district staff said supply-side and potential utility delivery increases could raise FY26 costs by hundreds of thousands of dollars; uncertainty about solar incentives adds to the risk.
Pike County, Kentucky
The Pike County Conservation District presented its annual appliance buyback program and the Fiscal Court noted the schedule, fees and ID requirements for county residents to dispose of large appliances responsibly.
Del Norte County, California
Recology Del Norte requested removal of certain plastic categories from the local recycling list; the board gave staff consensus to negotiate a change order with the franchisee and asked for details before any contract amendment.
Warrenton City, Warren County, Missouri
Two property-related ordinances vacating a portion of an alley (Bill 41-25) and a roadway easement in Forestdale Subdivision (Bill 42-25) passed unanimously; planning staff said utility easements remain where noted.
Tompkins County, New York
Independent auditors reported no findings for Tompkins County's 2024 financial statements; legislature voted unanimously to accept the audit and to extend the 1% sales tax through 2027.
Pike County, Kentucky
The court approved a resolution authorizing application for a Kentucky Local Match Participant Program (LMPP) grant to cover local match for a USDA-NRCS buyout award; the county reported up to $33.5 million in NRCS buyout funds with a local portion of roughly $3.16 million and more than 300 homeowner applicants.
Decatur SD 61, School Boards, Illinois
The Decatur Public School District 61 Board of Education approved a tentative fiscal year 2025–26 budget and set a public hearing for Sept. 23, while district officials warned that statewide revenue pressures and rising utility costs mean the plan remains provisional.
Batavia USD 101, School Boards, Illinois
The Batavia Public Schools Board of Education adopted the fiscal year 2026 budget and approved a permanent transfer of $14,048,000 from operating funds to the Capital Projects Fund to finance the district's Warm'Safe'Dry facilities work.
Del Norte County, California
Staff said the county's new ERP accounting system has delayed routine budget transfers and added work on grant tracking. CalRecycle electronic reporting and SB 1383 requirements are increasing staff workload; the authority scheduled an August community meeting on municipal mulching.
Pike County, Kentucky
Pike County Judge Executive Thomas "Judge" Jones told the Fiscal Court that federal assessments and approval processes have delayed repairs from recent floods, and estimated county damage in the tens of millions; several large bridge and road repairs could cost millions and require specialized engineering and drilling.
Saratoga County, New York
Multiple school districts sent letters thanking Saratoga County for the Speak Sobriety program; the board said the initiative started as a pilot, expanded countywide and will continue this school year.
Warrenton City, Warren County, Missouri
GBA presented a baseline traffic study using public survey input and traffic counts, recommending short-, medium- and long-term intersection improvements including turn lanes on Route 47, pedestrian crossings and a future corridor widening plan.
Del Norte County, California
After multiple recent break‑ins at the Del Norte transfer station, board members pressed staff for strengthened security and asked for an assessment of losses and options to harden the facility; staff said it will return with proposals and cost figures.
Arlington Heights SD 25, School Boards, Illinois
The board received an informational report listing core instructional materials for 2025–26. The district will expand the HMH Into Reading literacy resource for grades 1–5 (with kindergarten already implemented) and will provide kindergarten students a science notebook to accompany the district's Activate Learning Prime science program.
Kissimmee, Osceola County, Florida
A Planning Advisory Board member signaled intent to propose adopting Rosenberg’s Rules of Order at a future meeting and provided board members with copies for review; staff recommended the item be placed on the next meeting as a discussion item for review and potential future motion.
Saratoga County, New York
The board approved a resolution to reclassify 90 positions and abolish five under the Department of Public Works as a budget-neutral measure intended to improve recruitment and retention, county officials said.
Warrenton City, Warren County, Missouri
Two residents asked detailed questions about a proposed data center tied to the Root Beer substation; city staff said some infrastructure is in the county and referred residents to county officials and regional planning for answers.
Batavia USD 101, School Boards, Illinois
The Batavia Public Schools Board of Education voted to approve three consultant contracts for the coming school year after an extended discussion about cost, effectiveness and oversight.
Saratoga County, New York
The board voted to adopt a package of resolutions on Aug. 19 including grant acceptances, intermunicipal agreements, airport leases, sewer district change orders and participation in opioid settlements; the package was approved by roll call.
Mason County, Washington
The Mason County Board of Commissioners approved warrants, a Department of Corrections prisoner-housing per-diem amendment and multiple departmental resolutions as part of the action agenda.
Kissimmee, Osceola County, Florida
The Planning Advisory Board approved a resolution to vacate an alley/right-of-way that runs through the First Presbyterian Church property at 15 Church Street; staff said the vacation corrects a historic platting discrepancy and utility easements will remain.
Warrenton City, Warren County, Missouri
Board passed code amendments affecting multifamily and residential standards (Bill 43-25); a resident warned a new 35% lot coverage limit, increased lot-width rules and firewall design requirements will make multifamily development impractical on many lots.
Arlington Heights SD 25, School Boards, Illinois
The board approved five staff handbooks for 2025–26, updated salary scales, included new teacher‑assistant hour charts in the TCARN handbook and added an assistant business manager position to the Other Support Personnel handbook.
Saratoga County, New York
The Saratoga County Board of Supervisors introduced a local law to create a county animal abuse registry and set a public hearing for Sept. 10; supervisors and public speakers said the registry follows recent high-profile abuse cases and that penalties were strengthened during drafting.
Batavia USD 101, School Boards, Illinois
School district staff told the board the district opened an Early Childhood Center at Alice Gustafson Elementary and described program size, blended classroom model, services for students with disabilities and community outreach including home screenings and Special Olympics partnerships.
Kissimmee, Osceola County, Florida
After debate, the Planning Advisory Board approved a text amendment to the Osceola Village mixed‑use planned development to add self‑storage as a permitted use and to adopt revised sign standards; board members discussed comprehensive‑plan compatibility and ground‑floor retail requirements that will apply at site plan review.
Mason County, Washington
County public-works staff announced openings on the Transportation Improvement Program Citizens Advisory Panel (TIPCAP) and the Solid Waste Advisory Committee (SWAC) and invited applicants from all commissioner districts.
Fairview, Multnomah County, Oregon
A resident objected during public comment after seeing a $20 public-safety fee on a bill; city staff and the manager explained council had combined a previously proposed $15 public-safety fee and a $5 parks fee into one $20 public-safety fee during council deliberations.
Warrenton City, Warren County, Missouri
The Board of Aldermen approved an ordinance setting the 2025 municipal tax rate after a public hearing and two readings; the rates are projected to raise about $698,922.
Kissimmee, Osceola County, Florida
The Planning Advisory Board approved a conditional-use site-plan request to allow up to six food trucks at La Lechonera El Gibarito on South John Young Parkway, amending hours to permit sales until midnight during the initial 90‑day trial period while keeping sound restrictions in place.
Gage County, Nebraska
The Board approved the county's one- and six-year road and bridge plan, adding several projects eligible for the Nebraska bridge-match program and favoring tube replacements over box culverts where feasible to save costs.
Mason County, Washington
After hours of testimony from residents and event hosts, Mason County commissioners voted to table proposed changes to Title 5, Chapter 5.18 (Temporary Outdoor Public Events) and schedule a community workshop before making a final decision.
Fairview, Multnomah County, Oregon
The council conducted a public hearing and adopted Ordinance 6-20-25 to remove specific day/time language from portions of the municipal code. No members of the public testified and the ordinance passed after motion and second.
Smithville, Clay County, Missouri
Smithville staff told the board the nine-month budget picture is stronger than the adopted projection, narrowing the city’s expected 2025 deficit and setting the stage for a 2026 budget that relies on certificates of participation and bonds to fund several large water and wastewater projects.
Kissimmee, Osceola County, Florida
The Planning Advisory Board voted to find the Downtown Community Redevelopment Area (CRA) master plan update consistent with the city comprehensive plan after consultants presented revisions that add a public safety action item and other changes informed by public input.
Gage County, Nebraska
After public comment and debate over process, the Gage County Board of Supervisors voted to reconsider a prior decision and send a draft of livestock regulations — with setback numbers removed — to the Planning and Zoning Commission for review and public hearings.
Nelson County, School Boards, Kentucky
During public comment at the Aug. 19 meeting, Justin Burton of Cox's Creek told the board that fear and misdirection have hindered decisions, urged an end to delaying investments in students and called on the board to match district staff's urgency for student success.
Granville Village, Licking County, Ohio
Council and staff described a long‑running effort to formalize a water utility services contract with Granville Exempted Village School District that aligns contract expiration with a future superintendent contract and provides village access to well infrastructure for redundancy; council discussion noted protections and future review points.
Whatcom County, Washington
Whatcom County’s Forest Resilience Task Force met online and failed to reach a quorum, but members used the session to press consultants and county staff to tighten the plan’s collaboration framework and to set tentative follow-up meetings.
Miami County, Kansas
The Miami County Board unanimously authorized staff to solicit price quotes and proposals to replace a failing on-site wastewater system under a Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) grant that will fund repairs for one property cited in codes enforcement and code court proceedings.
Fairview, Multnomah County, Oregon
12 Mile Disposal asked the council to allow a pass-through rate increase after Metro raised its disposal fee; company representatives said the change will be presented to council as a resolution at the next meeting and noted tight operating margins.
Granville Village, Licking County, Ohio
Council voted 5–1 to adopt an amended resolution joining a Sustainable 2050 program run by an external regional organization; council members debated whether the program’s guidance was prescriptive, how local priorities and budgets would be balanced, and whether the village had reviewed the current program materials.
Nelson County, School Boards, Kentucky
On Aug. 19 the Nelson County Board voted 4–1 to reduce the real-property tax rate from 67.3¢ to 67¢ and maintained the motor-vehicle rate at 54.8¢. The board also approved revised BG-1 forms for multiple projects, received bonding-capacity estimates of $76–$83 million, and approved a BG-1 for Foster Heights accessibility and learning-space work.
Granville Village, Licking County, Ohio
Council introduced Ordinance 13‑2025 to update restricted parking zones and a color‑coded residential permit program; a resident without off‑street parking urged carving out dedicated spaces, but staff said the permit does not guarantee a space and council asked police and staff to study additional areas and return within two meetings.
Oroville, Butte County, California
Mayor David Pittman told the Oroville City Council that the city’s population has grown from about 7,000 to more than 20,000 and that roughly 9,000 lots mapped since February 2008 create opportunities for single-family and market-rate housing; Pittman said voters approved funding for security measures to protect investments.
Miami County, Kansas
A Buceras resident, Kelly Roberts, told commissioners she was concerned that proposed tax increases discussed in recent notices would hurt fixed-income and elderly residents; county staff said the revenue-neutral hearing and budget/levy discussions are scheduled for the next meeting at 1 p.m.
Fairview, Multnomah County, Oregon
At an Aug. 20 Fairview City Council meeting, urban-renewal consultant Elaine Howard explained how Tax Increment Financing (TIF) works, reviewed the city's URA projects and budgets, and answered council questions about maximum indebtedness, revenue flows and recent expenditures.
Sebring, Highlands County, Florida
Organizers presented plans to the Sebring City Council for the 11th annual Lake Jackson cleanup, scheduled for Sept. 13 from 8 a.m. to noon, and described logistics including boats, dive support, supplies and post-cleanup refreshments.
Nelson County, School Boards, Kentucky
At its Aug. 19 meeting the Nelson County Board of Education heard Foster Heights Principal Hill and three adult teacher apprentices describe a paid apprenticeship that combines classroom work, micro-credentials and university coursework as a route to teacher certification.
Miami County, Kansas
At the Aug. 20 study session county staff said they will solicit proposals to repair a failing on-site wastewater system. Staff described a two-year contractor engagement, an expected system lifespan if maintained, recommended systems and the pool of licensed installers that will be invited to bid.
Socorro City, El Paso County, Texas
City staff opened a public hearing Aug. 19 to nominate We Win Technology Corporation for designation under the Texas Enterprise Zone Program. No members of the public spoke; the City Council will consider an ordinance to nominate the company at a vote set for Aug. 21, 2025, at 6 p.m.
Gage County, Nebraska
Supervisors approved an interlocal agreement to participate in the Nebraska Regional Interoperability Network and joined multiple counties in a joint application for bridge-investment funding (VIP).
Kenilworth, Union County, New Jersey
Kenilworth School District Superintendent Jeremy Davies thanked borough leaders for support of construction projects at David Brearley and invited residents to participate in the district’s strategic planning beginning Oct. 8.
Rowan County, School Boards, Kentucky
The Round County Board of Education approved a set of routine consent items Aug. 19, including a therapy contract with Happy Heights, surplusing two literacy programs, emergency teacher certifications and shortened school days for four elementary students.
Jefferson County, Colorado
A roll-call summary of formal votes taken Aug. 20 by the Jefferson County Board of Adjustment, including minutes approval, consent agenda, a short-term rental renewal approval, and a continuance.
Kenilworth, Union County, New Jersey
Police said surplus military vehicles acquired through a federal/state program helped officers access flooded areas during July storms; the chief asked the borough to support expanding the program to acquire more of these vehicles.
Gage County, Nebraska
Board members said taxable growth came in below expectations, triggering earlier cuts of roughly $1.3 million and indicating further reductions may be needed; officials noted Tax Increment Financing (TIF) projects are not being counted as growth this year.
Rowan County, School Boards, Kentucky
Round County’s technology coordinator updated the board on annual data‑security practices, daily vulnerability scanning and enrollment in an early Kentucky Department of Education identity‑sync initiative to reduce stale accounts and improve account provisioning.
Miami County, Kansas
Steven Grah told the Miami County Board of County Commissioners on Aug. 20 that county crews had severely damaged landscaping and a windbreak on his property after trimming activity in the county right-of-way, and he asked the board for restitution and cleanup.
Gage County, Nebraska
Supervisors approved two claims that prompted abstentions: a $185 claim to Diversified Drug Testing associated with Supervisor Claybaugh, and a $50.98 claim to Johnny's Welding Inc. associated with Supervisor Jurgens. Both motions carried with the named supervisors abstaining.
Rowan County, School Boards, Kentucky
The Round County Board of Education approved the district's property and motor vehicle tax rates for the 2025–26 school year during the Aug. 19 meeting. The property tax rate was presented as 53.2 (down from 53.8 last year) while the motor vehicle rate remained at 49¢ per $100 assessed valuation; board voice votes approved both measures.
Jefferson County, Colorado
The Board of Adjustment continued a hearing on a proposed short-term rental at 17761 West Alameda Parkway in Golden to Oct. 15 after staff and the fire district flagged private access, load-bearing and upgrade issues.
Kenilworth, Union County, New Jersey
Kenilworth's Department of Public Works started providing shared services to Roselle Park on July 1, the council heard, and members discussed overtime, time-off and the effect of delayed hiring on department finances.
Jefferson County, Colorado
The Jefferson County Board of Adjustment approved renewal of a short-term rental permit for a 10.09-acre property at 14030 Pine Valley Road in Pine, requiring septic maintenance within 30 days and an updated parking plan.
Gage County, Nebraska
The Gage County Board of Equalization on Aug. 20 approved two one-year maintenance agreements for property appraisal services covering July 1, 2025, through June 30, 2026, unanimously. Officials said the contracts mirror prior arrangements; one vendor representative, identified only as Josh, was present for the Cardinal Assessment Group item.
Rowan County, School Boards, Kentucky
After threat‑assessment training with the Kentucky Center for School Safety, Round County district staff presented a first reading of a revised policy (KSBA 09/22) recommended by the Kentucky School Boards Association; no vote was taken at the Aug. 19 meeting.
Kenilworth, Union County, New Jersey
The borough accepted its 2024 audit and approved a corrective action plan requiring the board of health to remit receipts to the treasurer within 48 hours of receipt, a change council members said should be implemented immediately.
Gage County, Nebraska
The board appointed Tim Lottman and Ross Traorek to the Planning & Zoning Commission, passing both nominations though several supervisors objected to bypassing a new application-based appointment process.
Gage County, Nebraska
Blue Valley Community Action presented its annual results and asked the board for $17,600 in county support. BVCA reported growth in client needs, potential federal funding cuts to CSBG and commodities, and updated the board that a new Wymore Head Start facility is under construction.
Gage County, Nebraska
The board approved a $56,918 bid from Plymouth Electric to replace courthouse fluorescent fixtures with LEDs, and staff said leftover grant money could fund additional county buildings' lighting upgrades.