What happened on Friday, 22 August 2025
Coppell, Dallas County, Texas
The commission approved revised site plans and a companion replat for the Pecan Creek/Concrete Shopping Center, allowing two restaurant/retail buildings with conditions including hours and lighting restrictions; neighbors raised drainage, privacy and vermin concerns during the public hearing.
Lake County, Ohio
The Lake County Board of Commissioners presented a certificate of recognition to Mark Ball, a 4-H participant, after he extinguished a tree fire that threatened a house in Hiseley Park.
Office of the Governor, Other State Agencies, Executive, California
During a post‑signing question‑and‑answer period in San Francisco, Governor Gavin Newsom defended a redistricting ballot measure placed for a November special election, said he has confidence it will succeed, and criticized opposition spending tied to former President Donald Trump.
Vernon Township School District, School Districts, New Jersey
The board reviews goals and welcomes Superintendent Ebony de Mendez during the meeting.
Coppell, Dallas County, Texas
The Planning and Zoning Commission denied a request by Goodwill to convert a 2,500-square-foot Sandy Lake Road suite to a donation-only warehousing/distribution facility, citing comprehensive-plan conflicts and staff concerns about outdoor clutter and illegal dumping.
Office of the Governor, Other State Agencies, Executive, California
California and Denmark formally signed a memorandum of understanding in San Francisco to create a flexible framework for cooperation on environmental resilience, green economy, digital safety, cyber development and innovation, with officials from both governments and business delegations present.
Lake County, Ohio
A Lake County commissioner said he will oppose participation in a U.S. EPA-funded, $1 million regional climate action planning grant administered by NOWACA, arguing the funds would be better used on local infrastructure; commissioners discussed allocation of $300,000 to surrounding counties and possible approval at a future meeting.
Utah Department of Natural Resources, Utah Government Divisions, Utah Legislative Branch, Utah
The Board extended the Stantec consulting contract and the Bureau of Reclamation task order for the Lake Powell Pipeline through 2027, citing slow progress amid ongoing Colorado River interstate negotiations; both extensions add no funds and passed by unanimous vote.
Chino Valley Unified, School Districts, California
The board recognized Don Lugo High School’s FFA team for winning the 2025 state light-horse judging title, accepted a $20,000 donation from Good Shepherd Presbyterian Church for student programs, and heard a fall-start report from student board representative Phoenix Kim.
Town of Loxahatchee Groves, Palm Beach County, Florida
Advisory committee members asked public works to explore more pedestrian/horse bridges over canals, solar flashing crossing signs, asphalt milling at crossings, trailer parking and improved trail connectivity; staff noted engineering standards and property ownership constraints.
Lake County, Ohio
The Lake County Board of Commissioners unanimously approved a package of routine resolutions including roadway cooperation, bridge and engineering contracts, utilities appropriations and purchase authorizations; all items carried on recorded roll call votes.
Utah Department of Natural Resources, Utah Government Divisions, Utah Legislative Branch, Utah
Staff told the Utah Board of Water Resources that returned ARPA funds and slow project spending require the board to review underperforming grants in October so remaining federal funds can be reallocated before federal deadlines. Jo's Valley dam safety needs and reuse project commitments also affect capacity to take new projects.
Chino Valley Unified, School Districts, California
Multiple public commenters at the Aug. 21 board meeting accused district officials of failing to respond adequately to racial bullying and to alleged misconduct by a school resource officer; they urged the board to take action and provide support to affected students and families.
Lake County, Ohio
The Lake County Board of Commissioners unanimously passed a resolution designating Aug. 31 as Overdose Awareness Day. The county’s ADAMS Board described declining overdose deaths since 2022, warned of funding cuts and announced a recovery concert in Willoughby on Aug. 31.
Chino Valley Unified, School Districts, California
Speakers at the Aug. 21 board meeting criticized an information-item policy the district introduced in response to the U.S. Supreme Court decision Mamu v. Taylor, saying it would create logistical nightmares and raise First Amendment concerns.
Town of Loxahatchee Groves, Palm Beach County, Florida
Committee members said they expected a February grant decision tied to a long fence along Okeechobee and requested staff contact the grant lead, Mary Nichols, for a status update before reporting to council.
Utah Department of Natural Resources, Utah Government Divisions, Utah Legislative Branch, Utah
The Board of Water Resources set a fifth ARPA secondary-meter application period from Sept. 8 to Oct. 10, 2025, and restricted eligibility to applicants who meet all board, state and federal requirements at application time; the motion passed unanimously.
Department of Health Care Access and Information, Agencies under Office of the Governor, Executive, California
California’s Song Brown Primary Care Residency Program webinar reviewed application dates, funding categories, eligibility rules, scoring thresholds and portal procedures for the 2025 cycle, and answered applicants’ questions about documentation, accreditation phases and allowable uses of funds.
Homestead City, Miami-Dade County, Florida
At a July 24, 2025 City of Homestead special‑master hearing, the magistrate issued a mix of fines, reduced penalties, compliance deadlines and dismissals across many property code cases, including a large reduction that set a $39,774 settlement for one long‑running enforcement file.
Chino Valley Unified, School Districts, California
The Chino Valley Unified School District Board of Education voted 4-0 to adopt a resolution opposing Assembly Bill 495 (the Family Preparedness Act) after public comment from speakers both criticizing and defending the measure.
Utah Department of Natural Resources, Utah Government Divisions, Utah Legislative Branch, Utah
State legal counsel presented a draft third‑party contract the Utah Board of Water Resources would use when users of the Green River Block water right file fixed‑time change applications to participate in programs that route water to federal storage.
Town of Loxahatchee Groves, Palm Beach County, Florida
The Trails and Greenway Advisory Committee postponed formal approval of a proposed horse multi‑use trail sign design pending vendor proofs and discussed safety risks from a stockpile of shellrock and operating loaders near trailheads.
Dawson County, Georgia
The Dawson County Board of Commissioners approved multiple routine and procurement items including public-health facility contracts, project management for a fire station and fueling center, SPLOST additions, funding for fire hydrants, and a library board appointment.
Department of Health Care Access and Information, Agencies under Office of the Governor, Executive, California
California Health Care Access and Information staff explained eligibility, required documents, funding amounts and portal steps for the Song Brown Primary Care Residency Program in a recorded webinar; applications opened July 25, 2025, with an early-completeness review on Aug. 27 and a 3 p.m. deadline on Sept. 8.
Copperas Cove, Coryell County, Texas
During its workshop on Aug. 19 the City Council discussed how a proposed development outside the city limits could be designed to fit with the city and provided staff with policy direction; no ordinance or formal regulation was adopted in the provided transcript excerpt.
Alpharetta, Fulton County, Georgia
The Alpharetta Board of Zoning Appeals approved variances allowing Colonial Pipeline to place perimeter fencing closer to the Alpha Loop multiuse trail and raise fence height to 6 feet, subject to design and operational conditions including decorative flat‑top metal fencing, landscaping and gates open during weekday business hours.
Copperas Cove, Coryell County, Texas
The City Council awarded a contract to complete construction of the senior center and directed staff to work with a community garden developer on an electrical feasibility analysis, with contracts to return to council for consideration; dollar values and vote records were not provided in the transcript.
Dawson County, Georgia
The Dawson County Board of Commissioners approved a special-use reduction in minimum lot size to allow a manufactured home and a rezoning to permit a new single-family residence, with applicants saying both moves will keep families together.
Utah Department of Natural Resources, Utah Government Divisions, Utah Legislative Branch, Utah
The board committed $348,000 (17.5%) to Co-op Farm Irrigation Company and $320,000 (16.1%) to Huntsville South Bench Canal Company to pressurize irrigation systems, both at 0% interest over 15 years; Board Members Brian Steed and Juliette Tenert voted against one or both motions.
CARROLLTON-FARMERS BRANCH ISD, School Districts, Texas
The Carrollton-Farmers Branch ISD Board of Trustees adopted the district’s three required budgets for 2025–26, approved a resolution releasing a state revenue stabilization reserve, and set a combined tax rate of 0.9481 per $100 of property value (0.7481 M&O; 0.20 I&S), a 3.069% decrease from the prior year.
Alpharetta, Fulton County, Georgia
The Alpharetta Board of Zoning Appeals approved a variance allowing a swimming pool at 3565 Newport Bay Drive to be sited 10 feet from the rear property line instead of the 20 feet required by code, subject to staff conditions and neighborhood approval.
Copperas Cove, Coryell County, Texas
At its Aug. 19 meeting the City Council held a public hearing on the previously proposed tax rate and adopted the operating budget, fee schedule, the Coppers Cove Economic Development Corporation budget and related long-range plans; the transcript does not state dollar amounts or vote tallies.
Utah Department of Natural Resources, Utah Government Divisions, Utah Legislative Branch, Utah
The Board of Water Resources approved a state share of 85% (up to $999,000) for replacement of an aging riveted steel penstock and related open-channel repairs; the loan will be 0% interest over 20 years.
Marysville Exempted Village, School Districts, Ohio
Marysville FFA leaders presented accomplishments and upcoming activities to the Board of Education, saying the chapter earned a top-10 national chapter ranking in the category "strengthening agriculture," listed summer leadership experiences and described fundraising aims for Wreaths Across America.
Barrington, School Districts, Rhode Island
A boosters' presentation requested a district policy change to permit limited sponsorship advertising on two proposed video scoreboards, arguing the devices would be funded by sponsors at no taxpayer cost and would support a CTE curriculum in partnership with DATronix.
Barrington, School Districts, Rhode Island
The Barrington School Committee received a project update that outlines an April 2026 construction start, a staggered schedule, continued design development and communications outreach, and neighbor‑relations work; project managers said the plan remains largely unchanged from what voters saw and that the project is about 1.4% over budget but has a
Utah Department of Natural Resources, Utah Government Divisions, Utah Legislative Branch, Utah
The Utah Board of Water Resources authorized up to $8,645,000 (85% of cost) for Lake Creek Irrigation Company to replace diversion structures, add screening and upsized pipelines to address pressure and water-quality problems; loan at 1.26% over 30 years passed unanimously.
Marysville Exempted Village, School Districts, Ohio
Superintendent Dr. Howard told the Marysville Board of Education that district enrollment rose by 139 students from last year, preschool enrollment at the Mini Monarch Academy increased to 206, and bus ridership is 3,100 — enabling route optimization. The district still has eight open positions including three school psychologists and two aides.
Sandusky Boards & Commissions, Sandusky, Erie County, Ohio
The City of Sandusky Board of Zoning Appeals voted to approve a variance allowing a property long used as a duplex to be reestablished as a two-family dwelling, subject to building, engineering and other required permits.
Department of Education, Agencies, Organizations, Executive, Mississippi
The State Board recognized East Central Upper Elementary School for earning the American School Counselor Association RAMP designation; local officials described two years of training, data-driven counseling, and plans to expand the model across the district.
Department of Education, Agencies, Organizations, Executive, Mississippi
The State Board of Education approved a $700,000, one-year allocation to five institutions of higher learning to support the department's World Class Teacher program, as appropriated in House Bill 42 (2025).
College Place, Walla Walla County, Washington
City staff told the Historic Preservation Commission the city is conducting a comprehensive plan update under the Growth Management Act and will seek public input via a survey launching on or before Sept. 25, an October open house and outreach at the farmer’s market.
Tooele County Commission, Tooele County Commission and Boards, Tooele County, Utah
Tooele County's economic development group rolled out a beta landing page called Grow Tooele and asked board members to review content, correct contact information and send suggested edits. The site aggregates local incentives, site-selection listings and development resources and links to third-party services such as CoStar/LoopNet and the SBDC.
Marysville Exempted Village, School Districts, Ohio
The Marysville Board of Education voted unanimously to adopt a model policy limiting student cell-phone use during the school day, while reserving documented exceptions for medical or instructional needs.
Haddon Township School District, School Districts, New Jersey
During public comment, a resident asked the Haddon Township School District superintendent to establish an application process for student board representatives; the meeting record gives no detail on current selection procedures or any board action.
Williams County, North Dakota
A 3.57-acre lot was rezoned to heavy industrial to allow expansion of an adjacent compression facility; the parent parcel remains agricultural and the subdivision recordation is contingent on county review.
College Place, Walla Walla County, Washington
City staff announced a $18,000 Certified Local Government grant award to pursue a National Register historic district nomination for Walla Walla University; work is planned for 2026 pending state funding and scoping with preservation staff.
Troy, Miami County, Ohio
A community volunteer asked the commission to help churches coordinate veteran outreach, described the Miami Valley Veterans Museum's photo wall for honored service members and said state changes reduced the number of veterans receiving food boxes from the pantry.
Tooele County Commission, Tooele County Commission and Boards, Tooele County, Utah
Tooele County officials discussed establishing an energy overlay zone and courting a range of power projects — including modern small modular nuclear, solar and wind generation — during an Aug. 21 meeting of the Economic Opportunities Board.
Williams County, North Dakota
A minor subdivision to create a 15-acre residential lot from a 160-acre parcel was approved; the planning commission approved the rural-residential zoning for the new 15-acre lot and the larger acreage will remain in agricultural zoning.
College Place, Walla Walla County, Washington
The College Place Historic Preservation Commission voted unanimously to move from monthly to quarterly meetings and scheduled its next regular meeting for Oct. 16, 2025.
Department of Education, Agencies, Organizations, Executive, Mississippi
Two student board representatives described positive results from a school-level cell-phone restriction policy and urged the state to support students who want to self-study Advanced Placement courses that are not available locally.
Troy, Miami County, Ohio
The Human Relations Commission said it will form a subcommittee to expand its 'Beloved Community' work year-round, recruit new commissioners and reach out to area pastors after the Council of Churches disbanded.
Williams County, North Dakota
A 40-acre parent parcel will be split into two lots (20.02 and 19.79 acres); the commission approved a zone change to rural residential for the 20.02-acre lot and a variance to keep the smaller lot in agricultural zoning because it contains an oil well site and hay field.
Troy, Miami County, Ohio
Human Relations Commission members praised the recent Civil War memorial unveiling and discussed placing a historical marker for Josephine Slider at Riverside Cemetery, inviting nominations from the public.
Tooele County Commission, Tooele County Commission and Boards, Tooele County, Utah
Board members reviewed a newly awarded tourism cooperative grant of $126,000 and a county marketing plan that would push roughly $350,000 into digital marketing and content creation next year. The Chamber of Commerce will function as the county's destination marketing organization under contract, officials said.
Bulloch County, Georgia
Following a serious crash that killed local residents, Bulloch County commissioners expressed condolences to the Rountree family, praised first responders and described a county engineer's on-site coordination with the Georgia Department of Transportation to review the Highway 46 and Neville's Denmark Road intersection.
Department of Education, Agencies, Organizations, Executive, Mississippi
MSMS officials detailed HVAC and mechanical needs, a $7.83 million list of past facility investments, rising support fees paid to Mississippi University for Women and asked the State Board of Education and legislature to consider funding pathways and scholarship partnerships.
Williams County, North Dakota
A five-acre parcel along U.S. Highway 2 was rezoned to rural commercial and a conditional use permit granted to allow a 30,000-gallon propane tank and bulk distribution operations; applicant said the operation will be primarily bulk and will seek DOT approval for approaches.
Troy, Miami County, Ohio
Troy’s police chief reviewed officer training, department policy and month-by-month citation and warning counts after commissioners raised questions about racial disparities in traffic enforcement.
Tooele County Commission, Tooele County Commission and Boards, Tooele County, Utah
Tooele County Economic Opportunities Board members on Aug. 21 discussed plans to pursue the 2026 Rural County Opportunity Grant (Part B) and identified Wendover workforce training, airport infrastructure upgrades and business-park water/sewer looping as candidate projects.
Bulloch County, Georgia
Public commenters asked why Bulloch County’s 2025 gross tax digest rose by $607 million and sought clarity on changes to the homestead exemption; commissioners said reassessment is governed by state law, homestead exemptions are tied to the 2024 assessment for 2025 tax bills, and confirmed a 1% sales-tax measure will appear on the November ballot.
Wilsonville, Clackamas County, Oregon
Former Oregon state representative Teresa Alonso Leon recounted her immigrant childhood and outlined policy work on language access at the Oregon State Capitol and efforts to boost college completion for underrepresented students, including a statewide advocacy and training program now seeking foundation funding.
LEANDER ISD, School Districts, Texas
Trustees adopted a resolution acknowledging requirements under Senate Bill 12 and signaled that district policies will be revised to comply with forthcoming guidance from TASB and TEA.
Williams County, North Dakota
Williams County Planning and Zoning Commission approved a conditional use permit for a 49.9-acre-foot freshwater holding pond to support oil-well operations; staff said the pond will be lined, fenced and served by a Blue Ridge industrial well.
LEANDER ISD, School Districts, Texas
Superintendent reported that students and staff involved in a bus rollover on the first day of school are out of the hospital and recovering; the district highlighted its reunification and emergency response capacity built after recent flooding.
Department of Education, Agencies, Organizations, Executive, Mississippi
An informational proposal would reorganize MDE offices so internal audit and program evaluation report directly to the board; board members referenced a 2017 state auditor report that criticized past oversight and urged stronger, independent reporting lines.
BERKELEY COUNTY SCHOOLS, School Districts, West Virginia
A student presenter demonstrated how to view teacher updates in the Schoology mobile app, including a key difference with the web browser: pinned announcements on the web do not appear automatically in the app and require tapping the Updates button.
Tooele County Commission, Tooele County Commission and Boards, Tooele County, Utah
Tooele City officials told the Council of Governments on Aug. 21 that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has issued a permit allowing UDOT limited access to depot property for an easement tied to the Mid Valley Highway project, a step city staff described as significant.
LEANDER ISD, School Districts, Texas
To reduce the 2025–26 insurance premium, trustees approved a property‑insurance option that lowers the annual premium but shares catastrophic losses with the district up to $8.75 million (FEMA‑reimbursable in declared disasters), district officials said.
LEANDER ISD, School Districts, Texas
After a public hearing required by state law, trustees approved a total tax rate of $1.0869 per $100 of valuation for 2025–26, a rate the district said keeps the same overall levy as the prior year despite state homestead‑exemption changes.
South Madison Com Sch Corp, School Boards, Indiana
Dr. Hall presented a preliminary enrollment report showing net elementary growth (Maple Ridge +17; Pendleton +41) and a district‑wide increase of about 54 students compared with last year; the official count for state funding is Oct. 1.
LEANDER ISD, School Districts, Texas
Population and Survey Analysts (PASA) presented the enrollment‑projection methodology to trustees, explaining why older neighborhoods may stabilize or decline even as some subareas continue new construction and growth.
LEANDER ISD, School Districts, Texas
Dozens of students, parents and staff spoke at a packed Leander ISD board meeting, urging trustees to pause plans to repurpose or close neighborhood campuses and demanding more transparent data and planning.
Tooele County Commission, Tooele County Commission and Boards, Tooele County, Utah
A Tooele County subcommittee recommended allocating $1.65 million to finish Mormon Trail (matching a $5 million federal grant), approved funding for two Council of Governments (COG) planning requests, and proposed corridor-preservation funding recommendations; the full COG approved the subcommittee’srecommendations by voice vote.
Building Code Council, Governor's Office - Boards & Commissions, Executive, Washington
SBCC staff briefed the Plumbing TAG on preliminary economic-impact and small-business analyses required for CR102 filing. TAG members were asked to flag proposals that may add cost or affect small businesses; staff will poll members to schedule a follow-up meeting to finalize input before the October filing goal.
Department of Education, Agencies, Organizations, Executive, Mississippi
State education officials reported modest declines in statewide MAP proficiency for 2024–25 and described a multi-pronged response focused on math and literacy coaching, high-quality instructional materials and revisions to alternate-assessment practices.
Mississippi Public Universities, Agencies, Organizations, Executive, Mississippi
Dr. Casey Presswood explained board policies and timelines for new program approvals, required documentation, and academic productivity review thresholds that can trigger suspension or deletion of degree programs.
South Madison Com Sch Corp, School Boards, Indiana
At an Aug. 21 work session the South Madison board reviewed a preliminary budget showing state aid as the district's largest revenue source, an advertised property-tax levy target, changes to a state textbook reimbursement line item and mounting self‑insurance claims that could pressure future budgets.
Tooele County Commission, Tooele County Commission and Boards, Tooele County, Utah
County staff demonstrated a beta economic-development website called Grow Tooele that centralizes demographic data, site listings and contact links for municipalities; presenters said the site is not yet public and encouraged jurisdictions to submit updates.
Nantucket County, Massachusetts
The board approved a septic upgrade at 12 Baltimore Street with a three‑bedroom deed restriction; a separate request for 113 Hammock Pond Road was continued to the September meeting so the applicant can provide excavation and mitigation details after a high‑cost estimate and complex groundwater conditions were discussed.
Building Code Council, Governor's Office - Boards & Commissions, Executive, Washington
The Plumbing Technical Advisory Group discussed GP2020 to provide UPC guidance for refrigerant-based hot-water systems and to clarify when mechanical ventilation and refrigerant-volume rules apply.
Jefferson County, Indiana
The Board of Commissioners heard extensive discussion and public comment on a proposed commercial solar energy system amendment to the county's unified development ordinance on Aug. 31, including technical corrections, setback proposals, screening rules, decommissioning language and a countywide acreage cap.
Mississippi Public Universities, Agencies, Organizations, Executive, Mississippi
Trustees approved initiation of the University of Mississippi Medical Center cancer center and research institute project using the construction manager at risk delivery method (citing Mississippi Code 31-7-13.2) and approved exterior designs and budgeting for Mississippi State University's College of Veterinary Medicine additions.
Nantucket County, Massachusetts
Wicked Island Bakery in downtown Nantucket received a one‑year variance allowing front‑of‑house employees to continue without mandatory hair nets; the board will reexamine classification of the staff as waitstaff in January 2026.
School City of East Chicago, School Boards, Indiana
The board discussed adding girls flag football and middle school baseball. Administrators said Indianapolis-based partners will fund the first-year girls flag-football program and that the district will bear costs for the middle-school baseball program; coach compensation for the baseball position had not been finalized.
Building Code Council, Governor's Office - Boards & Commissions, Executive, Washington
Members debated proposed changes tying backwater-valve access to cleanout clearance; residential impact and installation-cost concerns led the proponent to indicate withdrawal for the current code cycle.
Mississippi Public Universities, Agencies, Organizations, Executive, Mississippi
Board approved 11 finance items including facility use and subscription agreements, clinical equipment rentals and purchases, a hotel room lease for Jackson State students, and a bookstore fee change; several trustees recused on specific items and legal staff reported compliance reviews.
Nantucket County, Massachusetts
Town and consultants reported surface water PFAS results below Massachusetts DPH beach screening values in July samples, while seafoam samples contained much higher concentrations and were flagged by the lab; the health department will issue a foam advisory and collect a second round of samples.
Jefferson County, Indiana
The Board of Commissioners approved Ordinance No. 2025-05 amending the county zoning ordinance to add provisions for wineries, breweries, distilleries and barrel warehouses; planning commission had given a favorable recommendation and statutory notice was referenced during readings.
School City of East Chicago, School Boards, Indiana
The School City of East Chicago board reviewed a memorandum of understanding to renew a Community Health Net clinic at Central High for the 2025–26 school year.
Nantucket County, Massachusetts
The Board of Health reported 1,347 short‑term rental (STR) registrations as of Aug. 18, 2025, and said enforcement is shifting from registration drive to audits, attestation checks and outreach to platforms and realtors; the department plans to hire a short‑term rental liaison to oversee follow‑up.
Jefferson County, Indiana
United Consulting presented the county's bridge inventory: 108 county-owned structures, federally mandated biennial inspections, county compliant with FHWA/NDOT standards, a single bridge on increased-inspection frequency slated for replacement this October, and rehabilitation projects programmed for 2027.
Building Code Council, Governor's Office - Boards & Commissions, Executive, Washington
The Plumbing Technical Advisory Group discussed a proposed code change (GP2019) to treat cycling sump pumps as intermittent fixtures for fixture-unit (DFU) calculations, raised sanitary-ejector concerns, and asked the proponent to revise language clarifying scope; the TAG could not vote because it lacked quorum.
School City of East Chicago, School Boards, Indiana
Trustees discussed first and second readings of staff timekeeping and accountability policies and a plan to pilot a reliable timekeeping system with labor unions during 2025–26 and implement it for the 2026–27 school year.
Norwalk City, Fairfield, Connecticut
Oak Hills Golf Professional Paul Alexander told the Oak Hills Park Authority at its August meeting that summer play remained strong and that operations are preparing for fall, with a mobile app and facility improvements underway.
Mississippi Public Universities, Agencies, Organizations, Executive, Mississippi
Interim President Denise Gregory reviewed Jackson State University's enrollment, research awards, community partnerships and campus projects; later the board voted to form a search committee, chaired by Trustee Stephen Cunningham, to begin a search for a new Jackson State president.
Norwalk City, Fairfield, Connecticut
The Zoning Board of Appeals approved a partial second‑story addition at 53 Rowayton Avenue but required the applicants to offset a small increase in impervious surface (about 30 square feet) with a landscaping or permeable‑surface change; the board also found the project consistent with coastal management goals.
Hoschton City, Jackson County, Georgia
The Houston City Council approved an intergovernmental agreement with the West Jackson Fire Department on Aug. 21 described in the meeting as a one-time arrangement; council members said the terms and packet details were included in their meeting materials.
Hoschton City, Jackson County, Georgia
The Houston City Council approved a modification to rezoning case Z-25-03, allowing the Providence Group of Georgia to construct up to 30 model homes in the Aberdeen subdivision prior to final plat approval.
Norwalk City, Fairfield, Connecticut
Oak Hills Park Authority members heard updates on tennis operations, an upcoming RFP for tennis services and a structural repair need for a court wall that is eroding toward a fairway.
Pasco County, Florida
Zephyrhills staff briefed the MPO on a mobility plan and comprehensive plan updates that prioritize complete‑streets design downtown, three high‑priority trails and capacity improvements to support industrial and commercial growth.
Provo City Other, Provo, Utah County, Utah
City staff briefed TMAC on multiple completed and ongoing projects — including a new pedestrian crossing on Ninth East, sidewalk infill near several elementary schools, a traffic signal installation and the Lakeview Parkway grand opening — and said crews will continue work into the fall.
School City of East Chicago, School Boards, Indiana
Trustees reviewed a bid for a new handicap elevator and staircase upgrade at Central High School and discussed ongoing HVAC issues, engineering drawings and recent contractor work. Administrators described hiring a district HVAC technician and expected engineering drawings to be stored centrally.
Hoschton City, Jackson County, Georgia
Houston City Council voted to table the Downtown Development Authority nomination of Anita Boyd to replace Dr. Kumar until September, after members said the DDA has a newly revised application and should be allowed time to solicit additional applicants.
Norwalk City, Fairfield, Connecticut
The Zoning Board of Appeals approved variances allowing a freestanding 7 Brew coffee kiosk and refrigerated storage at 641 Connecticut Avenue after the applicant reoriented buildings closer to the street and added pedestrian amenities; approval carried conditions for landscaping and staff review.
Hoschton City, Jackson County, Georgia
The Houston City Council voted Aug. 21 to approve the city’s annual update to its Capital Improvement Element (CIE) and transmit the document to the Georgia Department of Community Affairs for review. The update adjusts the five-year schedule of improvements and raises the city’s parkland purchase cost estimate.
School City of East Chicago, School Boards, Indiana
Trustees discussed a recently approved administrator contract and broader concerns over when salary figures are disclosed. The board agreed to remove one contract from the upcoming personnel report and asked the superintendent to revisit salary placement and the administrative pay scale in a follow-up, likely in executive session.
Jefferson County, Indiana
Bethany Legacy Foundation and LifeSpring Health Systems presented a community needs assessment recommending a federally qualified health center, a 24-hour crisis receiving and stabilization service, and the option to flex to residential treatment; they asked commissioners to consider opioid-settlement funding and other support.
Norwalk City, Fairfield, Connecticut
Superintendent Jim Schell told the Oak Hills Park Authority the course's new well is supplying roughly 22–23 gallons per minute (about 30,000–32,000 gallons per day), easing irrigation strain during an abnormally dry period. The authority also confirmed fall greens aeration and a bunker renovation following the Whittingham outing.
Norwalk City, Fairfield, Connecticut
The Zoning Board of Appeals continued a variance request for 34 Garner Street after finding the property contains an unpermitted garage conversion and potential illegal rooming‑house conditions; the applicant was told to return with a parking plan and documentation by the next meeting (Sept. 18).
Pasco County, Florida
A federal certification review for the Tampa–St. Petersburg TMA commended the Pasco MPO for strong public outreach, visible safety audits and data‑driven project prioritization and made four recommendations to improve documentation and UPWP clarity.
District staff described a new program enabled by a July 2025 state law that lets students make up missed instructional days outside regular hours. The program will be voluntary, standards‑aligned and limited by staff ratios and allowable days.
Norwalk City, Fairfield, Connecticut
Oak Hills Park Authority members discussed redirecting money earmarked for cart-path repairs to replace failing HVAC units in the pro shop and adjacent clubhouse areas at their August meeting.
Pasco County, Florida
Pasco County parks and transportation staff presented a draft trail wayfinding plan that proposes consistent directional signs, mile markers every half‑mile and large trailhead maps; staff sought board feedback on colors, QR codes and inclusion of connecting local trails.
Facilities and operations staff described upgrades including increased cleaning frequency, privacy fixtures, QR reporting, exterior cameras near restrooms and student education campaigns, and said more work remains.
School City of East Chicago, School Boards, Indiana
At an Aug. 25 work session the School City of East Chicago discussed a proposal to contract with ESS for districtwide substitute staffing. Presenters said ESS offers inclusive, trained substitutes and cited potential time and instructional benefits; trustees asked about fees, HR responsibilities and a trial contract.
Provo City Other, Provo, Utah County, Utah
City council adopted a phased increase to Provo’s transportation utility fee—approved unanimously—raising projected annual revenue from about $2.7 million toward $4 million over three years to address pavement remaining service life and maintenance shortfalls.
Springfield City, Hampden County, Massachusetts
Superintendent Dr. Dernault presented preliminary districtwide improvements in FAFSA completion, MCAS results, attendance and myCAP completion during the Superintendent's Report and thanked staff for recent professional development.
District staff reported increases in summer program enrollment across preschool through adult education, along with credit recovery results and a new pilot of dual‑enrollment courses with Riverside City College.
Pasco County, Florida
GoPasco staff reported on a completed comprehensive operations analysis, a real‑time passenger information system, new camera upgrades, upcoming Zephyrhills transfer station and mobile ticketing and other bus stop improvements.
Springfield City, Hampden County, Massachusetts
The committee voted unanimously to award city-of-Springfield diplomas to three individuals who completed district requirements; the actions were formal roll-call approvals recorded on the meeting record.
Provo City Other, Provo, Utah County, Utah
At its Aug. 21 meeting, the Transportation Mobility Committee (TMAC) reviewed conflicts in Provo’s micromobility ordinance, discussed aligning city code with Utah law, and directed members to submit recommended edits by Sept. 5 for formal review at the next meeting.
South Carroll Special School District, School Districts, Tennessee
The district’s director reported exterior and interior maintenance work, kitchen repairs, playground and parking-lot fixes, and noted an inquiry about installing two cameras in the old gym to cover blind spots.
Pasco County, Florida
The MPO accepted a $36,419 planning grant from the Commission for the Transportation Disadvantaged to support local paratransit coordination and planning for the coming year.
The board voted unanimously to begin the formal process to form Community Facilities District (CFD) No. 42 and approved bond refinancing measures the district's finance advisers said will reduce interest costs.
Leesburg City, Lake County, Florida
The Planning and Zoning Commission voted to recommend rezoning 0.4 acres at 937 East Main Street from R‑2 to C‑3 to correct a spot zoning inconsistency; the owner supported the change and staff said the property's future land use already is general commercial.
Springfield City, Hampden County, Massachusetts
Committee members and school staff urged honoring a longtime custodian, Dan Kavanaugh, and moved to send the naming request to the buildings and maintenance subcommittee; the referral passed on a roll-call vote.
Public commenters and board members debated a district social-media post and school response after Poly High varsity players staged a protest over a match involving a student from Jurupa Valley. Speakers cited state law and Title IX while asking the board to clarify discipline, transparency and student protections.
Pasco County, Florida
The Pasco County MPO approved nine proposed amendments to the fiscal-year Transportation Improvement Program (TIP) to roll forward projects that were not implemented last fiscal year into the current program so they can be included in FDOT’s work program.
Leesburg City, Lake County, Florida
Leesburg planning staff recommended approval on Thursday of an annexation and small-scale comprehensive plan amendment that would bring 7.53 acres at Royal Highlands into the city and rezone the site for a 48-unit townhouse project, but the Planning and Zoning Commission split 3–3 on the recommendation, sending the matter to the City Commission for final action.
Springfield City, Hampden County, Massachusetts
District leaders told the School Committee the district is trending upward on K–3 literacy screeners, described a successful tutoring pilot and said the district will expand high-dosage human tutoring and pilot an AI tutor for fall; staff offered to provide additional cohort breakdowns on preschool attendance.
South Carroll Special School District, School Districts, Tennessee
Board members moved to adopt a virtual-program graduation policy modeled on DeKalb County’s guidance and to set the district requirement at 22 credits, with corrections noted for ACT/SAT not to be required.
Pasco County, Florida
The MPO approved a $224,809.44 task order to develop a transportation resiliency improvement plan that will evaluate natural, man‑made and technology threats and recommend projects across 5‑, 10‑ and 20‑year horizons.
Danville CCSD 118, School Boards, Illinois
A staff member told attendees that display refresh remained at 60 hertz and that staff had experienced login issues when connecting a system called "Cashier" to the room's smart boards; no formal action was taken.
Bloomington City, Monroe County, Indiana
The Board of Public Safety voted Aug. 21 to adopt amended standards that remove provisions now covered by a merit system, adjust meeting scheduling language and clarify that the fire merit commission handles disciplinary matters unless it asks the board to act.
South Carroll Special School District, School Districts, Tennessee
The South Carroll Special School District board approved a $30,000 transfer to the cafeteria fund to support increased meal service and set an a la carte pizza price of $3 during its Aug. 22 meeting.
Pasco County, Florida
The Pasco County MPO board approved a $121,103.44 task order to fund phase two of a countywide freight transportation plan, directing the consultant team to complete outreach, needs assessment and an implementation plan by spring 2026.
Santa Fe County, New Mexico
The Santa Fe County Planning Commission on Aug. 21 approved a conditional-use permit allowing a small outdoor event “retreat” at 7687 Old Santa Fe Trail for memorials, weddings and similar ceremonies, subject to recorded conditions limiting gatherings to 20 attendees and other requirements addressing lighting, parking, septic and fire safety.
Peabody City, Essex County, Massachusetts
PBD Living LLC requested release of remaining bond funds and street acceptance for the Stonegate Subdivision; the Planning Board continued the item after the Department of Public Services advised against action and the developer asked for a continuance.
ARLINGTON ISD, School Districts, Texas
The board held the required public hearing on 2025'26 federal grant allotments (Title I/II/III/IV, IDEA-B consolidation, and Perkins V). Chief of Federal Programs outlined planned uses: campus Title I allotments, Title II professional learning (~$2.1M), Title III supports, and Perkins V funding (~$641,000). No members of the public spoke.
Bloomington City, Monroe County, Indiana
At the Aug. 21 Board of Public Safety meeting the fire department reported 512 calls in July, reviewed response‑time heat‑map areas, described training (including lithium‑battery extinguisher and flashover chamber training), and said Station 3 (Phoenix) should be substantially complete in mid‑September.
Pasco County, Florida
Pasco County staff presented the draft 'Pasco Conserves' chapter of the Pasco 2050 comprehensive plan update at a Planning Commission workshop on Aug. 21; commissioners pressed staff to clarify the agricultural‑reserve/ecological‑planning map, define 'open space' by context, and move technical wetland/buffer rules out of the comp plan and into the LDC.
Town of Babylon, Suffolk County, New York
An owner seeking to legalize current uses at a Deer Park industrial building asked the zoning board for a reduction in off-street parking and approval for outdoor storage for five warehouse tenants. The board reserved decision and left the record open for a fire-marshal follow-up.
ARLINGTON ISD, School Districts, Texas
The board voted unanimously to approve four administrative appointments announced after closed session: Raven Jackson as Mary Moore principal; Yolanda Riley Raley as Pope Elementary principal; Herman Kilgore as Ashworth assistant principal; and Christina Flowers as Miller assistant principal.
Pasco County, Florida
The Planning Commission recommended consistency for a county‑initiated comprehensive plan amendment to change multiple future land use designations to 'Conservation Lands' across about 2,813 acres; the item was approved by motion.
Peabody City, Essex County, Massachusetts
Attorney John Kelty presented a redesigned plan for 19 Centennial Drive that reduces landscaped-area removal and adds parking; the Providence Planning Board voted to allow the applicant to reapply to the Zoning Board of Appeals, and asked that the petitioner consult with the fire department about turning radiuses.
Town of Babylon, Suffolk County, New York
Strange Stars LLC asked the Town of Babylon Zoning Board of Appeals on Aug. 21, 2025, to approve a special-exception permit and parking variance to expand its Farmingdale cannabis dispensary into an adjacent unit.
Bloomington City, Monroe County, Indiana
At the Aug. 21 Board of Public Safety meeting, a police department representative reported year‑to‑date crime and training figures, described recruiting gains and social‑work partnerships, and said the department has used Tasers mainly to de‑escalate; the board approved the promotion of Officer First Class Carl Bryant.
Pasco County, Florida
A Planning Commission workshop item and ordinance amendment to remove fee language from the Land Development Code and implement updated tree mitigation fees by resolution was continued to Sept. 18 after stakeholders said the BOCC resolution raised rates and lacked grandfathering; staff agreed to meet with the TBBA and return with outcome.
ARLINGTON ISD, School Districts, Texas
Trustees unanimously approved delegating authority to the superintendent to enter an attendance-credit (Option 3) agreement under Texas Education Code Chapter 49; administration told the board the district expects a recapture payment in the $4'4.5 million range after changes to the state homestead exemption.
Town of Babylon, Suffolk County, New York
Jacqueline Grant asked the Town of Babylon Zoning Board of Appeals for permission to add an accessory dwelling unit and a second-story deck at 15 Garfield Avenue in Amityville. The board reserved decision after Grant said she needed time to check tax and lot-merger implications required as a condition for approval.
City of Eustis, Lake County, Florida
City staff told the commission that a consultant, Raftelis, is completing an impact‑fee and water/wastewater rate study and that new state rules create a compressed schedule. Staff proposed a public workshop and a special meeting in late September to adopt updated impact fees in time for a 90‑day notice period tied to a January 1 implementation.
Columbia County, Florida
County staff said the North Florida Water Utility Authority will assume operation, maintenance and some building responsibilities for county water systems on Oct. 1; the authority will be funded partly by county contributions next fiscal year while aiming for rate-based self-sufficiency.
Pasco County, Florida
The Pasco County Planning Commission voted Aug. 21 to recommend a County ordinance pausing new local regulations that would be more restrictive for properties damaged by a hurricane; staff and the county attorney said the pause will be limited to properties with documented structural damage and will be clarified before the ordinance goes to the Board of County Commissioners.
City of Eustis, Lake County, Florida
The City Commission on Aug. 21 adopted ordinance 25‑26, updating the city’s five‑year capital improvement schedule and highlighting priorities such as a new fire station, street resurfacing and a library expansion.
Columbia County, Florida
Staff updated the board on active industrial leads at the North Florida Mega Industrial Park, including a near-term opening for an AgroLiquid facility and ongoing discussions for a high‑power site requiring up to 50 megawatts.
ARLINGTON ISD, School Districts, Texas
Arlington ISD trustees were told Aug. 21 that a vendor error prevented the state from processing the district's June rescore submissions for AI-scored written responses, and that expedited human rescoring later produced score increases that change several campus accountability ratings; staff will file appeals by Sept. 12 to request corrected published ratings.
Lynn Haven, Bay County, Florida
Staff recommended two compensation options for Interim City Manager Mr. Lightfoot: match the prior city manager's salary ($166,240) or increase the interim manager's salary 20% (to about $135,580 annual); staff also recommended a $450 monthly car allowance; no vote was recorded in the pre-meeting transcript.
Senate, Legislative, Texas
Senator King, chair of the Senate redistricting committee, told colleagues on Aug. 22 that the House-drawn congressional plan now before the Senate (HB4, plan C2333) met his three stated goals: it was legal, it would "perform better for Republican congressional candidates," and it improved compactness in some districts.
Columbia County, Florida
The board approved a resolution inviting the City of Lake City to negotiate an interlocal service boundary agreement (ISBA) that would allow voluntary satellite annexation of specified nonresidential parcels for municipal services and economic development.
Lynn Haven, Bay County, Florida
Police and staff described heavy congestion when three schools release in close succession at the Mill Bayou area, and staff said a stormwater fix is identified but will take three to four months; the police recommended coordinating with county traffic engineers to adjust signal timing.
City of Eustis, Lake County, Florida
Fire Department officials told the commission the department's ISO rating rose to 88.77 from 84, improving insurance classifications and reflecting gains in training and equipment. Presenters said the department lost some points on staffing and station deployment and recommended planning for additional staffing and stations as the city grows.
Columbia County, Florida
After a Department of Commerce visit and interviews with six local firms, county staff said workforce shortages, training funding and average wages top employer concerns and proposed small career-cafe events to connect CTE students with local businesses.
Lynn Haven, Bay County, Florida
Staff recommended awarding work on outfall No. 23 to Emerald Coast Site Construction for approximately $190,000, using remaining reimbursementable legislative funds; commissioners were told the appropriation will fund only a portion of originally planned outfalls.
City of Eustis, Lake County, Florida
Representative Cobb presented the City of Eustis with state allocations on Aug. 21: $2,078,978 for a Rosenwald Gardens/Coolidge and North Shore Bridge package and $500,000 for the Trout Lake Nature Center education complex.
CENTRAL CONSOLIDATED SCHOOLS, School Districts, New Mexico
Human resources presented a list of about 30 open positions across certificated and noncertificated jobs, including several new, grant-funded roles; board members asked about sustainability after grant expiration and shortages in hard-to-fill positions such as speech-language pathologists.
Committee on State Affairs, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Legislative, Texas
The House Committee on State Affairs heard testimony on House Bill 7, the Woman and Child Protection Act, which would create enforcement mechanisms aimed at out‑of‑state manufacturers and distributors of abortion‑inducing drugs.
Lynn Haven, Bay County, Florida
Residents requested pickleball courts in the FEMA-funded James E. Rogers Park redesign, but staff recommended omitting them citing noise, crowds and limited parking; commissioners urged more resident input because flood-mitigation work is also part of the project.
CENTRAL CONSOLIDATED SCHOOLS, School Districts, New Mexico
The board approved the district’s unified IDEA application and accepted several program grants including a $22,000 GRADS award for Career Prep High School and a $25,000 youth civic infrastructure grant for Kirtland Central High School internships.
Columbia County, Florida
To reduce life-safety risks and avoid procedural delays during disasters, the board approved a written policy empowering staff to make private roads passable during declared states of emergency, with preconditions and limited authorities consistent with attorney general guidance.
Committee on State Affairs, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Legislative, Texas
The House Committee on State Affairs held extended public testimony for Senate Bill 8, a proposal to require public entities to designate multi‑occupancy private spaces by biological sex. Supporters said the bill protects women’s privacy in restrooms, locker rooms and shelters; opponents, including domestic violence advocates, hospitals and many .
City of Eustis, Lake County, Florida
On second reading the commission approved ordinance 25‑19 allowing additional signage for the Orlando Health emergency facility at 15719 US‑441 after the facility's attorney and an Orlando Health representative confirmed on the record that the monument and wall signs will use 'Eustis' as the location identifier. The commission declined to
Lynn Haven, Bay County, Florida
Commissioners and the city attorney discussed whether to separate the city clerk duties from the city manager and whether a charter amendment and referendum would be required; the attorney said the commission could initiate the change but the charter currently makes officers subordinate to the city manager.
CENTRAL CONSOLIDATED SCHOOLS, School Districts, New Mexico
District staff described efforts to grow CTE pathways across middle and high schools, align programs to local industry and expand dual-credit and internship opportunities; board members asked for stronger outreach and school-level marketing.
Committee on Public Health, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Legislative, Texas
The House Committee on Public Health left House Bill 25 pending after a contested hearing over a proposal to make ivermectin available from pharmacists without a health‑care practitioner’s prescription.
City of Eustis, Lake County, Florida
The Eustis City Commission on Aug. 21 voted to table second‑reading votes on a set of annexation and land‑use ordinances for property at the intersection of County Road 44 and County Road 44A until a date‑certain hearing on Sept. 4.
Lynn Haven, Bay County, Florida
Several commissioners asked for a forensic audit covering purchasing procedures back to 2021; the city attorney said Florida procurement rules and the commission's role as the audit committee could require an RFP for services estimated above $35,000.
Columbia County, Florida
Columbia County staff said just under 30 surveys were returned and announced an open house on Sept. 9 plus staff-sector workshops; the outreach supports an update to the county comprehensive plan and land development regulations (LDRs).
Franklin City, Johnson County, Indiana
The Park Board approved a request to allow a food truck at the recovery fair on Sept. 6 and granted a permit for the annual harvest walk on Oct. 5 along the Greenway Trail; both requests were described as routine annual events.
CENTRAL CONSOLIDATED SCHOOLS, School Districts, New Mexico
The Central Consolidated School District board approved a $150 monthly rent increase for district-owned staff housing following testimony about rising maintenance costs and a backlog of repairs; board members and tenants clashed over timing, notice and alternatives.
Committee on Public Health, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Legislative, Texas
Texas House lawmakers on the Committee on Public Health left House Bill 265 pending after hours of testimony about safety at youth camps and whether state oversight is adequate.
Franklin City, Johnson County, Indiana
The parks director summarized key elements of the 2026 budget for the Park Board, including a proposed full-time building services supervisor for the Active Adult Center, increased part-time wages, and a plan to implement nonresident fees with a resident discount starting in January.
Columbia County, Florida
The board adopted Ordinance 2025-22 requiring storm-debris contractors to register before performing cleanup during declared emergencies and approved steps to negotiate with top-ranked debris contractors and award local road construction contracts.
Franklin City, Johnson County, Indiana
Park staff said the playground equipment for Payne Park has been ordered and will be delivered the week of Aug. 27 and installed just after Labor Day; the design was changed to include an 'expression swing' at a neighbor's request.
Franklin City, Johnson County, Indiana
The Park Board approved posted hours of 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. and a no-camping rule at Greenlawn Cemetery after staff reported late-night visitors, RV stays and calls from police; the board voted unanimously to implement the measures.
Monroe County, Indiana
Monroe County approved an agreement with High Tank to split the cost of encasing a private utility line found under Sunrise Greetings Court during road construction; the county’s share was $44,900.20 (per record) from Local Road & Street Fund 1169; future maintenance of the private line rests with the property owner.
Monroe County, Indiana
Monroe County awarded the untreated salt bid to Morton Salt Inc.; agenda item recorded a price as $92.06 or $90 per ton delivered or picked up, to be charged to Local Road & Street Fund 1169.
Monroe County, Indiana
The Board approved a memorandum of understanding to partner with the Luddy School at Indiana University to host a website design camp for middle school students; county contribution up to $3,500; IU will provide curriculum and site; women’s commission will serve as camp ambassadors.
Monroe County, Indiana
The Monroe County Board of Commissioners appointed Dr. Michael Teague to the Health Board to fill a vacancy left by Diane Neal; term dates were not specified at the meeting.
City of Eustis, Lake County, Florida
Florida Department of Transportation officials told the Eustis City Commission on Aug. 21 that construction of the State Road 19 multimodal improvement project is on schedule for an October 2025 completion but still faces open items including signal work, landscaping and a drainage structure at Bay and Orange streets.
Columbia County, Florida
County economic staff and outside consultants announced a Sept. 5 workshop aimed at giving local officials and business leaders a forum to discuss projects, impact fees, workforce training and media strategies to attract industry.
Monroe County, Indiana
Monroe County approved a three‑year, $154,493.94 OpenGov agreement to maintain asset management records for highway, bridge and stormwater systems; cost is split across three departmental budgets.
Committee on Intergovernmental Affairs, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Legislative, Texas
Committee hearings on proposals to cap political‑subdivision spending drew wide testimony from hospitals, school officials, cities and counties, with opponents warning that uniform caps tied to population and CPI could force service cuts, delay recovery and shift costs to state general revenues.
Uintah Basin Revitalization Fund Board, Boards and Commissions, Organizations, Utah Executive Branch, Utah
Uinta County Economic Development announced the annual Uinta Basin Energy Summit will be Sept. 2425 in Vernal, featuring roughly 50 presenters, policy and industry panels, and a new "Basin Burner" golf kickoff event on Tuesday.
Monroe County, Indiana
Monroe County approved a 24‑month contract with VET Environmental Engineering LLC to inspect radon mitigation systems at several county facilities for up to $26,350.87.
Monroe County, Indiana
Health department reports increasing COVID-like emergency visits and wastewater trends; Indiana Department of Health reported more than 10 infant deaths tied to unsafe sleep in August; county offers free safe-sleep trainings and vaccines at public clinic.
Monroe County, Indiana
County facilities staff and an environmental contractor have tested and begun remediation at the Monroe County Justice Building after mold was detected in ceiling tiles; the county also tested the Sheriff/Jail areas and temporarily closed portions of the building while work proceeded.
Columbia County, Florida
A visiting state representative outlined more than $16.8 million in district appropriations to Columbia County this year and summarized a seven-year total of funds and projects secured for the county and district.
Murray City Council, Murray , Salt Lake County, Utah
The Murray City Planning Commission on Aug. 21 granted design review approval for Rockworth Companies’ Block 1 mixed‑use development on properties between 4800 South and Fifth Avenue, from State Street to Hanauer, subject to nine staff conditions.
Lawndale Elementary, School Districts, California
Superintendent and staff reported a successful first day of school with improved attendance over last year, summer TK/K orientation programs, a district health fair, open-enrollment reminders and a USDA gold recognition for the nutrition and wellness department.
Uintah Basin Revitalization Fund Board, Boards and Commissions, Organizations, Utah Executive Branch, Utah
The Division of Oil, Gas and Mining described the new R649-12 pollution-control certification rule and an online application portal that allows operators to certify equipment that reduces pollution and claim state tax incentives.
Orting School District, School Districts, Washington
At its regular meeting the Orting School District Board approved the 2025–26 budget, the capital facilities plan (Resolution No. 3.2024-2025) and the transitional bilingual program for the coming school year; the district also approved a surplus request and received the June financial report.
Orting School District, School Districts, Washington
The Orting School District superintendent presented a focused $137.2 million bond package at the board meeting, saying it would fund a new Orting Elementary, a 200‑student career and technical education (CTE) high‑school addition, reduce portables and address safety and traffic problems; no vote on the bond occurred at the meeting.
Stevensville, Ravalli County, Montana
Councilors moved and seconded approval of a contract with Energy Systems LLC for a new fuel tank/fuel farm at the town airport; discussion clarified the contract matches an earlier low bid, that an FAA grant offer has been signed and returned, and that the town attorney will sign after review. The vote outcome is not recorded in the transcript.
Columbia County, Florida
The county commission voted to authorize a memorandum of agreement with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission to study a conceptual Gateway Outdoor Center on the county'9s 500-acre northside complex.
City of Orange City, Volusia County, Florida
Anna McAllister, Orange City public information officer, announced an Aug. 26 city council meeting, a new downtown digital sign in testing, annual hydrant flushing through October and a utility contact-info reminder.
Uintah Basin Revitalization Fund Board, Boards and Commissions, Organizations, Utah Executive Branch, Utah
Jerry Kenska, assistant field manager at the BLM Vernal Field Office, reported about 20 position losses across the Green River District since the administration change, a hiring freeze extending to October, and that Vernal received nearly all federal APDs submitted in Utah this year.
Lawndale Elementary, School Districts, California
District staff reported that the Rogers Elementary groundbreaking has taken place, construction is underway and the project is slated for completion in December 2026, about 18 months after the announcement.
Stevensville, Ravalli County, Montana
The council approved Resolution 529a adopting updated job descriptions for town positions, formalizing a recent promotion to sergeant and clarifying department-wide training expectations.
Committee on Intergovernmental Affairs, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Legislative, Texas
Senate Bill 14, laid out in committee as an incentive program to lower impact fees when developers install water‑efficient systems, drew support from builders and environmental groups and resistance from counties and some local governments that said the credits shift costs to existing taxpayers; committee reported the companion bill to the full Ho
Uintah Basin Revitalization Fund Board, Boards and Commissions, Organizations, Utah Executive Branch, Utah
Dr. Seth Lyman presented satellite- and ground-based analyses that show Uinta Basin methane emissions fell sharply in 2024 and that emissions per unit of energy produced declined from about 5% in 2013 to roughly 1.5% in 2024, though he said total emissions still matter for ozone formation.
Nampa, Canyon County, Idaho
City staff and consulting team presented a draft form‑based zoning code for downtown Nampa at a workshop, describing five form districts, frontage types, building types and proposed height ranges; commissioners and residents pressed for clearer boundaries and protections for historic buildings along Twelfth Avenue and near the train depot.
Stevensville, Ravalli County, Montana
The Stevensville Town Council voted 4-0 to approve two liability claims that had been held over from prior meetings after staff consolidated older items into the packet.
Lawndale Elementary, School Districts, California
Educational Services staff presented a five-year strategic arts plan aligned to Prop 28 funding, with phased implementation, measurable goals and a planned submission to the board for approval on Sept. 4.
Uintah Basin Revitalization Fund Board, Boards and Commissions, Organizations, Utah Executive Branch, Utah
Richard Powell of the Utah Division of Oil, Gas and Mining said the division has adopted a 43-page Class 6 rule and is assembling the primacy application to allow the state to regulate geologic CO2 sequestration wells rather than EPA, noting a fee-based program and ties to 45Q tax credits.
Laconia Police Commission, Laconia, Belknap County, New Hampshire
Chief Steve Canfield briefed the commission on accreditation differences between CALEA and the state's program, relocation of a consolidated 911/fire dispatch center, and plans to bid four new police cruisers.
Committee on Intergovernmental Affairs, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Legislative, Texas
The House Intergovernmental Affairs Committee adopted a substitute to House Bill 26 and voted to report the bill to the full House after testimony that Harris County’s contract deputy program is strained by rising costs and disputes between constables and the commissioners court.
Racine Unified School District, School Districts, Wisconsin
Students from CASE, The Real School and Walden presented their robot, described awards won at regional FIRST competitions and outlined how a switch to a district model will change qualification for higher-level events.
BRENTWOOD UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
Ken Schroeder, a retired district teacher, told the board Aug. 21 that some staff listed for increases lack state licensure for social work or psychology and warned against nepotism; the board asked that speakers avoid naming specific individuals during public comment.
Laconia Police Commission, Laconia, Belknap County, New Hampshire
The Laconia Police Department briefed the commission on new liaison officers for recurring neighborhood problems, implementation of a school alert system and expanded use of a caller-update platform that sent 1,748 texts in July.
Uintah Basin Revitalization Fund Board, Boards and Commissions, Organizations, Utah Executive Branch, Utah
Division of Oil, Gas and Mining staff explained Class 2 UIC permitting, mechanical-integrity checks, step-rate testing and area-of-review requirements, and said the state currently regulates 89 saltwater disposal wells and 719 enhanced recovery wells.
Oak Park - River Forest SD 200, School Boards, Illinois
The board discussed three priority goal categories — communication, facilities & finance, and school environment/academic achievement — and directed teams to return with SMART goals at the next meeting. Members also discussed safety monitoring, freshman‑curriculum monitoring and increased board presence at school events.
Senate, Legislative, Texas
The Texas Senate suspended rules to lay House Bill 4 on third reading, triggering extended floor debate. Democratic senators said the proposed mid-decade congressional map dilutes minority voting power and splits communities of interest; supporters said the plan responds to political and demographic shifts.
Laconia Police Commission, Laconia, Belknap County, New Hampshire
Detective Stephen Orton, a 26‑year Laconia officer who led the city's prevention-enforcement-treatment work, submitted a resignation and the department plans interim coverage while it backfills his role.
BRENTWOOD UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
A Brentwood resident complained at the Aug. 21 board meeting that recently installed bleachers and an elevated press box behind her home were placed without notice and that the structures compromise privacy and property value; district staff asked for contact information and said they will follow up.
Oak Park - River Forest SD 200, School Boards, Illinois
Christine Marie Waters, an alumna and parent, told the board District 200 needs a written, enforceable communication policy for special‑education families, timely year‑round updates, clearer residency verification and restorative practices to rebuild trust.
BRENTWOOD UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
At its Aug. 21 meeting the Brentwood Union Free School District Board approved a settlement and general release for an instructional employee, ratified a last‑chance agreement with a union member, designated counsel for defense and indemnification in a civil case, and accepted a court dismissal and fee award in the William King Moss III action.
Laconia Police Commission, Laconia, Belknap County, New Hampshire
An 11-month investigation ending in early-morning arrests led to firearms- and narcotics-related charges and condemnation of a Laconia residence, Chief Steve Canfield told the police commission.
Uintah Basin Revitalization Fund Board, Boards and Commissions, Organizations, Utah Executive Branch, Utah
Assistant Attorney General Kathy Davis summarized the Supreme Courts unanimous decision reversing a D.C. Circuit demand to analyze "upstream or downstream" environmental effects in NEPA reviews and described ongoing procedural steps on remand affecting the Basin Railway project and tiered federal actions.
All Committees 2025, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Legislative, Texas
Representative Louderback said the measure would pause approvals of new public-safety radio systems that could worsen existing interoperability problems and direct the governor’s office to re-steer procurement toward compatible systems. No witnesses opposed in the hearing, but the measure drew questions about scope and the council’s role.
Oak Park - River Forest SD 200, School Boards, Illinois
The Oak Park and River Forest Board of Education voted to approve a one‑year change to the 2026‑27 academic calendar that shifts semester finals to after winter break, citing construction timelines. Board members and public commenters debated mental‑health, AP preparation and facility access before the roll call approval.
Richland County CUSD 1, School Boards, Illinois
Richland County Community School District 1 trustees at a special meeting directed staff to move forward primarily with ATG’s site plan for a proposed athletic complex and asked consultants to return with alternate layouts, itemized cost comparisons (including turf-versus-grass pricing and 10-year maintenance estimates), and phased building options.
Uintah Basin Revitalization Fund Board, Boards and Commissions, Organizations, Utah Executive Branch, Utah
State official Clay Crozier summarized recent court rulings and federal action affecting the EPAGood Neighbor" obligations under the Clean Air Act and said the decision leaves uncertainty about interstate air-quality trading and state implementation plans.
Daytona Beach City, Volusia County, Florida
Board of Adjustment member John George tendered his resignation. During the meeting members also discussed recurring issues with final surveys on production-built homes and noted that disciplining surveyors is a state-level process.
Wentzville R-IV, School Districts, Missouri
District officials told the board the first week of school saw route challenges: 20 routes without permanent drivers, 14 drivers in training, intermittent stop-finder app outages and plans to resume text/email alerts for families.
BRENTWOOD UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
The Board approved multiple personnel actions Aug. 21 including appointment of Deshauna Doolin as principal of Brentwood High School, James Gesick as associate principal, Jessica Castoro as assistant coordinator of special services, and an amendment adding David Estevez as school transportation coordinator.
Wentzville R-IV, School Districts, Missouri
District staff summarized major summer capital projects including completion of Boone Trail renovations, multi-phase HVAC work at Timberland High, emergency sewer repairs at Holt High, Piney Ridge flood repairs, ongoing tuckpointing and progress on the REACH Samuelson Center.
Wentzville R-IV, School Districts, Missouri
The board approved revised policy 2656 after debate. A proposal to remove the policy exception allowing authorized instructional use of personal electronic devices failed; the board subsequently waived the second reading and approved the policy as presented.
Wentzville R-IV, School Districts, Missouri
The Wentzville board debated whether the body should require unanimous consent to suspend district policy without prior notice, rejected removing that unanimity requirement, and later approved policy 0510 as presented after other amendments failed.
Wentzville R-IV, School Districts, Missouri
After hours of debate, the Wentzville School District Board approved revisions to board policy 0342 to add the chief financial officer to required financial disclosures and to set a lower dollar threshold for reportable income sources.
All Committees 2025, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Legislative, Texas
A local conservation district asked the House committee to approve an exemption so districts can divert reservoir water for dam repairs without repeated permitting delays.
City of Stuart, Martin County, Florida
The City of Stuart Planning Board recommended approval of an amendment that replaces a quasi‑judicial public hearing requirement with a public presentation for developments of about 50,000 square feet or larger, while insisting that public notice be retained.
Liberty County, Georgia
Commissioners approved replacing two 25-ton HVAC units at the Riceboro Youth Center and accepted a low local quote of $114,000 from Georgia Heating & Air; the city of Riceboro will share the cost 50/50.
Daytona Beach City, Volusia County, Florida
The Board of Adjustment approved a variance (BOA2025-019) allowing a 1,748-square-foot single-family home to be built with a reduced street-side yard setback of 7.5 feet (down from the required 15 feet) on a vacant parcel on Illinois Street.
All Committees 2025, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Legislative, Texas
Representative Ashby asked the committee to amend the rural infrastructure disaster recovery program by raising a GDP cap and lowering the poverty-rate threshold so Kerr County and 18 other counties affected by July floods become eligible to receive grants under House Bill 254.
BRENTWOOD UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
The Brentwood Union Free School District Board of Education appointed Brentwood High School senior Jaylene Guevara as the ex officio, non‑voting student member for the 2025–26 school year, citing district policy and state education law governing student board representation.
Liberty County, Georgia
Public Works reported multiple projects including permitting for a Jones Creek pier, a wetlands study for a boardwalk, a low bid award of $166,095.51 for the Pelican Lane waterline and approval of a 45-day extension for a water-system contractor; the roundabout at 119/Barrington Ferry drew discussion and a county cost estimate.
Daytona Beach City, Volusia County, Florida
The Board of Adjustment unanimously approved a variance allowing Havertys Furniture to install a 286-square-foot wall sign at 2500 W. International Speedway Boulevard (Unit 600), exceeding the city’s usual 200-square-foot maximum, citing building-scale and visibility considerations.
Cumberland County Schools, School Districts, North Carolina
Cumberland County Schools outlined 2024 security investments of over $3 million, including Cheah Open Gate weapons detectors, the Raptor visitor management system, the Say Something anonymous reporting portal and the role of school resource officers.
All Committees 2025, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Legislative, Texas
Lawmakers heard proposals to create a statewide disaster relief account offering loans and matching grants and a targeted Hill Country recovery and reimbursement program. Witnesses supported state help but asked for transparent distribution rules and attention to uninsured households.
Cumberland County Schools, School Districts, North Carolina
Cumberland County Schools described its Language Support Services, including interpretation and translation, a language support hotline (910‑678‑2300, press 2), top languages served and that the service has provided real‑time interpretation to more than 1,000 families.
Liberty County, Georgia
County finance staff reported a soft close for June showing higher-than-budgeted revenues and lower-than-budgeted expenditures, lifting the general fund and unreserved fund balance to about 5.4 months of reserves.
Retirement System, Agencies, Organizations , Executive, Virgin Islands, International
The treasurer presented monthly receipts, employer and employee contribution figures, disbursements and a month net cash surplus; parts of the transcript include figures that are garbled or unclear and are reported here as stated on the record.
Daytona Beach City, Volusia County, Florida
The Board of Adjustment unanimously approved an after-the-fact variance for a newly built, roughly 1,102-square-foot screened pool enclosure at 292 Blue Starfish Place that encroached approximately 15 inches into the required 5-foot rear-yard setback, allowing the building permit to be finalized.
Cumberland County Schools, School Districts, North Carolina
District staff encouraged parents to register for the Infinite Campus parent portal to access grades, attendance, assignments and schedules in real time and to use it as a primary communication tool with educators.
All Committees 2025, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Legislative, Texas
Lawmakers advanced two related measures to improve flood early warning: one would require the Water Development Board to identify flood-prone areas needing outdoor sirens and provide grants; the other creates a limited working group to study alert effectiveness and coordination.
Daytona Beach City, Volusia County, Florida
The Board of Adjustment voted 5-0 to grant Eugene and Jennifer Sullivan a variance to reduce the single-family rear-yard setback from 25 feet to 12 feet, allowing a roughly 402-square-foot hard-roof addition within an existing screened patio at 1313 Ruthburn Road.
Retirement System, Agencies, Organizations , Executive, Virgin Islands, International
The investment officer reported the system’s portfolio was up about 0.5% in July, with domestic equity gains and modest emerging-market returns; the market value was reported at approximately $495 million.
Liberty County, Georgia
After two public hearings, the board adopted a capital improvements element and a development-impact-fee ordinance that sets a proposed fee of $2,500 per detached single-family home, effective Oct. 1, to fund parks, roads and public-safety capital projects.
All Committees 2025, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Legislative, Texas
A bill to allow counties to limit impervious cover in unincorporated areas for flood mitigation drew support from county officials and environmental groups and concern from builders about existing county authorities and effects on rural property owners.
Cumberland County Schools, School Districts, North Carolina
District communications staff summarized Cumberland Family Academy (CFA) offerings — workshops, Family Engagement On Demand, Throwback Thursdays, family ambassador program, and school‑level volunteer links — and invited families and partners to sign up online.
Austintown Local Schools, School Districts, Ohio
The board approved administrative items for 2025–26 including handbooks, an updated gifted policy and plan, a Local Professional Development Committee schedule with a $500 yearly stipend, and meal-price listings that will not be charged while the district participates in a free lunch program.
Liberty County, Georgia
The Board of Commissioners agreed to a county share of a modest pay increase for the Atlantic Judicial Circuit's staff attorneys and discussed a state law change that will reduce local supplements for Superior Court judges over several years.
Retirement System, Agencies, Organizations , Executive, Virgin Islands, International
The board approved policy committee-proposed edits to the bylaws to remove outdated technology references and update former names used in the document.
Austintown Local Schools, School Districts, Ohio
The board approved a set of contracts for the 2025–26 school year, including a Title I staffing agreement with Supplemental Educational Services Inc. that runs from July 1, 2025, to June 30, 2026, and agreements with Legacy Visiting Health Services and Mahoning Valley Community School.
Cumberland County Schools, School Districts, North Carolina
District leaders reviewed the 2025–26 student code of conduct, describing a levels‑based behavioral framework, new glossary, guidance for families of students in the exceptional children's program, and emphasis on restorative and supportive responses.
All Committees 2025, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Legislative, Texas
Representative Lopez presented House Bill 68 to commission a study of flatland drainage, defining artificial drainage systems, assessing costs, and producing actionable mitigation recommendations. Multiple Rio Grande Valley officials and environmental groups testified in favor, citing chronic shallow flooding and aging drainage infrastructure.
Boone County, Illinois
Board members were urged to attend an upcoming Zoning Board of Appeals meeting on two solar farm applications and cautioned not to state positions at that hearing because speaking could require recusal from later votes; staff and the state’s attorney were recommended as resources for framing lawful arguments.
Retirement System, Agencies, Organizations , Executive, Virgin Islands, International
The trustees adopted policy committee changes requiring trustees to attend at least 75% of board meetings to qualify for out-of-island training travel and set a daily travel allowance of $25 within the U.S. Virgin Islands and $50 outside the territory.
Austintown Local Schools, School Districts, Ohio
The Austintown Local School District Board approved a resolution declaring an "urgent necessity" and authorized executing a contract outside statutory competitive bidding procedures to install security cameras at Austintown Fitch High School; the measure passed by roll call vote.
Boone County, Illinois
Board members emphasized the county board’s fiduciary role in the annual budget process, urged newer members to review materials and ask staff questions, and discussed scheduling a finance meeting before the statutory October budget layover to allow more detailed committee review.
Retirement System, Agencies, Organizations , Executive, Virgin Islands, International
The Board of Trustees voted to adopt the policy committee’s recommended changes to the disability review process after a motion by Trustee Clark; two trustees were absent.
All Committees 2025, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Legislative, Texas
After deadly July flooding in the Hill Country, legislators heard several bills that would change how youth camps are sited, built and regulated, including new building standards, mandatory emergency plans filed with the Texas Division of Emergency Management, parent notifications and limits on lodging in flood-prone areas.
Cumberland County Schools, School Districts, North Carolina
Transportation staff presented a bus‑safety program featuring boarding and crossing procedures, rules for students and families, emergency evacuation practice, the Here Comes the Bus tracking app, and an invitation for schools to schedule on‑site safety visits.
Fort Atkinson School District, School Districts, Wisconsin
The board completed a first reading of policy-update 34.2, which staff said contains primarily legal reference and language updates from a third-party policy service (Neola) and no substantive operational changes; the board placed the policies on the table for action at the September meeting.
Whitefish, Flathead County, Montana
The Community Development Board approved zoning text amendments (WZTA 25-04) to remove a zoning protest provision eliminated by the legislature, add a definition for factory-built housing, update board names, and remove obsolete procedural language.
Committee on Homeland Security & Public Safety, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Legislative, Texas
The Committee on Homeland Security & Public Safety voted to advance Senate Bill 15, which would codify a model personnel/department file structure that keeps unsubstantiated complaints and some personnel-related documents from public release while leaving discovery rights and some existing statutes intact.
Boone County, Illinois
The county treasurer reported robust interest earnings in July; administration staff outlined project expenses against ARPA and capital projects including courthouse and McKinley Avenue work and said ARPA balances may be exhausted within months at current spend rates.
Fort Atkinson School District, School Districts, Wisconsin
The board heard an opening-of-school update: staff returns the week before students, convocation and orientation schedule set, students begin Sept. 2 with adjusted bell times and kindergarten staggered start; staff noted state statute prevents starting the school year before Labor Day.
Cumberland County Schools, School Districts, North Carolina
District officials outlined the Every Minute Counts campaign and attendance policy revisions: a 10 parent‑note limit (per semester for high school), notes must be submitted within five days, and the district offers Truancy Mediation Council as a restorative option before court referral.
Whitefish, Flathead County, Montana
The Community Development Board recommended approval of WLV 25-01, a major variance to install precast concrete panels and use an inflatable cofferdam to stabilize the City Beach boat ramp; the project includes turbidity controls, monitoring and required state and federal permits.
Boone County, Illinois
Architects presented a schematic design for a new bus garage on the county administration campus, recommending a functional Option 3 with daylighting polycarbonate panels and room for future bus-wash infrastructure; staff expects to present final materials for approval within two weeks to bid the project this year.
Senate, Legislative, Texas
After extended floor questioning about whether House Bill 4’s congressional map complies with the U.S. Constitution and the Voting Rights Act and about access to counsel analyses, the Texas Senate advanced the measure to engrossment and passed it on third reading.
Whitefish, Flathead County, Montana
The Community Development Board unanimously recommended approval of WCUP 25-06 to allow a second building on the Dalen Dentistry site with ground-floor commercial space and two second-floor apartments, subject to standard conditions, architectural review and MDT coordination.
Fort Atkinson School District, School Districts, Wisconsin
On consent the board approved a limited-term art teacher appointment contingent on contractual release and background checks; authorized foreign travel to Costa Rica (summer 2027); accepted several donations (including a vehicle donation valued at about $4,630 and a $700 gift for summer reading), and approved payment of district bills.
Cumberland County Schools, School Districts, North Carolina
Cumberland County Schools presented Alongside, a confidential mental‑health platform for middle and high school students that includes an AI chatbot, wellness tracking, video resources and an escalation pathway to school staff for serious safety concerns; parent permission is required.
Dawson County, Georgia
County staff presented bids for the Georgia 400 right‑of‑way beautification project, recommending contract awards totaling about $443,000 funded by hotel/motel tax; no formal contract approval was taken at the work session.
Revenue, Joint & Standing, Committees, Legislative, Wyoming
Cheyenne officials and utilities told the committee that sales-tax exemptions for server equipment helped recruit major data-center investments, but lawmakers and residents pressed for clearer accounting of local benefits and neighborhood impacts.
Whitefish, Flathead County, Montana
The board recommended approval of WCUP 25-08 for a seven-bay Rocky Mountain Car Wash on Highway 93 South, adding conditions requiring silenced dryers and the best feasible water-recycling/preservation technology, plus architectural review and standard site controls.
Dawson County, Georgia
Community Development requested reclassification of a budgeted fire planner position to an animal control officer and proposed using leftover funds for a six‑month IT intern paid about $15/hour; commissioners discussed potential FY2026 funding implications.
Fort Atkinson School District, School Districts, Wisconsin
District staff presented a strategic-plan update focused on the goal of 'distinction' and recognized state qualifiers and award winners across athletics, archery, academics and arts during the Aug. 21 board meeting.
Town of Rutland, Rutland County, Vermont
Rutland planning commissioners agreed to staff information booths at the upcoming town‑wide celebration after Select Board member Barbara asked for additional volunteers; several commissioners signed up for shifts and staff will circulate details by email.
Revenue, Joint & Standing, Committees, Legislative, Wyoming
Multiple residents, Casper officials and education representatives urged caution toward further property‑tax reductions, citing impacts on schools, public safety, parks and local infrastructure; city officials described $1.8 million in general‑fund cuts and asked that state changes consider municipal budgets.
Whitefish, Flathead County, Montana
The Whitefish Community Development Board voted to recommend denial of WCUP 25-05, a conditional-use permit for a retail shop proposing to sell hard liquor, finding the use inconsistent with neighborhood character and community compatibility.
Town of Rutland, Rutland County, Vermont
Commissioners reviewed Ferrisburg’s unified development regulations (Article 13 on subdivisions) as a starting point to update Rutland’s out‑of‑date subdivision rules, agreed to seek help from the Regional Planning Commission, and discussed which provisions would lack enforceability without a zoning framework.
Fort Atkinson School District, School Districts, Wisconsin
The School Board approved two 10-year, upfront sponsorship agreements: Jones Dairy Farm will fund $110,000 for stadium naming rights and Fort Community Credit Union will provide $75,000 for naming rights at the high school performing arts center; both approvals passed unanimously.
Revenue, Joint & Standing, Committees, Legislative, Wyoming
Department of Revenue staff walked the committee through the range of sales-and-use tax exemptions in Wyoming, explained administrative differences among product-, entity- and use-based exemptions, and described why prior state efforts to survey exempted purchases produced incomplete results.
Dawson County, Georgia
Human resources presented the proposed 2026 payroll and holiday calendar, noting no added holidays and an adjustment to payroll schedules; item recommended for consent.
Town of Rutland, Rutland County, Vermont
The Rutland Town Planning Commission postponed consideration of a boundary‑line adjustment affecting parcels identified as belonging to Baird and Levin on McKinley after no one appeared to present the request.
Capitola City, Santa Cruz County, California
Staff told the commission the Capitola Mall redevelopment will be considered later this year and that contract amendments and additional meetings may be needed to implement the housing element and objective standards work.
Fort Atkinson School District, School Districts, Wisconsin
Electors at the School District of Fort Atkinson annual meeting approved a $21,613,128 tax levy and the district's 2025-26 budget after a public budget hearing that highlighted reliance on local referenda, low state special-education reimbursements and rising private school voucher costs.
LaSalle County, Illinois
LaSalle County safety committee reported no workers' compensation claims for July and highlighted an ergonomics training initiative and upcoming employee appreciation event.
LaSalle County, Illinois
The LaSalle County Insurance Trust approved a one‑year contract with Nugent Consulting and a two‑year agreement with CCMSI (subject to adding a conflict‑of‑interest clause); both votes were taken by roll call.
Capitola City, Santa Cruz County, California
Staff announced a public draft of Local Coastal Program updates tied to a Cliff Drive resiliency project funded in part by a California Coastal Commission grant; planning commission will receive the LCP update at a future meeting.
LaSalle County, Illinois
The LaSalle County Insurance Trust received a renewal budget projecting a 14% increase in insurance costs for the Dec. 1 renewal, driven primarily by liability and nursing‑home claims; committee approved consultant fee and discussed seeking alternative quotes.
Nash County, North Carolina
Spring Hope Mayor Kyle Pritchard asked Nash County commissioners Aug. 11 to endorse formation of a Statewide Flash Flood Action Committee and to help the town pursue short‑term sensor deployment, alerting and DOT inspections after a recent deadly flash‑flood event.
Dawson County, Georgia
Dawson County Family Connection requested board approval to accept a $3,300 Georgia Family Connection Partnership kin caregiver support cohort grant to finance resources and programming for kinship caregivers.
Revenue, Joint & Standing, Committees, Legislative, Wyoming
The Department of Revenue reported it received 15,390 applications, refunded 13,990 applicants for a total of $14,700,000, rejected 1,341 primarily for income limits, and had 58 applications outstanding that needed additional information.
LaSalle County, Illinois
LaSalle County jail administrator presented cost and liability concerns about switching medical services from contractor Wellpath to an in-house medical unit; insurance advisers warned that bringing services inside the county could raise liability and workers’ compensation exposure.
Nash County, North Carolina
Dozens of county public‑school employees and supporters told commissioners that the Nash County budget did not increase local supplements for classified staff, calling for a salary supplement this year and comparing Nash to neighboring Wilson County, which provides a 7% supplement to classified staff.
Revenue, Joint & Standing, Committees, Legislative, Wyoming
Lawmakers, assessors and state officials discussed how a Wyoming Supreme Court decision and a 2025 legislative change (Senate File 81) affect taxation of state-owned land, whether counties can tax improvements, and whether a single "governmental purpose" definition should apply across federal, state, county and municipal property.
Capitola City, Santa Cruz County, California
The commission recommended that the city council adopt zoning amendments creating RM-30 and RM-40 subzones, updated development standards and ADU ordinance changes, and voted to amend the proposed interior setback minimum for the new RM subzones from 7 to 10 feet.
Burke County Schools, School Districts, North Carolina
Superintendent Mike Swan and Deputy Superintendent Karen Alton urged students, staff and families to reduce screen time, prioritize attendance, and support student wellness in opening remarks for the school year.
Nash County, North Carolina
The Nash County Sheriff’s Office presented its school resource officer (SRO) program as a state flagship, highlighting autism‑specific training, partnerships with mental‑health providers, ballistic shields and breaching shotguns for SROs. Commissioners praised a proactive focus on threat assessment and mental‑health partnerships.
Town of Templeton, Worcester County, Massachusetts
Members reviewed a warning letter from State Senator Peter Durant about potential state cuts, concluded Templeton was not affected this year and discussed inviting Representative Vlodnick to speak to the committee about long-term state funding risks.
Nash County, North Carolina
The board approved a subdivision‑standard waiver allowing a private road longer than the UDO’s 1,200‑foot limit for the Taylor Store Road subdivision, citing physical constraints on a narrow front parcel; the developer agreed to pave the first 150 feet of the entrance as a condition.
Revenue, Joint & Standing, Committees, Legislative, Wyoming
Committee and county assessors reviewed rollout issues for the 4% cap, 25% homeowner exemption and long‑term homeowner 50% exemption, including confusion about deadlines, residency rules (eight‑month test) and proration when property sells after an approved application.
Nash County, North Carolina
Nash County commissioners voted Aug. 11 to amend the Unified Development Ordinance to remove a requirement that the county Environmental Health division provide written evaluations of noise, air emissions, dust and odors for rural family occupation special‑use permits.
Town of Templeton, Worcester County, Massachusetts
Members reviewed overtime spending in police and fire budgets and discussed whether overtime could be redirected to fund additional permanent positions; they also raised safety concerns about extended shift work.
Capitola City, Santa Cruz County, California
The commission amended the wharf design permit to relocate a donor mosaic panel to the right of the entry arch and directed staff to raise it to improve visibility and screen utilities.
St. Pete Beach, Pinellas County, Florida
Board members reviewed a draft framework for a Pass‑a‑Grille design guidebook and discussed using photographic examples and preferred building types. Staff reported short‑term rental enforcement is ongoing and that storm‑damaged public facilities (Warren Webster roof, Mary Pier, shuffleboard court) are moving through procurement and bidding.
Revenue, Joint & Standing, Committees, Legislative, Wyoming
Department of Revenue told the committee pollution‑control exemptions totalled $7,272,230 and fire‑suppression exemptions $4,994,920 in corrected figures; exemptions require annual application and most business personal‑property details are confidential at county level.
Town of Templeton, Worcester County, Massachusetts
Members reviewed a 222-page purchasing document and flagged aging IT contracts and fragmented municipal information-technology arrangements; they suggested hiring an IT officer or bringing in a consultant to inventory systems and advise on consolidation.
Nash County, North Carolina
Nash County reported Aug. 11 that it has addressed the items cited in two Department of Agriculture inspection notices at the county animal shelter, resumed adoptions and is moving forward with staff training, veterinary partnerships and volunteer coordination to stabilize operations.
St. Pete Beach, Pinellas County, Florida
Staff and the architect discussed a design review for a new single‑family residence under the Pass‑a‑Grille overlay standards (case 25093). Staff flagged transparency, ground‑level articulation, driveway width, landscaping and blank wall treatments; the architect agreed to revise drawings and consider additional materials and screening.
North Wasco County SD 21, School Districts, Oregon
CFO Dan Peterson told the board that June financials show a drawdown in ending fund balance due to revenues coming in below budget; directors asked for a simple written financial health summary and key performance indicators before ongoing oversight work sessions.
Revenue, Joint & Standing, Committees, Legislative, Wyoming
The Joint Revenue Interim Committee reviewed Department of Revenue obsolescence data and asked staff to convert fair‑market figures into estimated tax impacts and to clarify appraisal practices for difficult assets such as idle wind turbines.
Town of Templeton, Worcester County, Massachusetts
After a committee review found large credit-card totals with limited documentation, members voted to ask the select board to audit town credit-card accounts and policies, specifically naming American Express and Amazon Capital Services.
Clarksburg, Harrison County, West Virginia
Council read a resolution authorizing a purchase agreement related to a Washington Avenue parking lot and then voted to adjourn into executive session under West Virginia law to discuss property purchase and legal matters; the meeting designated mayor, council members, city manager, city attorney and city clerk to attend.
Nash County, North Carolina
The board denied a developer’s request to rezone 37.9 acres north of Strickland Road from RA (R40 equivalent) to RA‑20 conditional zone for 54 lots, citing the county’s 2022 Comprehensive Land Use Plan recommendation for larger minimum lot sizes in that area.
North Wasco County SD 21, School Districts, Oregon
The district reported strong participation across fall sports, announced free admission and a Rowena fire donation at the Aug. 29 home opener, and discussed potential league reclassification and travel impacts under OSAA review.
Clarksburg, Harrison County, West Virginia
Council approved buying three snowplows for $21,084 and three salt spreaders for $19,410 from Baker Truck Equipment of Hurricane, West Virginia.
Nash County, North Carolina
After Local Government Commission review, the Nash County Board approved a $11.765 million, 10‑year installment financing package and then moved to award four capital contracts funded by the borrowing: courthouse renovation, Medpark relocation work, an administration building roof replacement and lighting for Miracle Park.
Clarksburg, Harrison County, West Virginia
Council authorized the city manager to enter an agreement with Banyan Corporation for $55,000 to repair a slip at the Wood and Stanley Avenue intersection and clarified the city will be responsible for purchasing the shop rock, cost not yet provided.
Clarksburg, Harrison County, West Virginia
The City of Clarksburg authorized an application to the West Virginia Department of Transportation, Division of Motor Vehicles, for a 2026 governor's highway safety grant totaling $471,920; the council approved the measure by voice vote.
St. Pete Beach, Pinellas County, Florida
City planning staff presented a site plan for a proposed 17‑unit, four‑story temporary lodging building at 702 Pass‑a‑Grille Way and Historic Preservation Board members pressed staff and the applicant on height, rooftop amenities and alley/parking requirements.
Town of Templeton, Worcester County, Massachusetts
Members recommended creating an approved vendor list and tightening the town's procurement policy after a records review showed many vendors and inconsistent contracting documentation.
Clarksburg, Harrison County, West Virginia
City council voted unanimously to ask the Clarksburg Planning & Zoning Commission to recommend zoning classifications for properties at 1400 N. 19th Street and 443 Lee Avenue.
North Wasco County SD 21, School Districts, Oregon
Facilities director reported summer cleaning, lighting upgrades, site repairs and a seismic project at Chenoweth Elementary; board praised contractors and grounds staff and announced community partners for new press box (Hawk’s Nest) opening Aug. 29.
Clarksburg, Harrison County, West Virginia
Mayor James L. Malcolm Joe proclaimed Aug. 31, 2025, as International Overdose Awareness Day for Clarksburg and representatives from Prevention Solutions announced a public awareness event featuring chalk art and people in recovery.
Marshall County, Indiana
The Marshall County Board of Health approved minutes of its May 16 meeting and later moved to adjourn. The transcript records motions and unanimous voice approval but does not name who moved or seconded either action.
Marblehead Public Schools, School Boards, Massachusetts
The Marblehead School Committee voted unanimously to hold executive session proceedings for collective bargaining with Unit A and to discuss pending litigation in Essex Superior Court, the chair said, citing potential detriment to public bargaining and litigating positions.
Town of Templeton, Worcester County, Massachusetts
Templeton Advisory Committee members asked for explanations of end-of-year budget transfers after finding line-item changes in the FY2025 reports and identified a mismatch between the town's finance bylaw and its finance policy.
North Wasco County SD 21, School Districts, Oregon
Board members and middle‑school staff presented data showing a drop in phone violations during a local “Off and Away All Day” pilot and urged the board to adopt a similarly strict policy; board asked staff to refine policy language, consult principals and return with a second reading.
Huntley Community School District 158, School Boards, Illinois
Trustees approved an intergovernmental agreement for a special‑education placement; administrators said private facility enrollments drove tuition cost increases, psychologists remain in short supply, and transportation staff made route adjustments amid new construction and safety concerns.
Marshall County, Indiana
Board members said they were concerned about personnel procedures and an outside HR investigation into a prior administrator; one board member offered his resignation, saying he no longer met statutory qualifications.
Marblehead Public Schools, School Boards, Massachusetts
Superintendent John Robodeau offered district updates on counseling supports following a student death, facilities work (HVAC, playground, scoreboard), and new electric vehicle in the district fleet ahead of the start of school.
Kane County, Illinois
Veterans Assistance Commission Superintendent Jake Zimmerman reported faster claim processing than state averages and millions in new veteran benefits; the committee unanimously approved a resolution to place a flat granite memorial marker honoring a former superintendent who died earlier this year.
Marblehead Public Schools, School Boards, Massachusetts
The School Committee accepted an unrestricted $500 donation from the Making Ends Meet Foundation earmarked for the Brown School; administrators said funds will be used at the school's discretion and thanked the donor.
Marshall County, Indiana
Annette Haining, the county tobacco education coordinator, said commissioners offered a cargo trailer to the tobacco program for $1 and that a contract will be on the Sept. 11 commissioners agenda; the trailer was originally purchased with immunization grant funds and has been used as a mock bedroom to teach parents about vaping.
Huntley Community School District 158, School Boards, Illinois
Public commenters defended one trustee and criticized another following an earlier meeting’s heated exchange and an allegation about a district payable; commenters cited prior legal reviews and urged the board to focus on students.
Concord Public Schools/Concord-Carlisle Regional District, School Boards, Massachusetts
The Concord-Carlow Regional School Committee approved a transportation contract as negotiated in executive session and ratified by the bargaining unit; several staff and committee members were thanked for their work and one member was given the option to abstain.
Marblehead Public Schools, School Boards, Massachusetts
The School Committee deferred approving two community appointees to the high-school roof subcommittee, asking for wider solicitation and biographical information. Administrators said potential bidders must be prequalified by Aug. 28 and recommended subcommittee work continue to meet procurement timelines.
Huntley Community School District 158, School Boards, Illinois
Trustees approved a policy change to add required annual notice that students age 12 or older may access certain counseling without parental consent; the administration described steps to standardize session tracking, staff training and parent‑notification procedures.
Marshall County, Indiana
Board members discussed an interim administrator in place, planned administrator interviews, and a large decline in program funding that will force prioritization of services.
Kane County, Illinois
The Kane County Farm Bureau provided an update on events, outreach and local initiatives, including reaffirmation of a county representative, farmer advertising campaigns, scholarship fundraisers and a potential interest in wetlands mitigation banking for the Evans property.
Marblehead Public Schools, School Boards, Massachusetts
The School Committee accepted administrative updates to the district's Bullying Intervention and Prevention Plan, including revised terminology aligning with state law (e.g., 'target' instead of 'victim') and a commitment to staff training and forward-facing website placement.
Huntley Community School District 158, School Boards, Illinois
Administrators reported year‑end strategic measures: k–8 proficiency rose on local measures but growth metrics were mixed; ISBE announced new proficiency cut scores that will reclassify some results and the district anticipates receiving summative designations in October.
Concord Public Schools/Concord-Carlisle Regional District, School Boards, Massachusetts
The Concord-Carlow Regional School Committee approved a consent agenda that included a request to enroll two children at Concord Public Schools and the disposition of surplus Concord-Carlisle High School math textbooks; staff said surplus textbooks are typically donated, not added to the library.
Huntley Community School District 158, School Boards, Illinois
District financial officer presented a display draft of the FY2026 budget showing a $432,000 projected operating deficit after state funding reductions, transportation reimbursement cuts and higher health‑insurance costs; board members debated whether to include a property‑tax abatement now or revisit it later.
Kane County, Illinois
The Regional Office of Education presented a reduced 2026 budget that trims one staff position and asked the county to continue covering $130,000 of its Geneva lease per an earlier resolution; the superintendent argued keeping the office centrally located helps programming, fingerprinting and juvenile justice education services.
Marblehead Public Schools, School Boards, Massachusetts
Public commenters cited Youth Risk Behavior Survey results showing more than 1 in 4 high school students reported riding with someone under the influence and urged a multi-agency task force including schools, Select Board and Board of Health to address parental social hosting and community norms.
Marshall County, Indiana
Marshall County health officials said they will attend a sewer-district meeting the night after the Aug. 19 board meeting to answer questions about failing on-site sewage systems, potential alternatives and contamination in lake areas.
Concord Public Schools/Concord-Carlisle Regional District, School Boards, Massachusetts
The Concord-Carlow Regional School Committee voted to seat Lynette Kelleher as the second Carlisle representative after a motion, second and roll-call vote; Kelleher briefly introduced herself.
Marblehead Public Schools, School Boards, Massachusetts
Members pressed superintendent John Robodeau to provide clearer deliverables, reporting cadence and metrics for the district's anti-discrimination/antisemitism committee and agreed the superintendent will report back after the committee's first meeting of the year.
Kane County, Illinois
Program staff described a soil‑health impact assessment that will sample 5–10 commodity crop farms and produce a business-case report by March; the committee also heard a demonstration of drone seeding and a cover‑crop workshop and discussed limitations for specialty growers and licensing requirements for drone services.
Escanaba, Delta County, Michigan
The Escanaba City Council on Aug. 21 approved a $150,000 counteroffer for six city‑owned lots on South 30 Second Street and heard a developer presentation — with no final vote — on a separate 5.17‑acre parcel proposed for condominiums north of Third Avenue South.
Housing Finance Agency, Agencies under Office of the Governor, Executive, California
Interim agency leadership reported Standard & Poor’s upgraded CalHFA to AA+ with a stable outlook, staff said Callasys disaster relief funds have paid three months of mortgage payments for 69 homeowners, and announced the departure of the director of multifamily programs.
Mountlake Terrace, Snohomish County, Washington
The City Council approved the consent agenda and voted to postpone the public hearing and vote on a property annexation petition to a date certain of September 4; both motions passed without recorded opposition.
Kane County, Illinois
Supervisor of Assessments Mark Armstrong presented statistical measures showing Kane County ranks highly on assessment equity, explained the methodology behind sales ratio studies and other metrics, and asked the committee to approve a modest 2026 budget to maintain staff and appraisal resources needed to defend assessments.
Marblehead Public Schools, School Boards, Massachusetts
The committee voted to update MPS handbooks to state that signing the handbook provides consent for certain surveys under the Protection of Pupil Rights Amendment, while preserving an opt-out. Members debated whether that constitutes lawful 'blanket consent' and agreed to refine operational procedures and notifications.
Narberth, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania
Staff reported progress on a zoning reconfiguration draft and outlined a timeline in which a full draft will be available for the planning commission in October, with iterative reviews through December and possible council advertising in December for adoption in January.
Brentwood, St. Louis County, Missouri
A Brentwood resident urged protection of older ranch houses on Park Ridge and asked whether the city inspects homes before sale; staff advised the international property maintenance code governs occupancy inspections and provided a staff contact to schedule an inspection.
Housing Finance Agency, Agencies under Office of the Governor, Executive, California
The CalHFA board moved to consider and then approved Resolution 25-24, authorizing action related to 520 Capitol Mall; counsel’s suggested language capped the purchase at $23,000,000 plus reasonable closing costs and the amended resolution passed by roll call.
Mountlake Terrace, Snohomish County, Washington
A public commenter told the council Flock Technologies cannot be trusted and urged the city not to install surveillance cameras, arguing the $57,000 already spent would buy over 700 low‑cost CorsiCube air purifiers for local schools.
Narberth, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania
The committee adopted a resolution certifying the borough has maintained Fox Hall, Marwen and Hanson Court for more than 21 years, a PennDOT requirement to pursue formal dedication of those streets to the borough.
Brentwood, St. Louis County, Missouri
An addition and covered patio at 9328 Sonora were approved Aug. 21 with ARB direction to improve the brick-to-siding transition, return the brick at the front, add trim boards and infill an existing gable vent so the addition reads as a coherent update to the existing home.
Housing Finance Agency, Agencies under Office of the Governor, Executive, California
The California Housing Finance Agency board approved Resolution 25-23 to distribute $300 million in state budget funds to expand the California Dream for All down-payment assistance program, authorizing staff to implement program operations and issue conditional awards to waitlisted applicants.
Mountlake Terrace, Snohomish County, Washington
Mountlake Terrace officials reviewed the city’s fiscal year 2024 financial report Wednesday, reporting a modest revenue surplus in the general fund but a nearly $933,000 shortfall in water‑service revenues and several large timing‑driven variances in capital funds.
Narberth, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania
The committee authorized submission of a Transportation Alternatives Set-Aside (TASA) application to replace school flashing signs at two schools and expand the project to include ADA ramps and crosswalk improvements; staff will expend about $5,000 to prepare the engineering application with a Sept. 6 preliminary deadline.
Kane County, Illinois
The Kane County Agricultural Committee approved TMP 251011 to permit a 5-acre subdivision on the Peterson Farm, allowing the operator’s nephew to renovate an existing house and move closer to operations; the easement still restricts new building within conserved areas and zoning changes remain a later step.
Brentwood, St. Louis County, Missouri
Prestige Custom Homes' plans for a ranch house at 2908 Collier were approved Aug. 21 with required trim boards to break up large siding expanses, brick returns at the front, window trim, and a change in main gable slope to reduce side elevation massing.
Belmont-Redwood Shores Elementary, School Districts, California
District staff presented the June CSBA policy update and a CSBA‑recommended AI policy for a first read. Staff described the AI recommendation as a high‑level framework; the policies will return for a second read and possible adoption at a future meeting.
Narberth, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania
The Finance Administration Committee approved scheduled bills totaling $1,009,633.72, including a $735,000 down payment for the Amtrak bridge, and adopted a resolution allowing the borough to process construction payments on a rolling basis to meet a 10-calendar-day federal reimbursement window.
Brentwood, St. Louis County, Missouri
The Architectural Review Board approved designs for two new single-family homes at 8737 and 8741 Magdalene on Aug. 21, 2025, after requiring reduced front gable pitches, added trim detail and a modest four-foot setback adjustment to reduce perceived mass and improve compatibility with neighboring one-story houses.
Kane County, Illinois
Public commenters and several board members challenged a county proclamation and alleged noncitizen voting; County Clerk described statutory procedures for same‑day registration and called for following state law while some board members demanded a transparent audit of same‑day registrants.
Belmont-Redwood Shores Elementary, School Districts, California
Administrators reported on summer services: the Extended School Year (ESY) program ran four weeks and served about 70 regular attendees across special‑education classes; Power Scholars Academy (PSA), run with the YMCA at Central, enrolled 111 of 463 invited students.
Parma City, School Districts, Ohio
Superintendent-level staff read the names of newly hired certificated staff for the coming year, including classroom teachers and intervention specialists; the board recognized the hires but took no separate recorded action beyond the earlier personnel resolutions that authorized employment.
Kane County, Illinois
The Kane County Agricultural Committee voted to authorize an amendment to the agricultural conservation easement on the Evans Farm in Big Rock Township, permitting subdivision so two local farmers can purchase separate parcels; the easement is locally funded and remains subject to farmland-use restrictions.
Greene County, Ohio
Greene County accepted an FAA airport improvement grant of $372,807 and authorized the county administrator to sign the grant agreement.
Belmont-Redwood Shores Elementary, School Districts, California
Superintendent and Director Jerome Simon updated the board on the district’s third‑year strategic plan and an ambitious technology program that includes a phased Mac rollout for staff, Chromebook 1:1 expansion in early grades, network upgrades and security system changes.
Whitehouse, Smith County, Texas
The White House Economic Development Council authorized the EDC director to participate in Leadership Tyler (Catalyst 100) for the 2025–26 year; the program fee is $225 and the council approved the expenditure by voice vote.
Department of Agriculture, State Agencies, Organizations, Executive, Colorado
Members of the Department of Agriculture working group reviewed updates to a public website and resource form, discussed records‑request transparency and extended an RFP period for nonprofit host agencies.
Greene County, Ohio
The commissioners appointed Denise Percival as acting county treasurer effective Sept. 1, 2025, after the elected treasurer said he would not begin the term; the county Republican central committee must appoint a replacement within state timelines.
Whitehouse, Smith County, Texas
At a White House Economic Development Council meeting, Retail Coach presented trade-area data and prospective retailer leads; the council approved a one-year renewal of its recruitment contract for $25,000, a $7,000 decrease from the prior year.
Parma City, School Districts, Ohio
District staff told the board that estimated Title fund allocations and carryovers total about $8.5 million as of July 28, down from $9.8 million last year; the carryover improved a prior projection but does not fully replace the loss in funding.
Department of Agriculture, State Agencies, Organizations, Executive, Colorado
At a Department of Agriculture working group meeting, Warhorse Ranch leaders described equine-assisted therapy, multi-day retreats and summer youth programs intended to support veterans, first responders and rural residents facing behavioral-health challenges.
Belmont-Redwood Shores Elementary, School Districts, California
Trustees approved updates to certificated and classified substitute salary schedules, including revised partial‑day rates and a home‑instruction teacher rate increase to $230; the classified schedule adds a licensed vocational nurse line and aligns paraeducator and nutrition clerk hourly rates.
Greene County, Ohio
After public testimony both for and against large-scale solar, the Greene County Board of Commissioners approved five-year restrictions on large-scale solar in unincorporated New Jasper Township and a portion of Miami Township under Ohio's SB 52.
Town of Merrillville, Lake County, Indiana
The Board of Metropolitan Police Commissioners approved resolutions promoting two officers to corporal and two to sergeant, effective 12:01 a.m. Aug. 24, 2025, each subject to a six-month probationary period.
Belmont-Redwood Shores Elementary, School Districts, California
During public comment, parents Nick and Jessica Schmear asked the district board to let their daughter transfer to Ralston, saying small numbers of same‑sex peers at Sandpiper are harming her social and emotional development. The board did not respond during the comment period.
Parma City, School Districts, Ohio
At its August meeting, the Parma City School District Board of Education approved multiple resolutions covering facilities repairs, transportation contracts, financial items and personnel actions; all motions noted in the transcript were approved by roll call; individual vote details were not specified in the record provided.
Anchorage Municipality, Alaska
AWW general manager briefed the committee on multiple ongoing capital projects, including an $8 million electrical upgrade at Eklutna, a $20 million rehabilitation of Pump Station 2, a pipe-bursting project on Bridle for about $5 million, fuel system upgrades at the King Street O&M campus, and long-running Girdwood inflow/infiltration work.
Department of Agriculture, State Agencies, Organizations, Executive, Colorado
Katherine Harvey of the Office of Suicide Prevention told a statewide workgroup Colorado is expanding local suicide-prevention coalitions, running outreach like 988 and the Coffee Break Project, and adding 12 Eastern Plains counties — but several programs depend on federal funds that are not yet secured.
Savannah-Chatham County, School Districts, Georgia
Speakers at a meeting described the Savannah-Chatham County Public School System’s aviation maintenance and logistics program at Grove’s CTAE Building as a workforce-focused pathway that mirrors employer facilities and connects students to job opportunities with local partners.
Ames City, Story County, Iowa
Parks staff reported that summer programs are winding down, Miracle League participation has grown to 71, the Brookside Park centennial is scheduled Sept. 13, and staff relayed a regional West Nile virus alert and ongoing mosquito spraying.
Unified School District of Antigo, School Districts, Wisconsin
The board approved renewal of the AVA subscription through Camera Corner for a cloud-based video analytics platform (AVA). IT staff reported the renewal cost is lower than last year after review and negotiation.
NORTHPORT-EAST NORTHPORT UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRIC, School Districts, New York
Trustees reported outcomes of three summer retreats, appointed committee members for the year and the superintendent announced a community engagement program kickoff in October; budget transfers were listed on the agenda but amounts were not discussed publicly.
Anchorage Municipality, Alaska
The administration reported the 2023 annual consolidated report has been published and that detailed financial statements and the single‑audit work should follow within roughly a month; officials warned audited financials are required before drawing down certain Medicaid reimbursements.
Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida
The CRA accepted its independent financial audit, which showed no findings; the auditor reported a clean audit and high marks for financial controls.
Ames City, Story County, Iowa
Parks staff updated the commission on construction at the Fitch Family Indoor Aquatic Center, contamination monitoring at the Fitch site, ADA path replacement at Ada Hayden, Daley Park splash pad contract, Steven Shanker Plaza ice ribbon negotiations, and relocation of maintenance and mulch facilities.
Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida
The CRA approved four Commercial Property Improvement Program (CPIP) grants — a $200,000 build‑out at 440 N. Monroe for Sushi Sake, and three smaller grants for a florist, a rehabbed property on Old Bainbridge Road and tenant improvements at 1450 Lake Bradford — to support local businesses and fill vacant space.
Anchorage Municipality, Alaska
Solid Waste Services (SWS) told the Assembly Infrastructure, Enterprise and Utility Oversight Committee on Aug. 1 that it will modernize its operational software and vehicle telemetry to improve customer service, safety and data quality.
NORTHPORT-EAST NORTHPORT UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRIC, School Districts, New York
The Northport-East Northport Union Free School District Board of Education voted to approve a districtwide safety and emergency management plan after a public hearing; a long-time resident urged action on electric scooters and e-bikes damaging playground grounds at East Northport.
Unified School District of Antigo, School Districts, Wisconsin
The board approved memorandums of understanding with four community counseling providers to allow licensed clinicians to use school space for student therapy; the district emphasized the providers are independent and the district only supplies space.
Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida
The CRA approved a $1.5 million capital commitment to reconfigure four blocks of North Adams Street to improve pedestrian safety, shorten crossings and add lighting; construction is timed to leverage a 2029 resurfacing schedule.
Ames City, Story County, Iowa
Parks staff said they will gather public input at a Sept. 10 CIP session and return proposals in September; staff explained difference between park rules and ordinances and described the CIP timeline and grant funding deadlines for Ontario Park.
Anchorage Municipality, Alaska
Assembly members said prior amendments to create a municipal housing fund were never set up operationally and lapsed into general fund balance; administration staff said the appropriation was made but not implemented and suggested steps to operationalize a fund for potential reappropriations.
Gulfport, Harrison County, Mississippi
The Gulfport City Council approved a one-item docket of claims and adjourned after a brief discussion about municipal costs. An unidentified participant asked for monthly year-to-date budget information to accompany future dockets; the presiding officer agreed it was a fair request.
Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida
The Downtown Improvement Authority presented a phase‑one lighting package for Adams Street; the CRA approved $55,000 to install overhead and landscape lighting intended to improve nighttime ambiance and pedestrian safety as part of a broader streetscape strategy.
Ames City, Story County, Iowa
Residents told the Parks and Recreation Commission that growing deer numbers are damaging yards and parks and urged immediate steps; staff agreed to return with recommendations and to include the city forester and police standards in proposals.
Unified School District of Antigo, School Districts, Wisconsin
Trustees approved removing balcony bleachers and closing openings in the high school balcony to create safer, dedicated spaces for gymnastics and wrestling. Board members cited safety and program needs; district staff said parts will be salvaged for repairs and the HVAC system will be revisited in a future upgrade.
Fort Bend County Court at Law No. 1, Texas Courts, Judicial, Texas
Defense counsel told the judge the defendant will accept deferred disposition; the court scheduled a plea and paperwork for Sept. 2 at 1:30 p.m.
Fort Bend County Court at Law No. 1, Texas Courts, Judicial, Texas
Defense counsel said discovery and Brady disclosures are complete and aims to pursue diversion; prosecutors said the defendant’s BAC numbers could allow a Pretrial Intervention (PTI) packet because it is below the office’s 0.18 cap; the court set a pretrial for Oct. 30 and encouraged prompt submission of a PTI packet.
Fort Bend County Court at Law No. 1, Texas Courts, Judicial, Texas
At a remote status hearing, prosecutors said they will continue final attempts to contact the complaining witness in State of Texas v. Lu Yang Schulich and may send a letter or investigator if phone contact fails; the court set a status check for Oct. 2.
Unified School District of Antigo, School Districts, Wisconsin
Trustees authorized the Gridiron Club to solicit donations for a potential new football stadium in exchange for naming-rights proposals, but clarified a multi-step process and that the board retains final approval of any name.
Anchorage Municipality, Alaska
Port finance staff previewed a proposed Port of Alaska modernization surcharge to fund program gaps, and Jacobs staff outlined a recommended $3.18 million Terminal 2 design contract (total authorized $3.5 million) to be considered by the Assembly in September.
Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida
KCCI and volunteers presented a turnkey lighting plan for the Calhoun pedestrian bridge connecting a downtown parking garage to commercial uses; the CRA approved up to $150,000 to the city for design, fixtures and installation to improve nighttime safety and to allow programmable color displays for events.
Miami Lakes, Miami-Dade County, Florida
The committee heard plans for a Feb. 28 Knights of Columbus and American Legion casino and domino night fundraiser at the Spartan Center, and discussed transferring Patriot Day flag-planting coordination to the public safety committee and connecting the school contact Anna Soto.
Port Angeles School District, School Districts, Washington
Two submitted public comments, read at the Aug. 21 board meeting, urged renaming Stevens Middle School to reflect the Elwha River and local Indigenous connections; the board will take up a naming decision at an upcoming meeting.
Anchorage Municipality, Alaska
Assembly members questioned OMB about underspent alcohol‑tax line items, including Best Beginnings and two public‑health programs, and were briefed on how Healthy Spaces used contracts during a staff hiring lag. An assembly member previewed a proposed landfill tipping fee to fund ongoing cleanup and Healthy Spaces work.
Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida
The CRA board adopted its budget but split over whether to include a $200,000 line item for community policing in the Greater Frenchtown Southside district; the board ultimately approved the budget with the CAC recommendation to remove the new $200,000 allocation by a 3–2 vote.
Unified School District of Antigo, School Districts, Wisconsin
The board approved a revised compensation plan for trustees of $3,600 per year, payable quarterly, after extended discussion and a substitutionary motion. The change drew debate over whether committee and special meetings should be counted and whether the amount is appropriate.
Miami Lakes, Miami-Dade County, Florida
Miami Lakes Veterans Committee discussed planning for a veterans golf tournament, with organizers seeking a Friday date and targeting a February–March window; committee members urged securing a course date and forming a subcommittee to handle logistics and sponsorships.
Anchorage Municipality, Alaska
Port staff told the Assembly oversight committee that corrosion, damaged fenders and a deteriorating precast pile cap at Petroleum Terminal 2 (POL 2) have prompted a condition assessment and a load-rating study to determine safe operations and costs to keep the terminal running for the next decade.
Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida
The Tallahassee CRA approved a request from MDL Tallahassee (Park 7 affiliate) to rebate the city portion of future ad-valorem taxes from a planned 187‑unit Gaines Street development, with board members and nearby developers pressing for community-benefit conditions and limits on student‑housing metrics.
Miami Lakes, Miami-Dade County, Florida
The Miami Lakes Veterans Committee approved the Radio Run 2025 design and materials package, choosing a die-cut medal design and approving the logo, shirts and participant straps.
Anchorage Municipality, Alaska
The Office of Management and Budget told the assembly the municipality is roughly 58% through the fiscal year and 51% spent as of July 31, with timing of venue contracts and non‑labor expenses producing early‑year imbalances and ongoing questions about overtime and contracted labor.
Port Angeles School District, School Districts, Washington
The board adopted the 2025–26 operating budget (Resolution 2425‑21) after a July financial presentation showing a higher-than-expected ending fund balance and routine July expenditures related to retiree payouts and grant spending.
Miami Lakes, Miami-Dade County, Florida
At a Miami Lakes Veterans Committee meeting, members moved money between line items to cover three scholarships, approved a $7,271.03 disbursement to the American Legion, and approved event materials for the 2025 Radio Run. The committee voted to donate 25% of 2025 Reindeer Run net proceeds to the American Legion.
Anchorage Municipality, Alaska
The Municipality of Anchorage trust reported investment gains through mid‑August and outlined a plan to pay its statutory distribution twice a year, while hiring a director of investment operations and running a new consultant RFP.
Unified School District of Antigo, School Districts, Wisconsin
The board approved the 2025–26 school calendar, academic standards, teacher/support-staff and student handbooks (with QR codes linking to social media removed), and first readings of several policy updates.
Pacific Grove Unified, School Districts, California
Trustees confirmed plans to present at the California School Boards Association conference about steering district governance through contentious issues, and discussed which trustees will attend, president training timing and whether student trustees should be invited to the conference.
Port Angeles School District, School Districts, Washington
The Port Angeles School District board approved a guaranteed maximum price (GMP) amendment of $61,779,059 for the Stevens Middle School rebuild, authorizing staff to move toward a contract pending OSPI approval and detailing a multi‑phase construction schedule.
Education, Joint & Standing, Committees, Legislative, Wyoming
The Wyoming Charter School Authorizing Board requested modest timeline and procedural flexibility in the charter-application statute. Committee approved LSO drafting of statutory changes and will consider the amendments at a future meeting.
Honolulu City, Honolulu County, Hawaii
City officials briefed the Honolulu City Council Committee on Government Efficiency and Customer Services on Aug. 21 on how rulemaking is governed under Hawaii’s Administrative Procedure Act (HRS Chapter 91) and on when departments must adopt administrative rules.
Pacific Grove Unified, School Districts, California
Trustees at a special governance meeting pressed for clearer meeting structures that separate information and action, improved onboarding for new trustees and more searchable public records. Trustees discussed creating a database or AI-assisted summary of past agenda items and contracts to aid research and transparency.
Unified School District of Antigo, School Districts, Wisconsin
The Antigo School Board approved its AGR spring data report and discussed statewide changes to screening norms and assessment tools, including a transition from FastBridge to AIMSweb Plus and how updated norms will affect year-to-year comparisons and reading-plan thresholds.
Honolulu City, Honolulu County, Hawaii
The Honolulu City Council Committee on Government Efficiency and Customer Services on Aug. 21 amended Bill 5 (2025) to create a framework for a farm-animal control contractor, added language allowing the Department of Customer Services or another mayor-designated department to enter contracts, and reported the bill out for passage and second reading with a public hearing to be scheduled.
Evergreen School District (Clark), School Districts, Washington
The Evergreen Public Schools Board of Directors on Aug. 22 approved Resolution No. 7077, moving the districts first day of school from Aug. 26 to Sept. 2 and authorizing emergency measures if a strike by the Public School Employees of Washington (PSE) Large Group occurs.
Education, Joint & Standing, Committees, Legislative, Wyoming
Witnesses urged a stronger, funded state literacy effort and clearer statute. The committee directed a legislative working group to refine proposals and voted to pursue a separate appropriation or bill to create WDE literacy staff.
Utah Department of Natural Resources, Utah Government Divisions, Utah Legislative Branch, Utah
The briefing session closed with housekeeping items and staff reminders. Members made procedural comments, planned motions for the formal meeting and the chair called for adjournment after confirming attendance and motions to be made at the board meeting.
Laramie City Council, Laramie City, Albany County, Wyoming
Ordinance 2,107 (adopting the 2024 International Code Series) and an ordinance to eliminate the City of Laramie’s Board of Health both passed first reading Aug. 5 and are scheduled for second reading on Sept. 2; the council also approved an 8–0 consent agenda covering routine administrative items.
Mecklenburg County, Virginia
The commission granted a special-exception permit to Holly Gill and the Gill Family Trust to operate a surgical-only veterinary clinic (spay/neuter) in a converted house near Highway 58. The applicant said operations will be limited to scheduled surgeries three days a week and she expects to handle about six cats per day.
Education, Joint & Standing, Committees, Legislative, Wyoming
State education officials, the Wyoming Education Association and superintendents told the Joint Education Committee that teacher morale, substitute shortages, pay and behavioral supports are driving recruitment and retention problems; they urged targeted policy changes and sustained state support.
Pacific Grove Unified, School Districts, California
Pacific Grove Unified School District trustees spent a special-session evening reviewing a governance handbook, completing a book study and agreeing to add wording to clarify that the board values the collective impact over "individual interests or personal beliefs."
Dawson County, Georgia
District Attorney Lee requested reclassification of Valerie Edmondson from administrative clerk (pay grade 5) to legal administrative assistant (pay grade 11), saying her duties already exceed her current classification and that the change can be absorbed in the current year’s budget.
Mecklenburg County, Virginia
The Mecklenburg County Planning Commission denied a request to rezone two parcels on Highway 92 from agricultural to Industrial M-1 to allow a concrete ready-mix plant after residents raised health, traffic and safety concerns.
Laramie City Council, Laramie City, Albany County, Wyoming
The Laramie City Council on Aug. 5 awarded the Wellhead Building Upgrades Project to Archon Inc. and passed a resolution to submit an application to the State Loan and Investment Board for funding of a Zone 1 treated water storage tank; both measures passed 8–0.
Mecklenburg County, Virginia
The Mecklenburg County Planning Commission voted to rezone 71 Saw Mill Road from Industrial M-1 to Business B-1. The application paperwork described an "adult daycare" use, but the property owner said the planned operation is a daytime dog daycare for about 10–15 animals.
Utah Department of Natural Resources, Utah Government Divisions, Utah Legislative Branch, Utah
Board members discussed timing and format for future briefing and board meetings, expressed preference for Thursday mornings and October tours, and asked staff to circulate proposed 2026 dates for adoption in October.
Laramie City Council, Laramie City, Albany County, Wyoming
On Aug. 5 the Laramie City Council voted 2-6 to reject repeal of Laramie Municipal Code Chapter 13.8 (surface water drainage), approved a 120-day suspension of a section of the code to allow staff and council to propose amendments, and announced refunds of surface-water drainage fees. Four public comments were received during the hearing.
Mathews County, Virginia
The sheriff reported a pilot inmate work program that has completed maintenance tasks around the county; facilities staff described rapid repairs at schools including boiler work and LED upgrades and noted energy-cost concerns.
Cannon Falls, Goodhue County, Minnesota
Summary of formal votes taken by the Cannon Falls City Council on Aug. 19: consent agenda approved; orderly annexation adopted; zoning amendment adopted; adjournment approved.
Utah Department of Natural Resources, Utah Government Divisions, Utah Legislative Branch, Utah
Staff presented two related Huntsville‑area irrigation projects that would pressurize open channels with ~18,400 feet of HDPE pipe, build new diversion structures and add meters, with multiple grants reducing the board's share to roughly 161.5% of costs per project.
Bridgeport School District, School Districts, Connecticut
The Policy & Personnel Committee moved bylaws updates — a code of conduct, revised public-comment timing and committee-structure review — to the full board for further review; the public-comment change (2 to 3 minutes) will be discussed by the full board.
Mathews County, Virginia
A member of the public alleged permitting irregularities, a revoked contractor license and failures by the health department, and urged official scrutiny; the board did not take action on the claims at the meeting.
Cannon Falls, Goodhue County, Minnesota
Anne Crawford of Goodhue County Health and Human Services presented county traffic‑safety data and local programs tied to the 'Towards Zero Deaths' initiative, noting a multi-pronged approach and targets to reduce fatalities in 2025.
Utah Department of Natural Resources, Utah Government Divisions, Utah Legislative Branch, Utah
Division director reported 100% of Utah in drought, noted reservoir declines, summarized state water plan timeline and announced expanded cloud-seeding research and an operational program; the board was briefed on conservation programs and upcoming public meetings.
Utah Department of Natural Resources, Utah Government Divisions, Utah Legislative Branch, Utah
Legal counsel updated the board on two cases: Great Salt Lake litigation in which state defendants are in fact discovery and a pending Utah Supreme Court decision in the Waterhorse matter. Counsel said fact discovery timelines are complex and that a fuller closed‑session update is planned for October.
Mathews County, Virginia
Matthews County agreed to participate in a Middle Peninsula regional water-supply plan and to pay a $20,558 share for plan development as required by state regulation.
Utah Department of Natural Resources, Utah Government Divisions, Utah Legislative Branch, Utah
Staff briefed the board on a Davis and Weber Counties Canal Company project to replace an approximately 1910 riveted steel penstock used for emergency discharge and seasonal flushing. The estimated project cost is about $1.175 million; the company seeks 85% board financing with 0% interest over 20 years drawn from the revolving construction fund.
Cannon Falls, Goodhue County, Minnesota
The Cannon Falls City Council approved an orderly annexation with Randolph Township and adopted a zoning text amendment that would allow data centers, with conditions on infrastructure, water use and developer payments. Public commenters expressed both support and concern; the council approved the annexation 6-0 and the zoning change 5-1.
Bridgeport School District, School Districts, Connecticut
Bridgeport School DistrictPolicy & Personnel Committee voted to refer a package of business and noninstructional policies to the full board on Aug. 21, 2025, waiving first and second readings for several items while sending others for a first read after committee discussion.
Utah Department of Natural Resources, Utah Government Divisions, Utah Legislative Branch, Utah
Staff reported a brief Lake Powell Pipeline update and requested that the board approve two‑year extensions for several contracts tied to the pipeline project. Division staff said the broader Colorado River negotiations and potential federal agency actions make short contract extensions appropriate.
Utah Department of Natural Resources, Utah Government Divisions, Utah Legislative Branch, Utah
The board approved a form third-party contract to permit applicants to pay Bureau of Reclamation fees associated with the Green River Block water right; a board member recused from the vote due to representation of a water conservancy district.
Augusta City, Richmond County, Georgia
At an Aug. 7 Augusta Charter Review Committee meeting, an expert presented research finding lower corruption risk under a council–manager government; the committee reviewed a public survey and voted to ask the Carl Vinson Institute to draft council–manager charter language with ICMA accountability. The committee also approved a package of general,
Coppell, Dallas County, Texas
The Planning and Zoning Commission approved a one‑story, 21,054-square‑foot addition to Lakeside Elementary, adding classrooms and a storm shelter; approval includes a required traffic impact and circulation plan and mitigation as part of final engineering.
Volusia County, Florida
At its Aug. 25 hearing the Volusia PLDRC approved multiple residential variances for fence heights, garages and yard encroachments and continued two other cases. All approved motions were unanimous; the commission continued one high-profile excavation and companion variances to Feb. 19, 2026.
Mathews County, Virginia
The Matthews County Board of Supervisors approved a $329,000 appropriation from interim financing to cover school boiler repairs, convenience-center repaving, a generator repair at Liberty Square and an animal containment unit.
Utah Department of Natural Resources, Utah Government Divisions, Utah Legislative Branch, Utah
The Utah Division of Water Resources presented a Lake Creek Irrigation Company project to add a new diversion, roughly 12,500 feet of pipeline in two sizes, a system loop, a pressure‑reducing valve and a system meter to address pressure, water‑quality and growth‑related issues.
Coppell, Dallas County, Texas
The commission approved a revised plan to enlarge a Victory Coppell retail building to 10,540 square feet, remove one drive-through lane, add rear parking and construct a portion of the site's linear park; staff conditions and a replat will be required before permitting.
Volusia County, Florida
The Planning and Land Development Regulation Commission continued a contested special-exception application and related variances for a proposed long-term borrow pit near Colony Road and State Road 415 to Feb. 19, 2026, after staff recommended denial and multiple residents raised concerns about traffic, wetlands and noise.
Dawson County, Georgia
County Manager Joy Leverett thanked public works and emergency services for responding to a June windstorm with widespread outages, celebrated the June 17 Stiles Park grand opening, reminded that county offices would be closed July 4, and requested an executive session for potential litigation.
Coppell, Dallas County, Texas
The commission approved a 10,020‑square‑foot single‑story expansion for Fulgent Therapeutics at 1111 South Freeport Parkway to store tissue blocks and slides; approval requires tree permits and a replat prior to permitting.
Coppell, Dallas County, Texas
The commission approved a revised plan for two restaurant/retail buildings at the Concrete Shopping Center with a condition limiting restaurant hours to 7 a.m.–10 p.m. and requiring lighting and drainage to be addressed in later reviews.
Dawson County, Georgia
County manager presented a recommendation to appoint Shannon Stanford to the Long Range Planning Committee to replace Jim Braley; a resume was included in the meeting packet.
Coppell, Dallas County, Texas
The commission approved an amended plan increasing a multitenant building from 9,095 to 10,540 square feet and removing one drive‑through lane at Victory Coppell retail site; replat required before permitting.
Coppell, Dallas County, Texas
Planning and Zoning approved a 21,054-square-foot, one-story addition to Lakeside Elementary but attached a requirement that the district produce a traffic impact assessment and management plan and implement any required mitigation.
Dawson County, Georgia
County Attorney and the sheriff's office brought forward the FY2026 intergovernmental agreement (IGA) with the Board of Education concerning school resource officers; the school board has already approved the agreement with updated dates and the item was presented to county commissioners for consideration with an effective date of July 1.
Coppell, Dallas County, Texas
The Planning and Zoning Commission voted 4-2 to deny a request to convert the vacant 2,500-sf suite at 1090 E. Sandy Lake Road to a donation-only warehouse and drive-through drop-off for Goodwill Industries.
Coppell, Dallas County, Texas
The commission approved a 10,020-square-foot storage expansion for Fulgent Therapeutics’ Gateway Business Park building and an associated replat; the addition will house long-term storage of tissue blocks and glass slides used for pathology and comply with zoning limits on warehouse area.
Dawson County, Georgia
County manager Joey Leverett presented a proposal to hire Gerard Development for program-management and construction oversight services for replacement Fire Station 3 and a fueling center at a proposed cost of $75,000; staff requested a professional-services exemption to proceed.
Dawson County, Georgia
Dawson County staff recommended awarding RFP 479-25 for repurposed renovations to Penncorp at about $1.79 million, with a 10% contingency and SPLOST 7 funding, while noting Davis-Bacon and domestic-sourcing requirements tied to a pending DCA CDBG grant will affect final cost.
Dawson County, Georgia
Procurement staff recommended awarding RFP 478-25 (program management services for a public health facility) to Ascension Program Management at a reduced fee of $51,400 using SPLOST 7 funds; staff said the scope excludes earlier task work and recommended finalizing the award with clearer line-item breakdowns for public clarity.
Dawson County, Georgia
Senior Services Director Dawn Johnson said an addendum to the LegacyLink contract adds $4,724 to cover 934 home-delivered meals for the month, meaning the county will not need to pay for those meals.
Dawson County, Georgia
Public Works requested adding intersection improvements at Jules Slayton Road and AT Moore Road (State Route 9 South) to the SPLOST safety line item to fund survey and preliminary design work; staff will coordinate with GDOT on the AT Moore work because of a nearby roundabout project.
Dawson County, Georgia
Public Works Director Robert Drury presented a draft right-of-way maintenance agreement with Georgia Department of Transportation to allow Dawson County crews to perform occasional nonroutine maintenance on state routes, including State Route 400; the county attorney reviewed the standard DOT form.