The Pensacola City Council on Oct. 9 handled a number of routine and proposed-code items. Most measures passed unanimously or by standard majorities. Highlights and outcomes below summarize formal actions taken during the meeting.
Votes at a glance
• Approval of minutes (special and regular minutes dated Sept. 25, 2025): Motion moved and seconded; motion passed 5–0.
• Approval of agenda: Motion passed 5–0.
• Consent agenda (including airport easements with Florida Power & Light, fuel tank replacement bid award, and discretionary funding allocation for Council President Jared Moore, District 4): Approved 5–0.
• Item 205135: Request for code enforcement lien reduction at 211 West Cervantes Street: See separate article — passed 4–1.
• Resolution No. 20256(7): Adopt the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Cybersecurity Framework as the city’s cybersecurity standard — Moved by Councilmember Baer, second by Councilmember Breyer; adopted 5–0.
• Resolution No. 20256(8): Recognize Florida City Government Week, Oct. 20–26, 2025 — Sponsor Baer; adopted 5–0.
• Proposed ordinance No. 19-25 (first reading): Repeal of section 2-1-4 of the city code regarding compensation of city council members (clean-up following charter amendment) — approved on first reading 5–0.
• Proposed ordinance No. 21-25 (first reading): Amend section 2-3-2 naming city property (initially included language to prohibit naming facilities after living persons; item was discussed and subsequently pulled by sponsor for further review/workshop) — item pulled from the agenda at sponsor’s request.
• Proposed ordinance No. 18-25 (second reading): Amendments to section 10-4-17 to adjust rates and charges for sale of natural gas — adopted on second reading, 5–0.
• Add-on: Honorary naming of a portion of West Belmont Street in honor of the late Reverend John Powell (honorary sign with no address change) — motion passed 5–0; mayor and sponsor discussed a planned Nov. 1 recognition.
What this means: Most routine and policy housekeeping items passed unanimously. The naming-ordinance proposal was pulled after discussion and will be the subject of further review; the council also adopted a NIST-based cybersecurity standard that will guide the city’s cyber posture. The Sanger/theatre controversy produced extended public comment but no council vote. The code-enforcement lien suspension for 211 West Cervantes (see related article) passed 4–1.
Procedural notes: Where the transcript did not contain a recorded roll-call vote with individual names, the minutes reflect the recorded tally appearing in the public record (for example, “motion passes 5 to 0” or “motion passes 4 to 1”).