What happened on Tuesday, 11 November 2025
Yankton City, Yankton County, South Dakota
Jesse Bailey, executive director of United Way of Greater Yankton, told the Yankton City Commission on Nov. 10 that the nonprofit faces a $150,000 annual funding shortfall that will shrink cash reserves and force program cuts unless new funding is found.
Minneapolis City, Hennepin County, Minnesota
The Minneapolis City canvassing board on Nov. 10 adopted an order certifying the results of the 2025 municipal election after Elections and Voter Services reported the highest turnout on record for the city.
Queen Anne's County, Maryland
Staff reported the authority is monitoring a national shortfall driven by rising rents, said HUD funding has covered payments through October, and updated the board on project-based vouchers at Slippery Hill where 166 applications were received for 14 units; staff aim to place eligible households by January.
Education, House of Representatives, Committees , Legislative, New Hampshire
Representative Brown moved to advance an amended HB 112 that would require undergraduates to demonstrate civic competency either by passing a version of the USCIS naturalization test with a score of 70 or by successfully completing a college civics course.
Lennox, Lincoln County, South Dakota
Council reviewed a draft SRO agreement modeled on Madison's program and discussed cost-sharing, timing (targeted FY27 start), vehicle and equipment splits, hours limited to the school day, and overtime monitoring. Chief Erickson described the arrangement as a partnership and staff will refine logistics with the school district.
Bradley County, Tennessee
During public comment a local sociologist urged the county to work with the city on blight through a citizen-led ad hoc task force and suggested modest consulting funds; a second speaker criticized the Bradley County Halloween block party as inappropriate for children and urged churches to oppose it.
Dorchester 02, School Districts, South Carolina
The School District Number 2 of Dorchester County board on Nov. 10 approved a resolution to reallocate a portion of referendum bond funds from the Yerby tract to add permanent classrooms at Knightsville and William Reeves elementaries.
Louisburg , Franklin County, North Carolina
The council administered the oath to Officer Robert Simmons, introduced as coming from Rocky Mountain with nearly four years' experience; Chief Lincoln and council members were present for the ceremony.
Behavioral Sciences Regulatory Board, State Agencies, Organizations, Executive, Kansas
The board advanced work to harmonize unprofessional-conduct regulatory language across professions (items 32–37 in the crosswalk) and discussed a package of proposed statutory changes for 2026, but members signaled caution about filing legislation this session because of anti-regulatory sentiment in the legislature.
Montcalm County, Michigan
At its Nov. 10 meeting the county board approved a facilities contract, the Byrne JAG grant agreement, a Community Corrections contract signature request, three warrant reports totaling $3,316,956.78, and placed consent items on file.
Bradley County, Tennessee
The county mayor recognized four employees for 30 years of service and said he has negotiated a no-cost lease allowing the city to use and improve the Archives Building parking lot; he asked that a resolution be placed on next week’s voting session.
Lennox, Lincoln County, South Dakota
The Lennox City Council approved the first reading of Ordinance No. 662 to rezone the Oppheim property from Agricultural-1 to R-2 after a public hearing in which neighbors warned about flood, drainage and traffic risks.
Chase County, Kansas
The commission signed a road maintenance agreement with Cottonwood Falls, confirmed the 07/05/2023 execution date on the agreement, and reviewed multiple emergency-equipment purchases, including battery-powered hydraulic rescue tools and a potential used engine/truck acquisition for the fire/rescue fleet.
Harrison County, Mississippi
Representatives of Jewel Drive LLC pitched a floating golf attraction with a $10,000 hole-in-one prize and said they are working with state agencies on environmental compliance; the Harrison County Board of Supervisors voted to take the proposal under advisement pending DMR/Army Corps approvals and standard vendor bidding.
Portland, Multnomah County, Oregon
The Finance Committee voted 3-1 on Nov. 10 to forward the City of Portland's annual investment policy to the full council while members and dozens of public commenters urged the city to adopt a human-rights screening overlay for its bond holdings.
Louisburg , Franklin County, North Carolina
Council approved a change to the town’s travel and training policy to reimburse actual meal costs up to $80 per full day and $60 for partial days (food portion), replacing an earlier state per‑diem approach for some reimbursements.
Newcastle, McClain County, Oklahoma
Newcastle adopted a four-tier volumetric water rate structure and an automatic mirroring mechanism for Oklahoma City wholesale increases to reduce mounting pressure on its water utility budget.
Education, House of Representatives, Committees , Legislative, New Hampshire
The chair of the Public Higher Education Subcommittee opened debate on HB 510, an amendment package the committee unanimously had earlier approved in part, saying the draft clarifies definitions for 'public institution of higher education,' 'student' and 'student organization' and adds procedural protections for disciplinary proceedings.
Bradley County, Tennessee
Bradley County planning and road staff told commissioners that portions of Old Parksville Ridge were paved without the county’s required inspections or compaction-test records, and neighbors say runoff from the work has caused drainage problems.
Portland, Multnomah County, Oregon
Portland officials told the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee on Nov. 10 that voters have approved the 2025 parks levy and outlined immediate implementation steps, including KPIs for City Council review by December 2025 and a long-range funding plan due in the coming years.
Griggs County, North Dakota
Representative Don provided a broad legislative update, describing a general fund of roughly $6.24 billion, passage of a property tax relief credit and a 3% spending cap on political subdivisions (House Bill 1176), plus recent transportation funding compromises that shifted money from Prairie Dog program into flexible grants and other priorities.
Queen Anne's County, Maryland
The executive director told the board the authority had been using an 80% of median-income threshold for admissions though it believes a 50% threshold should have applied; staff are researching the scope of affected households and will consult the Department of Housing & Community Development and HUD on corrective steps.
Louisburg , Franklin County, North Carolina
Council authorized the town administrator to contract Hayes & Sawyer for phase‑2 of the water supply feasibility study (water‑shortage response plan) with a not‑to‑exceed price of $62,000; council confirmed funds are available.
Township of Washington, Warren County, New Jersey
Mayor and police officials presented a plaque to Eric Tavares for providing training space and instruction in Brazilian jiu‑jitsu to local law enforcement; presenters emphasized the technique’s emphasis on control and de‑escalation.
Portland, Multnomah County, Oregon
The Transportation and Infrastructure Committee on Nov. 10 voted to refer an ordinance selling the Sellwood Community House to the Friends of Sellwood Community House for $1, subject to deed restrictions meant to preserve community use.
Chase County, Kansas
Commissioners reviewed competing insurance quotes, asked for apples-to-apples payroll baselines for bids, discussed workers' compensation audit history with vendor KWORK, and voted to renew employee health insurance through UnitedHealthcare.
Town of Sellersburg, Clark County, Indiana
Public works and consultant updates covered recent water main work, relocation of utilities for an INDOT project and preliminary engineering for drinking-water projects; the lead service line inventory found no lead lines in town.
Montcalm County, Michigan
Sunny Hagelin, county 4‑H program coordinator, reported program growth and partnerships, and the board approved a 90‑day pilot allowing a discreet food‑share shelf near the 4‑H office for residents in need.
Portland, Multnomah County, Oregon
The Finance Committee moved the reappointment of Catherine McLeod to the Fire & Police Disability and Retirement (FPDR) Board and forwarded confirmations for Sean Wallace and Penny Sweeting to the Revenue Division Appeals Board to the full council. Staff highlighted trustees' experience; the committee approved forwarding each appointment by 4-0.
Township of Washington, Warren County, New Jersey
The Township of Washington Council voted to adopt Ordinance 25‑23 on second reading, authorizing an 18‑month lease with Bethany Church to store DPW vehicles and equipment, after extended public comment from Woodfield Road residents who said the plan threatened neighborhood safety and quiet.
Syracuse City, Onondaga County, New York
President Hudson asked for a motion to adjourn into executive session for legal advice; a councilor moved the motion and Councilor Majak seconded, the presiding officer called for a voice vote and the motion was supported by an 'Aye' in the transcript.
Behavioral Sciences Regulatory Board, State Agencies, Organizations, Executive, Kansas
Board staff reported on multistate compact implementation (PSYPACT, professional counseling compact, social work compact), a licensee survey with roughly 4,000 respondents, and modest license growth; members discussed supervision, AI regulation, and training takeaways from national conferences.
Orange County, Florida
Mayor Jerry L. Demings presented a proclamation declaring Nov. 11, 2025, as Veterans Day in Orange County and praised veterans’ service.
252nd District Court, District Court Judges, Judicial, Texas
The 252nd District Court conducted a multi‑case docket call where the presiding judge accepted plea agreements, imposed probationary sentences in several matters and modified bond or monitoring conditions for defendants.
North Smithfield, Providence County, Rhode Island
North Smithfield — The Town Council on Nov. 10 completed the first reading of an ordinance authorizing the town to issue general obligation bonds not to exceed $9,000,000 to finance the construction, rehabilitation and improvement of the town’s Public Safety Complex, also described in council materials as the police station.
Tumwater, Thurston County, Washington
A Tumwater resident told city officials that a heat pump installation reduced uneven heating, kept the home comfortable year-round and that the application process — initiated after a City of Tumwater letter and a related meeting at Tumwater High School — went smoothly.
Montcalm County, Michigan
The board approved an amendment to the Montcalm County construction ordinance permitting accessory dwelling units (ADUs) and accessory structures with limits set to match building code setbacks and a size cap of 75% of the primary structure.
Chase County, Kansas
Acting as the Board of County Canvassers on Nov. 10, the Chase County commissioners accepted three provisional ballots for address changes, rejected one ballot for a nonresident registration, and signed the election abstract. Commissioners thanked election staff for their work during a busy election cycle.
Portland, Multnomah County, Oregon
The Portland City Council Finance Committee on Nov. 10 voted to forward four technical amendments to city code from the Revenue Division to the full council, changes staff said align local rules with recent state law updates and correct inadvertent omissions.
Homewood City, Jefferson County, Alabama
A resident asked for permission to place a shared Hot Wheels toy box near 507 Morris Boulevard; neighbors support the idea and the council asked for a demonstration and indemnification details before formal approval at the Nov. 24 meeting.
Town of Sellersburg, Clark County, Indiana
At its Nov. 10 meeting the Town of Sellersburg approved Ordinance 2025-OR-023 authorizing entry into an interlocal agreement to jointly purchase aerial photography for GIS mapping; the town manager or council president is authorized to execute the agreement.
Bangor City, Penobscot County, Maine
Jose Saavedra, director of the Bangor airport, told the council that the federal government shutdown is delaying FAA reviews, background checks and grant processing and is already producing flight cancellations and other downstream effects that can hit the local airport budget and projects.
Alfalfa County, Oklahoma
The board recorded motions and routine items including a motion on April minutes, a resolution to dispose of District 2 equipment and a decision to postpone action on a fairgrounds surplus item; an agreement related to extension services was also moved for approval and will follow budget timing.
Griggs County, North Dakota
Garrison Diversion representatives told the Griggs County Board of Commissioners they will advertise three pipeline construction contracts and could mobilize contractors in the county this winter.
Homewood City, Jefferson County, Alabama
The Homewood City Council approved a package of resolutions on Nov. 10, including acceptance of a bid for the Homewood Public Library Phase 4 renovation and authorization for the city manager to sign contracts up to $100,000.
Bangor City, Penobscot County, Maine
City staff told the council that an unexpected one‑time state payment allowed the council to dedicate $60,000 to winter warming centers; two organizations applied and staff proposed splitting the available funds into two $30,000 awards while pursuing another $60,000.
Behavioral Sciences Regulatory Board, State Agencies, Organizations, Executive, Kansas
The Kansas Behavioral Sciences Regulatory Board approved an emergency regulation requiring fingerprint-based national background checks for new licensure applicants starting Jan. 1, 2026, and an opt-in path for current licensees to become eligible for multistate compacts.
Montcalm County, Michigan
After an extended discussion about enforcement and liability, the Montcalm County Board of Commissioners voted to repeal the county parks ordinance enacted in 1995 and asked staff to consult legal counsel about next steps and park‑specific rules.
Homewood City, Jefferson County, Alabama
At its Nov. 10 meeting Mayor Andrews presented a proclamation recognizing Jane Reed Ross for decades of landscape architecture work in Homewood and announced a new trail bridge will be named for her. Ross thanked the council and reflected on the role of public infrastructure in lifting children’s self‑esteem.
POTEAU, School Districts, Oklahoma
The board approved the auditor acknowledgement, minutes and financial reports, adjustments to the playoff stipend wording, a PKMS principal stipend, updated OSSBA-recommended policies, several out-of-state activity trips, and personnel actions (resignation and two hires) after a brief executive session for personnel.
Bangor City, Penobscot County, Maine
On Nov. 10 the Bangor City Council approved a $60,000 one-time appropriation to support two warming centers this winter, unanimously passed an ordinance rezoning 69 Perry Road, accepted a $3,045,785 WIC grant from the state and approved several routine consent items and a license renewal.
Alfalfa County, Oklahoma
Commissioners added two vendors to six‑month road‑material bids, discussed rock and chip supply details and reviewed an equipment bid for a single‑drum roller missing key specifications.
Bangor City, Penobscot County, Maine
City staff recommended the council temporarily discontinue remote public comment via Zoom because staff cannot reliably prevent abusive or deceptive submissions; remote attendance and broadcasting would continue, and public comment would be accepted in person, by letter, email, or phone, with a reasonable‑accommodation exception.
Revere City, Suffolk County, Massachusetts
The Revere City Council considered downtown parking changes, a political-sign ordinance and several administrative requests on Oct. 27, referring multiple items for follow-up.
Syracuse City, Onondaga County, New York
The commission approved a run of resubdivisions and zoning map recommendations — Carbon Street, Burnett Avenue, multiple resubmissions and a DeWitt three-mile limit — generally issuing negative environmental declarations and standard filing conditions, and adding a bike-rack condition for one parcel.
Alfalfa County, Oklahoma
The county emergency manager told commissioners he will pursue a memorandum of understanding with the city of Cherokee to clarify roles, allow the county to operate on Cherokee's behalf during large incidents and formalize use of the Fairgrounds as a warming/triage station; commissioners asked him to return with a signed draft for their approval.
POTEAU, School Districts, Oklahoma
The board presented multiple staff and student recognitions: site Teachers of the Year across grade spans, a support-employee award to Sheila Nichols, and a Poteau Adult Learning Center recognition as the state's top-performing adult center (79.4% achievement) with fall teacher grants of $4,500 distributed by the Poteau Education Foundation.
Regional School District 15, School Districts, Connecticut
At a board meeting, trustees reviewed a feasibility study that narrowed possible sites for replacing two aging elementary schools, discussed engineering and septic constraints, and debated whether to pursue state reimbursement that could cut roughly 15% from construction costs; neighbors urged the board to rule out a Roxbury Road parcel.
Syracuse City, Onondaga County, New York
The Planning Commission approved the re-subdivision and major site plan for the Onondaga Hotel and Convention Center with filing and review conditions after hearing neighbors raise drainage, egress, noise and cable-service concerns; staff said the project meets zoning and stormwater-review requirements.
Asheville City Schools, School Districts, North Carolina
Superintendent Maggie told the board that staff who can perform job duties remotely will be allowed to do so on inclement weather days, essential hourly staff who must report will receive hazard pay (amount to be determined), and the district will not permit association staff to meet with employees during school hours when staff are on duty.
Oconee County, School Districts, Georgia
At the Nov. 10 meeting Oconee County Schools reported a 24.2 ACT composite for the Class of 2025, announced four REACH Georgia scholars, released the 2026-27 school-choice application timeline, added three deputies to the SRO program (bringing total to 11) and won board approval for two recommended out-of-state band field trips.
Silver Bow County, Montana
The Butte-Silver Bow Study Commission authorized a three-member working group to research charter language, taxing boundaries, equipment ownership and legal precedents after extensive public testimony from career and volunteer firefighters.
Syracuse City, Onondaga County, New York
A neighborhood planner said the council needs to amend last year’s ordinance language to change a property description from 'structure' to 'vacant land' after an emergency demolition; councilors also discussed a contractors list and an appointment item (item 52) that will be amended to name someone other than Mr. Davis.
Bangor City, Penobscot County, Maine
City of Bangor officials told the council Monday that the city will continue a pilot program allowing overnight on‑street parking through the upcoming winter, except when a citywide parking ban or snow‑clearing order is in effect.
Bangor City, Penobscot County, Maine
The Bangor City Council voted Nov. 10 to amend its remote participation policy and stop allowing public comment by remote methods, citing recent disruptive behavior on Zoom and technological limits.
Asheville City Schools, School Districts, North Carolina
An auditor presented the district’s draft 2024–25 audit, reporting an unmodified opinion and general fund balance of about $12.9 million; the Child Nutrition fund cash balance declined from roughly $274,000 to $61,000, which the auditor said warrants monitoring.
Liberty Elementary District (4266), School Districts, Arizona
The district’s IT and procurement staff presented ParentSquare to the board, describing an integrated parent-communication platform and estimating an annual cost around $25,000 plus a one-time onboarding fee (~$2,500). Board members asked for the contract and pricing details and voted to table the item for future consideration.
Lansing, School Boards, Kansas
A Heartland Roofing inspection identified widespread roof issues and moisture-damaged insulation; full replacement of all poor areas was budgeted around $15 million while a mixed strategy using EPDM overlays could lower near-term cost to about $6 million. Administration recommended a special workshop to prepare a bond resolution in December for a
Appropriations, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Committees, Legislative, Georgia
The House Appropriations subcommittee on economic development on Nov. 11 heard updates from state agencies on budget shortfalls, disaster recovery spending and emerging infrastructure needs, including a surge in power demand tied to new data centers.
POTEAU, School Districts, Oklahoma
Facilities staff told the board that two electric buses are scheduled for production on Dec. 1, with likely arrival in early–mid January; an electric-charging station has arrived at the dealership and on-site electrical work by OG&E is underway. The report also listed completed and near-complete HVAC and renovation projects across campuses.
Town of Sellersburg, Clark County, Indiana
After two hours of public comment and council debate, the Town of Sellersburg scheduled an executive session to review financials and conditional terms for a requested one-year lease extension for Growing Minds Preschool; no formal lease vote was taken.
Brookings, Curry County, Oregon
Mayor Isaac Hodges told the city council he will step down as mayor because he is moving out of the city limits; he said Jan. 12, 2026 will be his last meeting at the latest and that he will provide more remarks in future meetings. Councilors praised his service.
Asheville City Schools, School Districts, North Carolina
After a closed-session personnel discussion, the board voted to extend Superintendent Maggie's contract; the amendment was described as extending the contract with no change to overall compensation and passed with one board member recorded as opposed.
Oconee County, School Districts, Georgia
Superintendent Dr. Robert Butler told the board that Dr. Deborah Harden will return to retirement on Nov. 21 after serving as interim and associate superintendent, thanked her for service, announced the county's ESPLOST renewal will fund facilities and technology, and celebrated several state athletic championships across the district.
Revere City, Suffolk County, Massachusetts
A Northeastern graduate demonstrated an AI-driven city data dashboard that aggregates police logs, transit and census data; councilors praised the tool but pressed for provenance and cost clarity and voted to ask the mayor to investigate a prototype pilot.
Lansing, School Boards, Kansas
District administrators reviewed Kansas’ new state assessment scoring and presented CAP/KSDE data, described K–8 math alignment work and outlined behavior interventions including BIST, PBIS and a new KinderBoost early-intervention program.
Anderson City, Anderson County, South Carolina
The council approved on first reading an order setting the municipal general election for Tuesday, April 7, 2026, established candidate-filing and voter-registration deadlines and will consider a second reading at the next meeting.
Wisconsin Rapids School District, School Districts, Wisconsin
Washington Elementary second-grade teachers described the class’ community-based curriculum, including field trips to police, fire, city hall and Lincoln High School ag department, and their annual Pioneer Day activities in which students make butter, write with quills and play period games. Teachers noted a new grant to buy playground scooters.
Liberty Elementary District (4266), School Districts, Arizona
District staff reported a small year-over-year enrollment decline and an October budget snapshot showing payroll-related encumbrance changes. Board members requested more detailed enrollment breakdowns for budget planning and warned that the district may need to revise its December budget.
Asheville City Schools, School Districts, North Carolina
At a regular board meeting, the Asheville City Schools Board of Education voted to approve a contract with the Asheville Police Department to provide school resource officers; the contract was described as circulated in advance and was approved unanimously.
POTEAU, School Districts, Oklahoma
District leaders told the board that OSTP cut-score resets affected score categories but pointed to fewer students in 'below basic' bands and strong eighth-grade math showing (29% below basic); principals will review site-by-site data to target improvements in math proficiency.
Brookings, Curry County, Oregon
Brookings adopted a new SDC methodology on Nov. 10 and froze SDC fee amounts while leaving future fee-setting decisions to subsequent council direction.
Syracuse City, Onondaga County, New York
Councilors discussed a package of items (53–57) that would authorize acquisition, down payment and renovation costs for a building intended as a new fire department maintenance facility; staff said the costs should be financed through bonds and councilors flagged large, unspecified sums.
Columbus City Council, Columbus, Franklin County, Ohio
At a Columbus City Council hearing, council members and city officials held a second session to review proposed amendments to Title 39 of the Columbus City Code, which governs the Office of Diversity and Inclusion.
Lansing, School Boards, Kansas
Three parents told the Lansing Unified School District board during public comment that school leadership has failed to respond adequately to safety incidents at Lansing Elementary School and asked the board to hold administrators accountable.
Homewood City, Jefferson County, Alabama
Committee previewed contracts for Riley Jackson (contractor/position not fully specified at pre-meeting) and an employment agreement to make Kale Smith acting city manager effective Nov. 3; councilors discussed making the acting-city-manager contract retroactive and will vote on the contracts at the upcoming council meeting.
Oconee County, School Districts, Georgia
At its Nov. 10 meeting the Oconee County Board of Education unanimously approved two out-of-state band trips, removed and approved a student electronic device policy for public review, authorized a technology surplus list, approved a bus camera purchase for $191,188.60 and certified the results of the Nov. 4 special election.
GreeleySchool District No. 6 in the county of Weld, School Districts , Colorado
At its Nov. 10 meeting the board approved proclamations recognizing school psychologists and education support professionals, approved the consent agenda and the district’s annual evaluation council membership, and heard student reports from Early College Academy highlighting dual-enrollment and a request for more parking.
Anderson City, Anderson County, South Carolina
On second and final reading, the Anderson City Council unanimously adopted an ordinance establishing a tiered special tax assessment for rehabilitated historic properties that freezes assessed value for set periods tied to investment levels, with oversight by the Board of Architectural Review.
House of Representatives, House, Committees, Legislative, Puerto Rico
La Comisión de Desarrollo Económico de la Cámara de Representantes celebró la vista pública convocada bajo la Resolución Núm. 400 para estudiar la viabilidad de la energía nuclear en Puerto Rico, recibiendo ponencias técnicas, médicas y comunitarias que ofrecieron criterios -a veces contrapuestos- sobre seguridad, costos y responsabilidades regulatorias.
Homewood City, Jefferson County, Alabama
The committee reviewed engineering recommendations for a three-way stop at Waverly Drive and Avalon, a proposed 12-inch waterline along Brookwood Boulevard, and a stop sign addition at Westover Drive and Shades Road; all items were carried to the Nov. 24 meeting for ordinance readings and public input.
Riley, Kansas
Steve Shirley and Tammy Lehi reported on Oct. 13 Employee Day, citing 231 attendees and survey results; staff also updated commissioners on an RFP, nuisance-case process under Senate Bill 384, fire-district consolidation paperwork and public-works projects.
Brookings, Curry County, Oregon
The Brookings City Council on Nov. 10 authorized the city manager to enter into an agreement with PlayCraft Systems LLC for the purchase and installation of playground equipment and surfacing at Bud Cross Park for $123,638.99.
Liberty Elementary District (4266), School Districts, Arizona
A district school psychologist told the board she had performed evaluations and transfers since August and asked for compensation. The board debated whether it could act on a public-comment request and, after discussion, voted down a motion to add $4,700 supplemental pay; the board later approved other personnel actions on a separate motion.
Homewood City, Jefferson County, Alabama
The committee previewed three Brookwood Village–area items to appear on the Nov. 24 agenda: an amended development plan to create new lots and parking for Andrews Sports Medicine, a Valvoline instant oil change proposal that drew landscaping and zoning concerns, and a temporary road-closure request during reconstruction.
Wisconsin Rapids School District, School Districts, Wisconsin
The board approved the 2026–27 calendar, security upgrades at a district recreation facility, and a new girls wrestling coaching position among routine personnel and finance actions.
Faulkner County, Arkansas
County staff told the Budget and Finance Committee they will reappropriate remaining ARP dollars and may shift funds between restricted and unrestricted ARP accounts so all grant spending is complete by the federal deadline. The committee approved batched reappropriations and zeroed out several closed subfunds.
Homewood City, Jefferson County, Alabama
Our Lady of Sorrows asked the city to rezone a single commercial lot to institutional (I-2) so the church campus can be consolidated into one lot; planning commission recommended favorable action and the council scheduled a Nov. 24 public hearing.
POTEAU, School Districts, Oklahoma
The Poteau School Board heard its auditor’s exit presentation and approved an audit acknowledgment after Jenkins and Kemper CPAs said the district received a qualified opinion on a regulatory basis of accounting and an adverse opinion relative to GAAP; the auditors reported no findings for major federal awards.
Liberty Elementary District (4266), School Districts, Arizona
The Liberty Elementary District governing board elected Sarah Schmidt president and Brian Ciarancione vice president and approved several consent and procurement actions at its Nov. 10 meeting.
Homewood City, Jefferson County, Alabama
Architects and engineers presented an amended development plan to expand and renovate the Piggly Wiggly store, moving the primary entrance to the south side because ALDOT may close the existing north entrance; councilors raised pedestrian-safety and landscaping questions and set a public hearing for Nov. 24.
Riley, Kansas
At its Nov. 10 meeting the Riley County Commission approved a series of routine motions: acceptance of a contractor low bid for Station 116, tax-roll corrections, a grant agreement with the City of Manhattan for recovery court funding, approval of Nov. 6 minutes and authorization to advertise a custodial position.
Faulkner County, Arkansas
Faulkner County's prosecuting attorney told the Budget and Finance Committee federal VOCA cuts forced the office to seek county funding for one victim-witness coordinator next year; the committee approved the prosecutor's budget request and related victim-service fund.
Faulkner County, Arkansas
The Faulkner County Budget and Finance Committee approved the bulk of department budgets for 2026, endorsing a 3% cost-of-living adjustment that drove most "above-the-line" personnel increases. The committee also reappropriated ARP funds to meet federal deadlines and tabled a handful of items that require additional information.
Pryor Creek, Mayes County, Oklahoma
Trustees approved the EDTA's 2026 meeting calendar, noting only routine adjustments for holidays (Indigenous Peoples' Day moved to second Monday of October) and no other significant changes.
Homewood City, Jefferson County, Alabama
Phase 4 bids for the Homewood Public Library renovation are approximately $127,000 over budget; staff proposed moving bond funds from a US-31 tunnel project (expected spring 2026) to finish the final phase and return to re-budgeting once tunnel timing is clearer.
RALSTON PUBLIC SCHOOLS, School Districts, Nebraska
Facilities staff outlined five roofing bid packages and a stadium press‑box/concession design, with Nov. 26 walk‑throughs and phased bid openings planned; staff aim to complete major projects while managing special‑building fund obligations.
Lewiston City, Nez Perce County, Idaho
Council authorized a state‑local agreement to apply approximately $2,000,000 in grant funds to safety work on Bridal Canyon Road.
Homewood City, Jefferson County, Alabama
Accounting consultant Carrigs & Ingram presented the city’s month-by-month reporting and projected about $2.9 million net income in the general fund through August; the committee treated the presentation as informational with no vote.
RALSTON PUBLIC SCHOOLS, School Districts, Nebraska
The district reported year-to-date revenue higher than last year and a prepared building-fund bond payment, but administrators flagged persistent lunch‑program deficits and audit findings requiring corrective budget hearings on internal funds.
Pryor Creek, Mayes County, Oklahoma
The EDTA voted to approve pursuing the Oklahoma Department of Commerce Community Marketing Partnership Program grant (up to $35,000), which requires a local match and must be accepted by Dec. 1; trustees discussed payout schedule, clawback language and procurement requirements.
Homewood City, Jefferson County, Alabama
Organizers asked the committee to allow a Dec. 1 holiday music event in the city right-of-way at Track Shack; councilors asked about coordination, indemnification and existing seasonal displays and held the item for the Nov. 24 meeting.
RALSTON PUBLIC SCHOOLS, School Districts, Nebraska
Officials told the board that expanded asphalt and campus footprints are increasing snow‑removal needs and recommended replacing aging trucks; administration will seek clarification from vendors and bring purchase recommendations for board approval to avoid losing vehicles on dealer lots.
Wisconsin Rapids School District, School Districts, Wisconsin
The board approved a collaborative agreement to share legal and appraisal costs with the City of Wisconsin Rapids and other taxing entities to defend state-assessed mill valuations.
Town of Pittsboro, Chatham County, North Carolina
Summary of formal votes at the Nov. 10 meeting: approval of the Chatham Park South Village SAP; acceptance of two PBO 101 resolution and sculpture donations; adoption of the Planning Board composition UDO amendment; approval of West Street rezoning; Reeves Farm development agreement and preliminary plat approval; Welcome Center funding and budget
Titusville, Brevard County, Florida
At a Nov. code enforcement hearing in Titusville, Magistrate Don Wynn found several properties now in compliance but ordered administrative costs or daily fines for others and set correction deadlines, notably imposing $250-per-day and $100-per-day penalties for ongoing violations.
RALSTON PUBLIC SCHOOLS, School Districts, Nebraska
Board members considered two draft calendars for 2026–27 and 2027–28, weighing balanced semester instruction for high school against a version that gives a longer Christmas break but could create extended gaps in school attendance and strain child‑care and meal programs.
Riley, Kansas
County Clerk Rich Vargo told the Riley County Commission that inmate medical and off-site housing costs have pushed the corrections fund over budget, and the county will move roughly $300,000 from the general fund to cover statutorily obligated expenses.
Pryor Creek, Mayes County, Oklahoma
Main Street staff reported that community engagement and town halls favored Plan A for the downtown streetscape (reduced bump outs, landscaping and irrigation) and reminded trustees that façade funding applications close on the 14th; several downtown events and shop‑local promotions were also highlighted.
Muscatine County, Iowa
The board appointed David Lurch and another applicant to two open seats on the Muscatine County Historic Preservation Commission, filling terms through Jan. 1, 2027 and Jan. 1, 2028.
GreeleySchool District No. 6 in the county of Weld, School Districts , Colorado
The Greeley-Evans School District 6 Board of Education honored Greeley Central teacher Steven Paulson with a reception and video recognition after the Colorado Department of Education named him the state’s Teacher of the Year. Colleagues and students praised his classroom rigor, mentorship programs and the impact on student outcomes.
Lewiston City, Nez Perce County, Idaho
The Lewiston City Council authorized a TAP state‑local agreement for 8th Street (5th Ave to 11th Ave) that will fund pedestrian improvements; Public Works Director Dustin Johnson said the award requires a 7.34% local match and that packet numbers are estimates pending engineering.
RALSTON PUBLIC SCHOOLS, School Districts, Nebraska
District leaders outlined a multi‑year technology plan that includes live classroom translation, Clever single sign‑on and a pilot of Google’s Gemini Plus for staff, along with network rebuilds and expanded cybersecurity training.
Muscatine County, Iowa
The board authorized purchase of a replacement cab tractor (John Deere model) and heard engineering updates on paving and bridge projects, including planned demolition of a box culvert on 180th Street.
Wisconsin Rapids School District, School Districts, Wisconsin
The Wisconsin Rapids School Board voted 3–3 and failed to approve a multi-year purchase of Mastery Connect, an assessment-alignment tool that integrates with Canvas. Supporters cited alignment and time savings; opponents and some board members said teachers had not been sufficiently consulted. The board will revisit the item in December.
Tumwater, Thurston County, Washington
A resident public commenter said Energize Thurston helped them switch from gas to electric heating by providing clear communication, dependable contractors and generous incentives; the commenter called heat pumps a "magic machine" and urged others to adopt them.
RALSTON PUBLIC SCHOOLS, School Districts, Nebraska
The Ralston Public Schools board recognized high school athletic achievements and two Meadows Elementary students who advanced in Nebraska's inaugural Kid Governor program during its Nov. 10 meeting.
Town of Pittsboro, Chatham County, North Carolina
The board reviewed a police-station predesign that proposes renovation plus a two‑story addition and heard staff financial projections showing the town would need to either phase projects or increase the tax rate (estimated 5–8¢) to fully fund a town hall, police expansion and fire station over coming years.
Muscatine County, Iowa
Supervisors approved two change orders totaling $14,650 for stone replacement, roof/parapet membrane work and handrail repairs at the Community Services Building.
Beatrice Public Schools, School Districts, Nebraska
The Beatrice Board of Education approved its consent agenda including minutes and budget items, heard an October treasurer's report showing October revenue of $4,330,432.12 and total bills of $4,332,114.14, and received student and staff updates including recognition of employee of the month Tara Weis.
Coffey County, Kansas
The commission conducted interviews for Planning & Zoning and Housing Authority openings, tabled final nominations, and approved up to $14,000 for maintenance of the recycling cardboard baler to be reimbursed from the recycling aluminum-can account.
Village of Hartland, Waukesha County, Wisconsin
To lock in current pricing and shorten delivery lead time, trustees approved a request allowing the police chief to order two patrol squads in 2025 that will be paid for when received in 2026.
Muscatine County, Iowa
The board expanded handgun-purchase assistance policies to include corrections officers and adopted federal transport qualifications for corrections staff. Supervisors also authorized the FY25–26 methamphetamine drug hot-spots grant for $9,000.
Lewiston City, Nez Perce County, Idaho
Lewiston City Council met Nov. 10 and unanimously approved a set of measures including pedestrian and road‑safety grants, an interlocal shooting‑range agreement with Clarkston, and advisory‑board appointments.
Florence City, Florence County, South Carolina
During public comment a resident, Gina Gilliard, complained of a two-year drainage and erosion problem at 1564 Quonset that she says has damaged her property, described out-of-pocket repairs and potential chemical contamination, and asked the city to inspect and remediate; staff collected her address to coordinate follow-up with the city manager.
Westminster, Jefferson County, Colorado
The WEDA board authorized the executive director to contract with Murray Dahl, Berry, and Renald, LLP for downtown Westminster legal services (urban renewal and eminent domain) not to exceed $150,000; the motion passed 6–1 after the city attorney said the prior $150,000 was effectively spent and cited an hourly rate of $350.
Village of Hartland, Waukesha County, Wisconsin
Trustees directed staff to prepare ordinance language and maps to expand the village’s registered-offender residency buffer (discussion mentioned increasing from 750–1,000 to roughly 1,250 feet); the board voted to bring the ordinance back for three readings.
Muscatine County, Iowa
Muscatine County agreed to send a letter supporting an ISAC amicus brief about whether federal/state pipeline siting preempts local zoning and approved a conditional $500 contribution contingent on the U.S. Supreme Court granting certiorari.
Pryor Creek, Mayes County, Oklahoma
EDTA reported the 2025 Pryor Bluegrass Festival had roughly 3,300 visits from 2,900 visitors, but weather and reduced sponsorships left the event with higher expenses and a larger net shortfall than 2024; organizers outlined planning changes for 2026.
Coffey County, Kansas
County engineers received KDOT sign-off on drainage and the commission approved a revised change order for Airport Access Road Phase 2 after negotiating down mobilization costs; the board also moved a no-cost extension to align the project with CDBG grant deadlines.
St. Francis Area Schools, School Boards, Minnesota
On Nov. 10 the St. Francis Area Schools board approved a resolution to return votes from a recent special election and adopted work agreements for the Information Technology department and bus drivers; the bus driver agreement passed by a recorded 7–0 vote.
Muscatine County, Iowa
Staff briefed supervisors on a special-use permit the Board of Adjustment granted for the Louisa–Muscatine solar project covering roughly 300+ acres in A1 zoning and additional industrially zoned acreage; staff noted CSR is not a deciding factor under the county's solar ordinance.
Town of Pittsboro, Chatham County, North Carolina
The board approved a development agreement and preliminary plat for Reeves Farm Phase 1 (approximately 250 lots), including dedication of roughly 49.69 acres of public recreation land and a $500,000 fee-in-lieu component. The developer and staff said heavy upfront infrastructure costs justify phasing affordable housing into later phases.
Westminster, Jefferson County, Colorado
Council approved four first-reading measures Nov. 10 addressing official postings, employee retirement plan changes, an EMS-related appropriation and greywater regulation.
Village of Hartland, Waukesha County, Wisconsin
Multiple residents told the board they regularly see drivers fail to stop at the Lindenwood–Maple crosswalk and asked trustees to fund a rectangular rapid flashing beacon (RRFB) in 2026.
Black Mountain, Buncombe County, North Carolina
The council approved the consent agenda (minutes, tax collector report, resolutions and professional services agreements), proclaimed November as Indigenous Peoples Heritage Month, recognized Town Manager Josh Harrell, and authorized a closed session to discuss personnel under North Carolina statute.
Coffey County, Kansas
Gallagher and ProvidersCare told Coffey County commissioners the transition from ValueHealth to Edison as third-party administrator is resolving earlier claims delays and that pharmacy rebates are now a 100% pass-through to the county; providers said they are monitoring claims and will meet with county employees to address remaining cases.
Muscatine County, Iowa
The board waived the third reading and adopted Ordinance 11 10 25 01 to rezone property in Bloomington Township from A1 to R1 on the second and final reading via roll-call vote.
St. Francis Area Schools, School Boards, Minnesota
District elementary leaders reported new literacy and math implementations, family engagement activity and special‑education program changes at the Nov. 10 school board meeting.
Clinton City, Clinton County, Iowa
Council approved property sales, contracts and extensions in votes that included the sale of two properties, a switching-services agreement for the rail park and an extension to the Hobo Renewable Diesel development timeline.
Westminster, Jefferson County, Colorado
Council passed an emergency ordinance to implement ballot issue 3H (a 0.4% sales-tax for paramedics and pavement) so the city can transmit the enacting ordinance to the state before the 45-day deadline; the emergency measure passed 6–1 with Councilor Ireland opposed.
Muscatine County, Iowa
The Board approved a $36,000 contract with Neapolitan Labs to redesign the county website and updated password policy to require 12-character minimum passwords and longer change intervals where MFA is used.
Churchill County, Nevada
The commission approved continued annual funding of $17,000 to the Churchill Animal Protection Society and authorized reallocating $10,812 of previously approved funds toward drainage repairs in the kennel area; CAPS described facility improvements funded by volunteers and prior county support.
Village of Hartland, Waukesha County, Wisconsin
The Village of Hartland Village Board unanimously approved the 2026 municipal budget package — including a $9.97 million general fund, utility budgets, a 5% annual sewer rate increase and a $7,392,828 property tax levy that raises the village rate by 3¢ per $1,000.
Town of Pittsboro, Chatham County, North Carolina
The Pittsboro Board of Commissioners voted Nov. 10 to approve the Chatham Park South Village Small Area Plan after extended public comment and lengthy Q&A, adopting a conceptual 5,000‑acre framework that staff says is consistent with the town’s 2015 master plan entitlements.
Coffey County, Kansas
The Coffey County Commission voted Nov. 11 to amend the projectost limit to include Phase 2 courthouse renovations, bringing the amended guaranteed maximum price (GMP) to $29,999,410 and approving change orders that reallocate Phase 1 contingencies to Phase 2 while keeping the project under the voter-approved $30 million cap.
West Bend City, Washington County, Wisconsin
The council approved an update to the Mid Moraine Municipal Court operational agreement that clarifies administrative committee roles, vacancy procedures, judge-salary setting consistent with Wisconsin statutes and adds the town of Fredonia and the city of Sheboygan Falls as members, increasing participation from 18 to 20 communities.
St. Francis Area Schools, School Boards, Minnesota
District staff proposed a work‑based learning program that would initially target seniors in CTE pathways, require a minimum 10 hours per week of work, and award high‑school credit; the presenter asked the board to consider funding a half‑time coordinator, noting Perkins funds would cover portions of CTE salaries and endorsement costs.
Fremont County, Colorado
At the Nov. 10 meeting the board unanimously approved a Class A secure transportation license and Type 1 vehicle permit for BS Transport Services LLC, reappointed Amanda Ellis to the Fair Board, and adopted proclamations honoring the Florence High School band, crash responder safety week and Veterans Day.
Westminster, Jefferson County, Colorado
Council members on Nov. 10 set a schedule to solicit applications and hold interviews to fill a seat that will open when Mayor-elect Claire Carmelia is sworn in Dec. 1.
Beatrice Public Schools, School Districts, Nebraska
Superintendent Alexander told the Beatrice Board of Education that an NDE federal desk audit requires districts to add a travel section to internal controls policy 31-32, saying federal grant-funded travel must be 'reasonable'; the change will be on future agendas for a second reading.
Black Mountain, Buncombe County, North Carolina
The council tabled a proposed amendment to the town's traffic code that would extend downtown sidewalk restrictions to scooters, hoverboards, skateboards and similar wheeled devices while staff and council refine language and exemptions.
EL PASO ISD, School Districts, Texas
The El Paso Independent School District board voted 7-0 on Nov. 10 to schedule interviews for five candidates for the superintendent vacancy and heard a presentation from a TASB executive-search consultant on recent community outreach and the next steps in the process.
West Bend City, Washington County, Wisconsin
The West Bend council approved a package of land-use actions on Nov. 10 including final approval to vacate Campus Drive to enable redevelopment of the UWWC campus, permanent rezoning of 159.07 acres to RS‑4 with environmental overlays, acceptance of a road dedication named Forge Place, and authorization of a property sale to PKH Holdings LLC.
Muscatine County, Iowa
The Muscatine County Board of Supervisors approved a term sheet to settle employment litigation filed by former jail administrator Dean Naylor. County counsel said the settlement closes nearly six years of litigation after prior summary-judgment rulings and appeals.
Kenai, Kenai Peninsula Borough, Alaska
The Kenai Harbor Commission voted unanimously Nov. 10 to recommend that City Council consider sunsetting the commission.
Clinton City, Clinton County, Iowa
Council approved capital improvements including converting a dilapidated tennis court at Emma Young Park into multiple courts and authorizing floor repairs at Eagle Point Lodge; council debated vinyl plank versus hardwood flooring and reviewed bids and previously authorized budget figures.
Concord, Merrimack County , New Hampshire
Parks staff and consultants presented a Memorial Field master plan Nov. 10 that proposes drainage and grading fixes, expanded on-site parking and new or relocated fields and facilities. The administration earmarked $1.2 million for final design and permitting as the next phase and identified potential grant sources to offset costs.
Churchill County, Nevada
The board approved a tentative subdivision map for the Sand Creek development (Casey Road, LLC) that reconfigures a north unit of Old Stone Ranch PUD from a roughly 500‑unit multifamily plan into about 180 single‑family lots, with phasing and road‑maintenance conditions.
Lee County, Illinois
The committee approved last month's minutes, heard a sheriff report about phone outages possibly caused by fiber cuts, and adjourned by unanimous voice vote after routine business.
Palo Alto, Santa Clara County, California
Multiple public commenters asked the council to require a pilot natural grass field to compare with synthetic turf because of PFAS and microplastic concerns; others pressed for stronger enforcement of RV parking and attention to impacts on neighborhood safety and business.
Black Mountain, Buncombe County, North Carolina
The Town of Black Mountain council voted to lower the speed limit on South Ridgeway Avenue and Sutton Avenue from 25 mph to 20 mph after a staff recommendation from the Active Mobility Commission. Council members said an education blitz will precede enforcement and staff will install signs as available.
Concord, Merrimack County , New Hampshire
At its Nov. 10 meeting the Concord City Council approved a package of ordinances and grant applications — including parking and zoning changes, a housing/community development plan readoption and several CDBG and federal brownfields grants — while deferring the police headquarters appropriation to a later date.
Florence City, Florence County, South Carolina
Council heard multiple constituent complaints alleging private-towing operators charge fees well above city caps and hold vehicles at off-site lots; staff said they will draft ordinance amendments to increase notification requirements, align city code with state law and enable enforcement by police and the city attorney.
Akron, Summit County, Ohio
The Akron Planning and Economic Development Committee approved on consent an ordinance allowing the city designee to enter into an agreement with Drum Properties 3, LLC for Summit County parcel 6860728 on Spicer, including a five-year option arrangement and an option fee of $5,500.
Palo Alto, Santa Clara County, California
The City Council voted unanimously to pursue four‑quadrant gate systems at key Caltrain crossings to enable a quiet zone, directing staff to secure funding and coordinate with Caltrain and regulatory agencies on design and timeline.
Fremont County, Colorado
The Fremont County commissioners approved MS 25-001 (Sinclair Minor Subdivision) at 350 Sangre De Cristo Drive in Coaldale, granting four waivers and imposing four conditions plus a contingency requiring compliance with a Division of Water Resources letter dated 03/05/2025.
Concord, Merrimack County , New Hampshire
Concord council tables $45.5 million police headquarters vote after hours of testimony
Churchill County, Nevada
After extended discussion about recruitment and budget implications, the County Commission approved hiring a chief civil deputy district attorney at grade 83, step 12, with staff saying the change addresses a longstanding vacancy and the DA's office arguing the hire will prevent costly litigation.
Lee County, Illinois
County staff reported progress on nuisance/abandoned properties, said funds from the Strong Communities grant must be expended by November, and said a local developer is considering residential redevelopment at the Lee Center School site.
Clinton City, Clinton County, Iowa
During public comment Celeste Robbins urged the council to explain which agency is enforcing animal-control laws and where impounded animals are held, citing Iowa Code 351.36–351.43 and asking whether the city has executed any new shelter contract and whether healthy animals might be euthanized under current arrangements.
Palo Alto, Santa Clara County, California
The Palo Alto City Council voted to approve the planned‑home zoning amendment for 660 University Avenue after extended public testimony and technical review, adopting staff recommendations as modified to include restored spillover‑parking mitigations and conditions for tree protection and construction logistics.
Lafayette, Contra Costa County, California
Council adopted the agenda and approved the consent calendar, appointed Christie Rodenbush to the Creeks Committee (resolution 2025-54), and approved a School Street closure for the Town Hall Theatre event (resolution 2025-55); several motions were moved and seconded and were approved by voice vote.
West Bend City, Washington County, Wisconsin
The West Bend Police Department introduced its new dual-purpose K9 'Valor' and handler Officer Trevor Gates, and the city presented citizen recognition awards to Pat Prescott and Tracy Hokanson for saving a man's life with an AED and CPR in March 2025.
Wisconsin Arts Board, State Agencies, Executive, Wisconsin
Staff reported rising follower counts and post reach and the committee discussed channel-specific strategies, tagging grantees, partnerships and staffing capacity. Vivian Temchenko will provide a post-meeting report of subscriber and engagement metrics and revisit strategy in March.
Black Mountain, Buncombe County, North Carolina
Several residents and recreation commission members told the Black Mountain Town Council the Veterans Park disc golf course has been neglected, calling routine mowing "an easy and inexpensive" fix and asking the town to follow the 2023 master plan. Council members said staff will meet with residents and report back.
Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon
The Council deferred a decision on the disposition of a city‑owned shower/restroom trailer after Community Sharing raised insurer objections to emergency deployments and councilors asked staff for additional information about insurance exposure and operating costs.
Lafayette, Contra Costa County, California
The city manager said five proposals were received to update development-impact fees, staff will interview consultants, and a public workshop and online survey are open for Hamlin Parkland with input requested by Nov. 17; engineering work continues on 2026 street maintenance and striping downtown.
Beatrice Public Schools, School Districts, Nebraska
Board member Marissa Centeno resigned effective immediately citing an accelerated family move; the board accepted her resignation and voted to ask former board members Lisa Pieper and Janet Byers whether they would fill the remainder of the term, citing Nebraska statute for appointment authority.
Fremont County, Colorado
Fremont County presented a conservative 2026 draft budget that anticipates higher property assessment revenue, a projected drop in sales taxes, stepped pay increases for county staff, and continued use of ARPA funds for capital projects; final adoption is scheduled for Dec. 16, 2025.
Lee County, Illinois
A department representative said staff will train on a new Tyler data-management system the week of Nov. 17, with a December 1 go-live; the county will not do an automated data conversion and will retain the old system for historical/pretrial records.
Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon
The Cottage Grove City Council voted unanimously to approve the first reading of Ordinance No. 3200, moving forward with the Cottage Grove Urban Renewal Plan after a presentation from staff and no public testimony.
Lafayette, Contra Costa County, California
Commissioners told council the CPOD plan has been completed and submitted to council, Lafayette now has 30 recognized Firewise neighborhoods (largest ~295 homes; Burton Valley would add ~950 homes when approved), and the commission plans additional outreach and a new printing of the wildfire guide estimated at $19,000–$20,000 across three cities.
Clinton City, Clinton County, Iowa
The council authorized a switching-services agreement with Burlington Short Line Railroad (doing business as Burlington Junction Railway), saying the company will operate an engine at the rail park; city staff described a revenue split that sets aside 10% for maintenance and allocates 30% to the city's rail-park fund.
Wisconsin Arts Board, State Agencies, Executive, Wisconsin
Committee members reviewed proposed bookmark collateral and pressed for simpler, more accessible design, professional printing and clearer Wisconsin Arts Board branding. Several board members also suggested initiating a broader brand review or redesign in the coming 18–24 months.
Florence City, Florence County, South Carolina
At a November meeting, the Florence City Council approved annexation and zoning measures, adopted recognition resolutions for local leaders and artists, and amended a resolution to provide $65,000 in emergency aid to local food banks in response to a federal shutdown.
Lafayette, Contra Costa County, California
City staff on Monday outlined final design, schedule and funding for the Connecting Lafayette pedestrian-and-bicycle project, which will add a 10-foot asphalt pathway on School Street and a narrowed path on Topper Lane, saying construction could begin in April and finish in August and that $4.6 million has been assembled toward a total estimated cost of $44.36 million.
Clinton City, Clinton County, Iowa
The Clinton City Council adopted a resolution approving a second amendment to its development agreement with Hobo Renewable Diesel LLC, extending key deadlines to Dec. 31, 2026, to give the company time to secure equity and debt financing for a project Hobo representatives said would cost roughly $1.9 billion.
Lee County, Illinois
Animal-control officer Terry told the Public Safety Committee the shelter is near capacity, warned a federal shutdown could push households to relinquish pets, and said the office will start a pet-food drive and continue low-cost vaccine clinics.
Beatrice Public Schools, School Districts, Nebraska
The Beatrice Board of Education voted 6–0 to authorize a $1,729,050 payment on a tax general obligation refunding bond series 2010B tied to Quality School Construction funding awarded in 2010, a payment the superintendent said had been anticipated and budgeted for.
Moorhead Area Public Schools, School Boards, Minnesota
The board approved a committee recommendation for a 9% aggregate increase in district health insurance premiums, and approved vendor adjustments for stop‑loss and pharmacy administration.
Wisconsin Arts Board, State Agencies, Executive, Wisconsin
The External Relations Committee reviewed a board-facing 'WAB Fast Facts' sheet to help board members talk about the agency, agreed to include technical-support and regranting language, and asked staff to finalize a revised one-pager for the December board meeting. Members also agreed to move future committee meetings to 10 a.m.
Lavaca County, Texas
The court approved a policy allowing private permanent water lines to be bored under county roads with a required pipeline-style permit and a $500 fee; commission said the policy applies countywide and includes accountability for repairs.
West Bend City, Washington County, Wisconsin
Finance staff moved a $28,000 transfer to cover Regner Aquapark expenses pending delayed donations and the committee accepted three donations and GEMT reimbursement funds for EMS operations.
Moorhead Area Public Schools, School Boards, Minnesota
Moorhead trustees approved the district’s 2024–25 Comprehensive Achievement and Civic Readiness report (formerly 'World's Best Workforce'); staff reported proficiency growth in 15 of 22 subgroups and outlined a new high‑school report card for college and career readiness.
Lauderhill City, Broward County, Florida
Lauderhill commissioners voted 5‑0 to approve a special exception allowing a spinal‑specialist medical office that will occasionally issue controlled‑substance prescriptions. The applicant said there will be no on‑site distribution of controlled substances.
Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina
Charlotte City Council awarded a two‑year youth violence prevention communications contract to Creative Marketing Resources, Inc., on Nov. 10 despite objections from three council members who urged that the city prioritize local primes.
Solvang, Santa Barbara County, California
During public communications on Nov. 10, Charlene Getz, a Solvang resident and member of the Design Review Committee, asked the council to restore Mission San Ynez to its original private land-use designation, saying current city oversight imposes extra restrictions compared with other private event venues and imposes costs on community events.
Moorhead Area Public Schools, School Boards, Minnesota
District staff presented November 1 enrollment and five‑year projections to the board, reporting the district’s November 1 count (presented as 7,360 students) and noting grade‑level 'bubble' effects that will influence staffing and program decisions.
Erath County, Texas
Erath County approved an MoA with TxDOT for the Duffer Creek Bridge adoption, an EMS training partnership, and several precinct-level road and vendor actions on Nov. 10.
Elmhurst, DuPage County, Illinois
A cluster of previously requested circle‑back items was reviewed: consultant fees split between the General Fund and TIFs, the city’s postage allocation process, and the status and use of several rented parking lots. Staff answered detailed questions and offered follow‑up information for some items.
Lavaca County, Texas
After a photo showed an overweight crane using a low–load-limit bridge near a drilling site, the Lavaca County Commissioners Court asked staff, the county attorney and the sheriff to convene a special workshop to tighten routing language, bonding and penalties for oil-and-gas-related road permits.
West Bend City, Washington County, Wisconsin
City staff told the council that 14 bid packages for Fire Station No. 1 have bidders and demolition and tank removal are complete; pending test results, the anticipated completion date shifted to November 2026 because of utility and environmental work. Two remaining contracts will be held directly with the city because of labor sourcing rules.
Erath County, Texas
The court approved purchases for deputy equipment (JPX systems and holsters, plus Mossberg shotguns), awarded the outside audit services contract to Eide Bailly, approved end-of-year budget adjustments and authorized payment of invoices totaling $442,066.53.
Cornwall-Lebanon SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania
Technology staff will ask the board for permission to go to bid on wireless access points and data switches for the high school; E‑Rate funding is expected to reimburse about 60% of eligible costs, reducing the district’s local share to roughly 40%.
Lauderhill City, Broward County, Florida
Commissioners adopted an amendment clarifying code that allows fines against property owners who permit unauthorized or illegal businesses, while directing staff to create an enforcement policy and education program to protect first‑time legitimate small businesses.
Solvang, Santa Barbara County, California
The Solvang City Council on Nov. 10 reintroduced Ordinance No. 25-0384 to amend terms and qualifications for city advisory bodies, clarifying meeting minimums for the RMOC and business-ownership qualifications for certain committee seats; the council introduced the ordinance for first reading by title only in a 5-0 vote.
Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina
Planning staff presented 14 community area plans and a revised policy map to Charlotte City Council on Nov. 10; council members argued over whether to adopt all plans at once or phase adoption to allow more targeted outreach.
Erath County, Texas
The county approved two subdivision plats in the Mountain Lakes area (Lot 753R split into 753R-A and 753R-B; Lots 897 and 898 combined into Lot 897R) and tabled a Lasombra manufactured-home community site plan until the City of Dublin confirms public water-connection approval.
Moorhead Area Public Schools, School Boards, Minnesota
Trustees unanimously approved a resolution to canvass and certify returns from the district’s Nov. 4 special election; staff summarized vote totals for two ballot questions.
Elmhurst, DuPage County, Illinois
The Elmhurst Committee of the Whole heard a finance committee recommendation to raise the general‑fund property tax levy by $1,000,000 and will consider committee‑backed budget adjustments ahead of a Nov. 17 budget review.
West Bend City, Washington County, Wisconsin
The City of West Bend adopted a balanced 2026 operating budget that sets a $28.3 million tax levy and a city tax rate of about $6.46 per $1,000 of assessed value. The budget keeps most services intact, funds road projects and the new fire station, and adds several staff positions, including a full‑time airport superintendent.
Lavaca County, Texas
The court approved creating two full-time ICE 287(g) task-force deputy positions that officials said would be 100% reimbursed by ICE and aimed at immigration interdiction; funding and reimbursement timing were discussed, including pending federal reimbursements for equipment.
Moorhead Area Public Schools, School Boards, Minnesota
The Moorhead Area Public Schools board received a report on 2024–25 community education programs, including early learning, enrichment and adult basic education; presenters said ad sales for district publications produced $30,820 last year and early learning used a state Pre‑K grant to serve 20 high‑need students.
Erath County, Texas
Erath County Commissioners approved a sales agreement for dispatch consoles with Russ Bassett totaling $197,540.93 (county share one-half) and authorized an interlocal agreement with the City of Stephenville and the joint dispatch center for shared DroneSense/UAS use.
Lauderhill City, Broward County, Florida
Lauderhill has shifted median, park and street‑cleaning work in‑house, added dedicated pressure‑wash, irrigation and trash crews, and created a Neighborhood Enrichment & Appearance Team (NEET) to inspect public facilities and plazas. The city proposed a community cleanup day for January 2026 dividing Lauderhill into eight zones.
Solvang, Santa Barbara County, California
Solvang City Council voted 4-1 on Nov. 10 to approve a $50,000 increase to its pledged contribution for the San Ynez Valley aquatic center, asking staff to finalize appropriation details during the midyear budget adjustment.
Churchill County, Nevada
After hearing two vendor proposals, the Churchill County Board of Commissioners voted to hire Baker Tilly to perform a comprehensive classification and compensation study to inform the county’s pay plan and budget timeline.
Cornwall-Lebanon SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania
The district reported an increase of roughly 180 meals per day (August–September data), continued free breakfast offerings, a stable district free‑and‑reduced rate (43%), new equipment purchases and a USDA Farm‑to‑School grant to support culinary training and scratch‑cooking initiatives.
Chatham County, North Carolina
A farm and food-systems session highlighted Chatham County’s strong agricultural base, rising direct and intermediate sales, and high share of beginning farmers; the presenter recommended protecting prime farmland, expanding cold storage and processing capacity, and funding programs that give new farmers access to land and capital.
Lauderhill City, Broward County, Florida
Following repeated reports of broken elevators in multifamily buildings, Lauderhill officials agreed to build a city inventory of nonoperational elevators and to press Broward County (which holds elevator jurisdiction) for enforcement; staff pledged a six‑month start plan for inspections and coordination with county elevator codes.
Muskegon City, Muskegon County, Michigan
The commission awarded a $390,295 park renovation contract, approved an approximately $26,752‑per‑year traffic‑data subscription, and adopted a police wage increase to bolster recruitment and retention.
Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina
City staff told Charlotte City Council Nov. 10 they are preparing to deliver $5.7 billion in road investments over 30 years, emphasizing accelerated project delivery, small‑business readiness and workforce development.
Chatham County, North Carolina
Commissioners, county staff and the Climate Change Advisory Committee used the retreat to refine the scope of a county climate-action plan: set clear goals, identify partners and metrics, and sequence public engagement to coincide with budget cycles and implementation.
Norwalk City, Fairfield, Connecticut
City staff told the Bike Walk Commission that Norwalk is on track to add roughly 12 miles of sidewalks this year, is designing a contact-bridge to close a dangerous Route 1 sidewalk gap, and is planning bike lanes to connect park drives with a new 12-foot multiuse path at Calf Pasture Beach.
Lauderhill City, Broward County, Florida
After a state‑commissioned performance review of Lauderhill’s Safe Neighborhood Districts (SNDs), commissioners authorized staff to proceed with already‑contracted balcony repairs and directed staff to pursue statutory clarification at the state level. The SND review advised a tighter nexus between projects and crime prevention.
Fountain Hills, Maricopa County, Arizona
The Planning and Zoning Commission voted 6-0 to deny a special use permit requesting 11 residential units on 11 noncontiguous parcels in Plat 106, citing unresolved ownership/control of parcels and lack of finalized HOA/POA arrangements.
Lavaca County, Texas
The county approved an MOU with Gulf Coast Gun Busters to destroy roughly 75 seized firearms at no charge, as the sheriff reported an evidence room backlog.
Chatham County, North Carolina
Jared Brown, interim director of the North Carolina State Climate Office, told Chatham County leaders their county has already warmed about 1.3°F and could see another 2½–3½°F of mean warming in the next 25 years, while extreme rainfall events and hotter nights demand changes to stormwater design and public-health planning.
The Village, Oklahoma County, Oklahoma
Council members promoted upcoming library events and urged residents to use the city website's 'Notify Me' and street-repair request features to identify streets needing work; the meeting adjourned after public announcements.
Lauderhill City, Broward County, Florida
Lauderhill’s City Commission met on Nov. 10 and directed staff to quickly roll out short‑term measures to help residents and federal employees affected by the federal government shutdown.
Fountain Hills, Maricopa County, Arizona
The commission voted 5-1 to recommend rezoning the area bounded by LaMontagne Drive, Palisades Boulevard, Saguaro Boulevard and Avenue of the Fountains to apply a council-approved downtown overlay, after residents raised concerns about potential industrial uses, height and viewshed impacts.
Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina
Council voted to defer item 27, a contract for Spectrum Center event traffic-control services, after members asked city staff to report how much Spectrum contributes and whether cost‑sharing models exist. The deferral passed after procedural confusion; manager Marcus Jones will research the contract details and return to council.
Cornwall-Lebanon SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania
The district provided updates on high‑school renovation phases and stadium work, reporting two change orders (about $10,915 and $47,462) and a schedule that will close portions of the auditorium and music wing for renovations, while Cornwall Elementary’s traffic‑pattern paving is complete and will open once the entrance gate is installed.
Spokane County, Washington
After debate over scope and cost, commissioners agreed Nov. 10 to add $75,000 to contingency to begin a systems evaluation and identify options for integrating criminal‑justice IT platforms; staff will first contact statewide associations and the National Center for State Courts for technical assistance.
CAROLINE CO PBLC SCHS, School Districts, Virginia
Superintendent staff presented the first reading of the FY27–31 CIP, showing $96 million in FY27 requests and noting a preliminary $9.9 million estimate to bring facilities into current ADA compliance and estimated IAQ testing costs.
Muskegon City, Muskegon County, Michigan
After financing delays tied to MSHDA funding, the commission re‑authorized split lot sales previously approved in July so small local developers can pursue workforce duplex and accessory dwelling unit projects targeted at roughly 70–80% AMI (some ADUs at ~50–55% AMI). Developers said they continue to pursue grants to lower rents further.
Canton, Lincoln County, South Dakota
The Canton commissioners approved the second reading of an ordinance to rezone Parcel 200.50.580.001 to a planned development district, authorizing publication on Nov. 20 and an effective date of Dec. 10; staff clarified streets will be public and some lots would see reduced setbacks.
Spokane County, Washington
Commissioners debated options to close portions of Geiger detention operations and cut or buy back programs including electronic home monitoring (EHM), an in‑house teacher and case‑manager positions. Staff presented a gross $3.39M savings option but noted revenue offsets that reduce net county savings.
Norwalk City, Fairfield, Connecticut
City transportation staff described a retrofit pavement-marking plan for West Avenue that adds dedicated bike lanes, green intersection conflict markings and red bus-pull markings; staff said full protected lanes were not feasible in this resurfacing cycle due to existing curb and lane widths.
CAROLINE CO PBLC SCHS, School Districts, Virginia
A Plan Forward survey of CCPS teachers found that Kiddom (elementary) and Mathspace (secondary) offer rich instructional resources but require more professional learning and pacing alignment; staff outlined coaching, PLCs, and midyear surveys as next steps.
Muskegon City, Muskegon County, Michigan
City staff held a public hearing on a PA 198 industrial facilities exemption for Johnson Technology (GE Aerospace) to support a ~20,000‑sq.‑ft., $9M expansion and about 90 new jobs; the commission took public comment and will consider approval after parcel consolidation is complete and requested documents are provided.
Lavaca County, Texas
The Lavaca County Commissioners Court voted Nov. 10 to extend a memorandum of understanding with Colorado County to continue a shared EMS director, keeping the arrangement in effect until either party gives 30 days' notice.
Spokane County, Washington
Commissioners signaled support Nov. 10 for a short-term county contribution to support food banks affected by recent federal shutdown impacts and holiday demand; staff will finalize logistics with Second Harvest and seek matching contributions from cities and partners.
ROCORI PUBLIC SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Boards, Minnesota
The board unanimously approved a resolution accepting multiple in-kind and monetary donations from the Booster Club — equipment, uniforms, costumes and an outdoor PA system — and thanked donors for supporting athletics and activities.
Somerville City, Middlesex County, Massachusetts
The committee heard from DPW Commissioner Jill Lathan on $23,109.33 in prior-year invoices and from Council on Aging Director Ashley Speliotis on a $3,000 Somerville Cambridge Elder Services grant for senior transportation; both items were placed on the consent list to recommend approval.
CAROLINE CO PBLC SCHS, School Districts, Virginia
District presenters described the Lotus Academy Alternative Suspension Center (ASC) as a restorative alternative to out-of-school suspension, reporting early improvements in attendance and student engagement and clarifying chronic absenteeism data and flex-time adjustments.
Fountain Hills, Maricopa County, Arizona
The Fountain Hills Planning and Zoning Commission voted 5-1 to recommend a special use permit that reduces nine parking spaces to extend a drive-through lane for a proposed Dairy Queen at 13212 North Saguaro Boulevard, subject to relocating a grease interceptor and requiring employee off-site parking.
House of Representatives, House, Committees, Legislative, Puerto Rico
Representative Cristian Muriel convened a public hearing on Proyecto de la Cámara 774 to consider amending Ley 255-2002 to permit voting by proxy in savings and credit cooperatives.
The Village, Oklahoma County, Oklahoma
Council members reviewed the North Side YMCA planned unit development design and questioned whether retention areas would hold standing water and about pedestrian railings and access points; staff said retention would not hold water.
House of Representatives, House, Committees, Legislative, Puerto Rico
The Cámara de Representantes convened a special session on Nov. 10, 2025, to honor veterans; speeches emphasized service and urged improved outreach, with the Commission on Federal and Veterans Affairs calling for clearer application of veterans’ rights and benefits.
Somerville City, Middlesex County, Massachusetts
Finance Director Alan Inacio said a clerical correction adds $10,000 to an earlier order; the committee will recommend approval of a $1,110,000 Massachusetts Gaming Commission grant to OSPCD and the Police Department for Union Square Plaza and Streetscape Phase 1, while some councilors questioned police-overtime allocations.
CAROLINE CO PBLC SCHS, School Districts, Virginia
The Caroline County School Board voted to request $847,000 in projected FY25 reversion (carryover) funds to pay part of the estimated $1.1 million cost of modular classroom units at Lewis and Clark Elementary to address immediate overcrowding.
Muskegon City, Muskegon County, Michigan
The commission advanced first‑read rezonings tied to a proposed land swap that would move maritime operations to Mart Dock and make a portion of city‑owned Fisherman’s Landing eligible for redevelopment; the votes drew sustained public comment urging preservation of the campground and questions about sequencing and funding.
Cornwall-Lebanon SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania
An external auditor told the board he expects an unmodified (clean) opinion on the district's 2024‑25 financial statements and on compliance for major federal programs, but the federal single‑audit final report remains pending until the federal compliance supplement is finalized following a federal shutdown.
Glendale, Los Angeles County, California
The Glendale Commission on the Status of Women adopted a resolution to change its regular meeting cadence to the second Monday of each month at 4:30 p.m., reflecting a recent city council ordinance expanding the commission's duties, and approved its August 20 minutes. Both votes passed on roll call, 4–0, with one commissioner absent.
Planning Meetings, Knoxville City, Knox County, Tennessee
Planning staff presented a 116-unit attached residential concept and several rezoning requests, recommending approval with conditions for the large subdivision while advising denial or caution on other proposals such as Davenport Road's requested upzoning and a Clinton Highway zoning change.
Muskegon City, Muskegon County, Michigan
The commission approved a Brownfield Plan Amendment for the Harbor 31 Hotel project and concurred with the Brownfield Redevelopment Authority’s condition that the developer meet federal ADA scoping requirements for accessible rooms; developers told the commission they expect updated plans showing additional accessible units.
Norwalk City, Fairfield, Connecticut
The Norwalk Bike Walk Commission voted unanimously to sign a letter backing a WestCOG/LACCP grant application for Phase 2 sidewalk and pedestrian-safety work on Ward Street between Main and Union, citing proximity to several schools and transit stops.
Glendale, Los Angeles County, California
A Glendale-based filmmaker asked the commission to consider assisting with filming costs for a 9-minute short called 'Neli,' saying a 3-day city filming permit could cost more than $10,000 and account for about 25% of the project’s budget; staff recommended placing the request on the December 8 agenda for full consideration.
ROCORI PUBLIC SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Boards, Minnesota
The ROCORI Public School District board voted to approve proposed changes to its preschool program after debate about transportation costs, fee adjustments and aligning preschool through third grade to improve kindergarten readiness.
Santa Clara , Santa Clara County, California
The City Council recessed into closed session to discuss up to two potential litigation matters, labor negotiations with multiple employee units including the Santa Clara firefighters and the IBEW, and an existing lawsuit, City of Santa Clara v. Lingenfelter. No public comments were offered before the council went into closed session.
The Village, Oklahoma County, Oklahoma
City staff said the city’s building-fee schedule, last reviewed in 2015, needs updating. Staff proposed several fee changes including a new $100 temporary occupancy fee for commercial properties that occupy premises before final completion; transcript did not record final council approval.
Glendale, Los Angeles County, California
The Glendale Commission on the Status of Women heard that the YWCA of Glendale and Pasadena has launched a Safe Haven initiative, completed a DV 101 training with Fire Chief Brooks, and plans expanded short trainings and outreach during its centennial year to strengthen survivor-centered responses at local fire stations.
Somerville City, Middlesex County, Massachusetts
The Finance Committee reviewed a proposal to create a Housing Assistance Stabilization Fund under MGL c.40, §5B to hold multi-year rental-assistance money and allow continuity of landlord payments; no money was appropriated tonight and the committee recommended approval to the City Council.
Cornwall-Lebanon SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania
District leaders told the board the state budget impasse has withheld roughly $11.6 million in expected subsidies, and administrators recommended adopting an Act 1 opt‑out resolution (to not exceed the 4.4% adjusted index) with final certification likely delayed until January pending state guidance.
Legislative Post Audit Committee, Joint, Committees, Legislative, Kansas
The committee approved the agency's triennial audit plan and chose a hybrid approach for 2026 IT security audits (option A confidential agency security audits plus option B audits of local governments), including at least one school district and at least one city and county for local audits.
Renton, King County, Washington
The Renton City Council approved a nine‑item consent agenda, concurred with Finance Committee recommendations to pay vouchers and payroll totaling roughly $9.97 million, and endorsed a 2026 stop‑loss insurance renewal with Symetra that raises the individual deductible to $300,000 to save about $311,521 on the premium.
West Chester Area SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania
The district reported a rise in AP exam success among test‑takers and said concurrent enrollment through West Chester University and University of Pittsburgh is the most used college‑credit pathway, while staff pledged to examine under‑representation of students of color in advanced courses.
The Village, Oklahoma County, Oklahoma
The Village City Council considered a rezoning request to convert 9501 North May Avenue from commercial C2 to a planned unit development to allow Vineyard Church to occupy a roughly 20,000-square-foot former carpet store. Property owners and neighbors raised traffic, parking and long-term exclusivity concerns; staff said the site has been vacant.
Muskegon City, Muskegon County, Michigan
The Muskegon City Commission voted Nov. 10 to authorize upgrades to the city’s beach parking program — adding a T2 pay‑by‑plate system, kiosk modem and keyboard upgrades, and an online portal — and approved online discounts with a staff‑run BOGO sale planned for December.
Somerville City, Middlesex County, Massachusetts
The Finance Committee discharged without recommendation a request to create a citywide Community Benefit Stabilization Fund and accept $3,946,742.98 in developer community-benefit payments; committee members asked for a detailed spreadsheet to show which projects contributed and how much remains in project-specific accounts.
Legislative Post Audit Committee, Joint, Committees, Legislative, Kansas
The Legislative Post Audit report found Kansas state agencies report about 4.1 million square feet of office space statewide, and that private leases in Topeka generally cost less than state-owned leases when fully loaded—but the Department of Administration's building-cost calculations lacked reliability.
Cowlitz County, Washington
The sheriff's office requested additional funding to complete a 60x100 foot storage building to consolidate long‑term evidence vehicles and high‑value equipment; bids and fees pushed the project estimate near $600,000. Finance staff said interest earnings from the Rural Public Facilities Fund could cover the remaining roughly $150,000, and the b
Lebanon, Wilson County, Tennessee
Staff recommended adding Title 14, Chapter 12, Section 12 to Lebanon’s zoning code to specify when development plans create vested rights, aligning local practice with a recent state statutory update and aiming to reduce confusion.
Planning Meetings, Knoxville City, Knox County, Tennessee
Planning staff recommended conditional approval of a seven-lot subdivision on Locust Hill Lane, citing hillside protection, a 1.97-acre disturbance budget (1.93 acres proposed), sight-distance concerns at Chapman Highway and a requirement to widen the substandard frontage to 20 feet.
Cascade City, Dubuque County, Iowa
Council took a series of routine actions including approving the consent agenda, a health-insurance renewal with Wellmark BCBS (1.26% increase), advancing an ordinance on refuse-collection rates, approving G.O. loan steps and tabling a Cascade Economic Development funding request.
Legislative Post Audit Committee, Joint, Committees, Legislative, Kansas
Continuous monitoring of KDHE's early-childhood data integration project found cost estimates growing to about $5.2 million, schedule slippage with an unrealistic near-term completion plan, and quality issues after user-acceptance testing identified more than 600 defects; auditors warned security assurances need clearer deliverables.
Cascade City, Dubuque County, Iowa
After hearing from staff and councilmembers about pedestrian safety and sign options, Cascade City Council voted to move the speed-limit sign and relocate the main crosswalk to Harrison Street; members discussed trialing a 25-mph limit and options such as solar flashing beacons and timed flashers to increase driver awareness.
Grand Island, Erie County, New York
Town consultant Lydia presented redlines to the town's solar ordinance and a new, separate draft battery storage law, prompting detailed questions about sheep grazing as vegetation management, screening requirements, overlay districts and safety setbacks for containerized battery systems.
Texarkana City, Bowie County, Texas
At its Nov. 10 meeting the Texarkana City Council approved the consent agenda and a series of ordinances and resolutions including airport planning items, contracts for fiber and tree services, several rezones and specific use permits, site‑plan approvals and right‑of‑way closures; most votes were unanimous voice votes.
Renton, King County, Washington
Two residents used the council's public comment period to raise building management concerns: one reported persistent lack of hot water affecting older residents and no backup generator; another described alleged parking‑permit misuse and towing in handicap spaces, asking staff to intervene.
West Chester Area SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania
District staff told the Teaching, Learning & Equity Committee that ELA proficiency has declined since 2022 and that the district will pursue tier‑1 strengthening, targeted literacy interventions and pilot programs, while math shows mixed improvement and targeted supports are planned.
Cowlitz County, Washington
Staff recommended installing a forest‑style gate and restricting public access for Butte Hill Road after a slide, rather than funding a roughly $2 million repair for a road serving timberland with no residences.
Cascade City, Dubuque County, Iowa
Cascade City Council voted to approve Resolution No. 103-25, obligating TIF revenue funds for reimbursements due in fiscal 2027, after members raised concerns that a property in the redevelopment area lacks stormwater mitigation.
Lebanon, Wilson County, Tennessee
The commission heard a series of final plat and site-plan items — Knoll Creek, Cedar Tree, Walnut Ridge phases, Lawrence Row, White's Food Court and others — with staff reporting no remaining comments on most items and no formal votes recorded at the meeting.
Planning Meetings, Knoxville City, Knox County, Tennessee
Michelle, a planning staff member, told the commission the proposed county ordinance amendment implements a state law change that makes an applicant's submission date the moment vested development rights attach, extends vesting to three years, and requires the county to define "substantial compliance."
Legislative Post Audit Committee, Joint, Committees, Legislative, Kansas
The Legislative Post Audit Committee heard a report showing three Kansas counties spent an estimated $28.8 million in fiscal 2024 on three state-required services, with roughly $9.7 million in offsets; county officials said many of the fees collected are remitted to the state and asked for local flexibility to address service demands.
Grand Island, Erie County, New York
The board approved a small seasonal outdoor patio for a Chipotle adjacent to an existing Starbucks, allowing the applicant to convert three parking stalls to a paved patio with landscaping; the board discussed auxiliary parking options reserved on the plaza site and whether the change affects overall parking compliance.
Texarkana City, Bowie County, Texas
City staff presented the draft Consolidated Annual Performance and Evaluation Report for the CDBG program, covering 10/1/2024–9/30/2025, outlined spending (15% administration; 13% public services) and projects including a $20,000 job training grant and housing repairs; the public comment period runs Nov. 17–Dec. 9 with a public hearing Dec. 8.
Sherman County, Kansas
After learning a sewer variance for a proposed campground was denied, Sherman County commissioners discussed options and agreed to table the project unless greater demand emerges. The board also approved an executive session on personnel and scheduled a joint meeting with the city.
West Chester Area SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania
The committee approved a $99,000 Army of Leaders contract to run a student‑led belonging conference, a structured‑literacy pilot with the AIM Institute for K–2 teachers, an AmeriCorps‑funded Reading Assist tutoring pilot at East Goshen Elementary, and a three‑year Hanover Research partnership.
Grand Island, Erie County, New York
The Grand Island Planning Board recommended approval of a special‑use permit for a one‑acre cemetery on the Bridal Fellowship parcel off Baseline Road and moved to rezone the larger church parcel from R‑1D to R‑1A after clarifying the proposed cemetery footprint and future development intentions.
Lebanon, Wilson County, Tennessee
Planning staff recommended against annexing 246 acres proposed by Summit Development, citing insufficient pedestrian connectivity, unclear tree-preservation language, and inadequate usable open space; public commenters warned of traffic effects and the developer said drafting fixes are planned.
Shawnee County, Kansas
Brian Colesch, on behalf of Shawnee County Department of Corrections, told commissioners the behavioral health unit construction is on schedule and slightly under budget, with tours underway and a planned work session in the first quarter of next year.
West Chester Area SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania
The Teaching, Learning & Equity Committee approved a district career education program that will offer internships and cooperative education for seniors across three high schools beginning 2026–27, and approved new and revised course proposals including semester personal finance and AP cybersecurity.
Cowlitz County, Washington
Finance and public works staff told commissioners the solid waste budget is roughly $27M in projected revenue with current receivables about $3.45M, and explained the county's 6% return methodology for valuing landfill rent.
Texarkana City, Bowie County, Texas
The Texarkana City Council voted unanimously on Nov. 10 to deny a rate increase application filed by Southwestern Electric Power Company and authorized municipal intervention in the Texas Public Utility Commission review.
Sherman County, Kansas
Sherman County staff told commissioners new funding is in place and local feeding efforts continued while SNAP was temporarily unavailable; commissioners asked whether a one-quarter-cent sales tax 'health care' fund could be used for feeding but received no definitive legal ruling during the meeting.
West Chester Area SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania
Following public testimony urging a later start and a full spring break, the district committee approved a draft 2026–27 calendar that proposes an Aug. 24 start (two weeks before Labor Day); staff said the draft will be revisited in the new year before final adoption.
Texarkana City, Bowie County, Texas
Mayor Bob Brueggman and the Texarkana City Council marked the 100th anniversary of Texarkana, Texas City Hall on Nov. 10, 2025, read a proclamation designating Nov. 12 as City Hall Day, and City Manager Dr. David Orr announced the building’s designation as a recorded Texas historic landmark with a marker planned for spring 2026.
Boise City, Boise, Ada County, Idaho
The Boise City Planning and Zoning Commission approved a multi-item consent agenda and deferred three items — including a conditional use permit and a zoning-code amendment — to December meetings; no public opposition was recorded.
Shawnee County, Kansas
Parks Director Tim Morett asked commissioners to authorize submission of a Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks (KDWP) 80/20 Recreational Trails grant to fund the Tin Man Circle trail, a roughly 1-mile project estimated at $725,786.25 with an expected local share of about $145,000.
Renton, King County, Washington
At council public comment, Gloria Grover of the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife urged the city to incorporate DFW's best available science into Renton’s Critical Areas Ordinance update and said a 100‑foot buffer is the minimum needed to filter pollutants from small, non‑fish bearing streams and protect downstream salmon habitat.
Romulus, Wayne County, Michigan
A resident described an Oct. 8 shooting and questioned why suspects were released; councilmembers and the mayor said ongoing investigations limit what can be publicly shared and debated whether the city's emergency alert system should more often notify residents of shootings.
Cowlitz County, Washington
The Port of Kalama presented a $12 million Kalama Crossing pedestrian overpass project to county commissioners and asked the county to consider support from the Path & Trails fund. Port staff argued the new ADA‑compliant overpass would shorten pedestrian trips from 2 miles to 0.2 miles, add ~110 parking spaces and improve access for hundreds of
Governor's Cabinet: Rep. DeSantis, Executive , Florida
Gov. Ron DeSantis announced that Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission staff submitted an exempted fishing permit to the U.S. Department of Commerce seeking state management of the recreational Atlantic red snapper fishery beginning in 2026; the proposal would create a 39-day, two-phase recreational season, pending federal approval.
Boulder, Boulder County, Colorado
The Boulder Urban Renewal Authority approved Resolution No. 2, series 2025, amending its bylaws to increase the number of commissioners and include representatives of local taxing authorities; staff outlined a December–January recruitment window and an IGA for city support is expected to come to council on Nov. 20.
Arlington City, Snohomish County, Washington
City staff reported two administrative final change orders: SR 530 needs a $1,097.27 sales-tax addition missed in a prior change order for a fiber extension to Public Works; the 211th Place improvement closeout includes signal revisions, an added pedestrian light, pond berm reinforcement and two trash racks to protect storm culverts.
Romulus, Wayne County, Michigan
The council adopted three budget amendments — $211,419.31 for Welch Packaging Brownfield reimbursement, $201,000 for a grant match and capital outlay, and $544,122 to recognize FEMA AFG revenue — and approved Warrant 25-21 for $5,265,440.95 covering multiple city funds.
Buena Park School District, School Districts, California
Trustees discussed changing 2026 meeting days (Monday conflicts cited) and agreed to ask staff for input and return the item for possible action at the Dec. 8 organizational meeting.
Sherman County, Kansas
Sherman County commissioners reviewed reported vote totals and unanimously approved a motion to adopt the canvassed results as official. County staff read vote counts and named leading candidates for several local races; commissioners then moved, seconded and voted to certify the printed results.
Georgetown City, Scott County, Kentucky
John Burke, Scott County Property Valuation Administrator, explained how Kentucky law requires property be assessed at fair cash value and outlined the county’s reassessment, inspection and appeals processes.
Renton, King County, Washington
Renton Police Chief Schultz presented life‑saving medals to officers for actions he said saved lives during four separate incidents, including a July shooting at the Renton Transit Center and an Aug. 30 water rescue at Gene Coulon Park.
Romulus, Wayne County, Michigan
The City of Romulus authorized a contract piggyback to buy 8 cardiac monitors and 3 mechanical CPR devices from Stryker Sales LLC at a cost not to exceed $598,535, with the mayor saying funds will be available under a FEMA grant. The vote was unanimous.
Cowlitz County, Washington
After one RFP response, county staff recommended piloting a transition to a county‑run gun range, acknowledging higher short‑term costs and uncertainty about grant payback exposure.
Buena Park School District, School Districts, California
Trustees approved a revised chief technology officer job description and reestablished the classification on the senior management salary schedule, noting the position combines extensive oversight and management responsibilities and may be difficult to recruit for.
Shawnee County, Kansas
At their Nov. 10 meeting the Shawnee County Board of County Commissioners approved vouchers totaling $3,224,703.40, awarded multiple contracts including weekend leases for county ball complexes, authorized contract negotiations for lobbying services, and approved four new 911 call-taker positions for the sheriff’s communications center.
Arlington City, Snohomish County, Washington
North County Regional Fire reported cultural training with the Stillaguamish Tribe, a payroll review and compensation study, staffing backfills and delayed engine deliveries, and Q3 call and transport totals for Arlington stations.
Pawtucket, Providence County, Rhode Island
PFM Financial Advisors told the Pawtucket City Council the city’s school construction portfolio will push annual net school debt service higher — by roughly $4.28 million at peak — before state reimbursements begin, and recommended monthly coordination, phased borrowing and other measures to smooth tax impacts.
Georgetown City, Scott County, Kentucky
Georgetown Municipal recommended and council approved a contract award to Cleary Construction (bid ~$6.9M) to replace aging downtown interceptor sewers with a new 42" main, funded with ARPA grant and bond proceeds. City officials said the project is infrastructure renewal to address infiltration and prevent imminent failures.
Buena Park School District, School Districts, California
Trustees voted to accept the revised comprehensive school safety plan for all Buena Park schools after trustees praised staff work on the lengthy revisions; acceptance was moved and seconded and announced as approved.
STEWARTVILLE PUBLIC SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Boards, Minnesota
The Stewartville Public School District board approved a package of routine resolutions and procedural changes at its meeting, including authorization to submit Minnesota State High School League forms to offset student activity and training fees, a change to the Dec. 8 meeting start time, and a vote to close the meeting for labor negotiation strategy.
Seal Beach, Orange County, California
At its Nov. 11 meeting the Seal Beach City Council approved the agenda and a series of items including a parks impact-fee adoption, a PSA amendment for environmental services, a crossing-guard job spec, and the 2025 Local Hazard Mitigation Plan.
Atascosa County, Texas
The court approved payroll and invoice processes, received an infrastructure project update, scheduled a special call meeting to canvas election returns, and adjourned the regular session.
Cowlitz County, Washington
Cowlitz County commissioners voted to accept a state Clean Building Performance Standards grant to reimburse energy audits for tier‑1 county buildings, moving the county toward the state's initial compliance deadline in June 2027. The motion passed unanimously during the Nov. 1 meeting after a brief presentation from Public Services staff.
Arlington City, Snohomish County, Washington
The police department reported hiring progress, adoption of a state crime-reporting system, a full evidence inventory and a recent apprehension of a prolific burglar using drones and canines; one entry-level officer was expected to start Dec. 1.
Buena Park School District, School Districts, California
Buena Park School District trustees recognized community partners including AutoNation Toyota Buena Park, Cal State Fullerton GEAR UP, Bracken's Kitchen and the Anaheim Ducks Foundation for donations and programs that provided backpacks, tutoring, meals and a street-hockey rink.
Tea Area School District 41-5, School Districts, South Dakota
District assessment director reported sizable gains in science proficiency and steady growth in third-grade math; the state will switch the junior-year summative assessment to the ACT beginning with the class of 2027 and will roster and pay for the ACT, with testing split over two days to reduce fatigue.
Atascosa County, Texas
After an executive session, the court rescinded a previously approved change order related to the tax assessor's office (originally approved 10/06/2025) and approved the sale of the property at 2504 In River Oaks Drive to Benton City Water.
Georgetown City, Scott County, Kentucky
Georgetown City Council on Monday approved a Series 2025A water and sewer revenue bond ordinance authorizing roughly $72 million in borrowing to refinance prior notes and fund water and sewer system upgrades including AMI metering and a south-side storage tank.
Seal Beach, Orange County, California
The council unanimously adopted an updated 2025 Local Hazard Mitigation Plan that adds power outages and human-caused hazards, catalogs 54 mitigation actions, and preserves eligibility for federal and state mitigation grants (FEMA/Cal OES, and tracks state Proposition 4 funding).
GOSHEN CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
A coach and parent told the board she was told to resign or be terminated over alleged misconduct arising from a parents' meeting about team storage and program support; she denied the accusations, said she was not given an opportunity to respond, and asked for a review before any termination.
Tea Area School District 41-5, School Districts, South Dakota
District staff reported final inspection and permanent occupancy for the new high school and the operations/shop bus barn; remaining work includes minor punch-list items, HVAC control tuning, and emergency lighting repairs discovered after a power outage.
Pawtucket, Providence County, Rhode Island
The Pawtucket City Council on Nov. 10 approved a resolution authorizing city actions and financing documents to refinance Redevelopment Agency revenue bonds issued for Phase 1A of the Tidewater Landing project.
Portland SD 1J, School Districts, Oregon
Operations staff reported improved maintenance metrics but also a staffing shortfall (77 FTEs of trades staff versus an APPA recommendation of 113), and provided updates on Musco LED field lighting, a $19.9M PSEF award and an imminent RFP award decision.
Arlington City, Snohomish County, Washington
Finance staff told the council the fund balance declined as planned spending on parks, facility upgrades and transportation continued, and that sales-tax revenue is flat, prompting hiring deferments and other cuts to balance next year’s budget if collections don’t improve.
Atascosa County, Texas
The commissioners approved the fourth amendment to an interlocal agreement with the Alamo Area Council of Governments to fund the Cowboy Connect fixed-route service for FY2026, setting Atascosa County's contribution at $135,652 payable in two installments.
Watertown School District 14-4, School Districts, South Dakota
District officials reported proficiency rates above state averages in ELA and math and said a supplemental attendance grant will fund an additional family support specialist to address chronic absenteeism.
GOSHEN CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
The Board approved tenure for Nicholas Pantolione as high school principal effective Nov. 28, 2025, and approved multiple appointments including a middle‑school principal and assistant principal, teachers and support staff; all motions were approved by voice vote as presented.
Lincoln County, Nebraska
At its Nov. 10 meeting the board approved prior meeting minutes, claims and treasurer receipts, received fee reports from county offices, and approved a motor-vehicle tax exemption for North Platte Baptist Church. Several votes were by roll call and recorded in the minutes.
Atascosa County, Texas
Atascosa County approved a 3‑year microfilm processing agreement and a vault storage agreement with Cofile Technologies, a master database access template, Frontier Communications permits to place fiber on Christine Road (five crossings), and release of a maintenance bond for Dairy Road Subdivision Unit 1.
Tea Area School District 41-5, School Districts, South Dakota
The board authorized staff to write a closing check up to $250,000 for the land purchase and approved moving forward with proposals to refund several capital outlay certificates and bonds, projected to net roughly $662,248 in savings over the outstanding lives of the issues.
GOSHEN CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
A business official laid out a five-year projection that showed a 2025–26 starting budget gap of $4.8 million, $1.8 million in cuts made and $3.75 million appropriated from fund balance; administrators warned reserves and capital plans could be strained without revenue changes.
Lincoln County, Nebraska
The county recommended the Nebraska Liquor Control Commission approve a manager change for Fast Stop in Sutherland, contingent on submission of requested documents. Applicant Victoria 'Vicky' Eustell told the board she would oversee ID procedures and comply with protocol.
Watertown School District 14-4, School Districts, South Dakota
The Watertown board approved a resolution to allow pursuit of refinancing certain 2015 bond series for Lake Area Tech through the South Dakota Health and Education Facilities Authority if favorable market conditions arise.
GOSHEN CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
Goshen Intermediate and Scotchtown Elementary presented expanded PBIS work—GIS’s Choose Love "Flock" system and Scotchtown’s PAWS/ticket program—saying the initiatives have strengthened belonging, boosted engagement and eased behavioral incidents while involving PTOs, volunteers and cheerleaders in rollouts.
Portland SD 1J, School Districts, Oregon
Portland Public Schools staff on Nov. 10 presented a seismic-prioritization framework that places about 90% weight on seismic risk and uses a hybrid approach to target both full-campus retrofits and targeted upgrades.
Oklahoma County, Oklahoma
The board approved the 2026 budget evaluation meeting schedule, reviewed furniture bids for a 5th-floor social-distancing project and opted not to act on trust items while the trust met elsewhere; the meeting adjourned after several routine votes.
Tea Area School District 41-5, School Districts, South Dakota
The Tea Area School Board voted to purchase roughly 21.5 acres for a future middle school, approving a roughly $1.07 million price and authorizing staff to pay closing costs up to $250,000.
Lincoln County, Nebraska
Lincoln County commissioners continued review of two interlocal agreements with the City of North Platte on Nov. 10, asking for more detailed cost and scope information on an IT services contract and instructing the roads committee to negotiate to restore Viera Drive to a road-maintenance agreement.
Atascosa County, Texas
Commissioners approved a series of personnel actions Nov. 10 including hires for corrections and juvenile supervision, promotions within the sheriff's office, a public defender pay-rate change, an HR promotion, and an assistant auditor appointment.
Oklahoma County, Oklahoma
Board members heard that three firms responded to the behavioral care center RFP; the evaluation committee plans to recommend a firm to the Board of County Commissioners by month-end and no funding decisions were taken at this meeting.
Watertown School District 14-4, School Districts, South Dakota
At its November meeting the Watertown School Board approved consent items, several personnel actions and new policies, and authorized staff to bid a $225,000 CNC plasma cutting table for the district’s welding program using FY26 Perkins grant funds.
Seal Beach, Orange County, California
After a public hearing, the council adopted updated parks-and-recreation impact fees based on a nexus study that identified $7.1 million in attributable facility needs and projected 1,243 housing units; new per-square-foot fees were presented as $3.83 (single-family) and $5.40 (multifamily).
Portland SD 1J, School Districts, Oregon
Portland Public Schools officials on Nov. 10 presented due-diligence materials on a proposed purchase tied to the Center for Black Student Excellence (CBSE) but agreed to bring deliberations to the full board on Nov. 18 after committee members and community representatives said the item had been noticed too late for adequate public participation.
Oklahoma County, Oklahoma
Oklahoma County BET members received a staff report showing higher year-to-date medical spending and increased prescription volume; staff said rebates have reduced net impact and the evaluation committee will continue monitoring costs.
Wausau, Marathon County, Wisconsin
The committee voted to add Martin Luther King Jr. Day as an annual in‑service day for department heads and management, recommending its inclusion in the employee handbook to allow planning and community communication.
Arlington City, Snohomish County, Washington
Arlington city staff on Monday presented a proposed amendment to the city’s fire code that would require fire sprinkler systems for many additions and accessory dwelling units (ADUs) in single-family and two-family homes.
Lincoln County, Nebraska
The Lincoln County Board of Commissioners voted to buy a 2025 Kenworth tandem snowplow truck from Master Tech Truck Equipment for $312,001.83, starting a multi-year fleet replacement plan. Highway Superintendent Jason Schultz said the truck is fully outfitted and will replace an aging vehicle that will be cycled to auction.
McGregor, McLennan County, Texas
Council adopted Resolution R22‑2025 to cast MacGregor's votes for a four‑year McLennan Central Appraisal District director term beginning Jan. 1, 2026, endorsing Commissioner Smith; the resolution passed by voice vote.
Atascosa County, Texas
The commissioners approved a $15,000 county donation to Meals on Wheels for use in Atascosa County during fiscal year 2026 under the Texas Department of Agriculture home-delivered meal grant program.
Seal Beach, Orange County, California
Mayor Lisa Landau and the council approved a site-lease agreement tonight that authorizes rooftop space for wireless equipment operated by Ericsson, but the vote followed public requests for more safety documentation about radio-frequency exposure.
United Nations, Federal
A U.N. disarmament representative briefed the Security Council on Secretary-General's report S/2025/670, highlighting progress on global ammunition management and urgent gaps in preventing diversion, tracing weapons and stemming illicit small-arms flows that exacerbate conflict and humanitarian harm.
Lebanon City Schools, School Districts, Ohio
Lebanon High School administrators proposed eliminating valedictorian and salutatorian designations in favor of an "honors with distinction" recognition; the board tabled the proposal to gather more input.
Wausau, Marathon County, Wisconsin
The committee approved a CDA request to add a 20‑hour part‑time building maintenance technician beginning in January to reduce backlogs, cover absences and support succession planning. The CDA representative said the authority is HUD‑funded and that new NSPIRE inspection rules have increased staff time per inspection.
Calaveras County, California
Calaveras County and regional partners marked completion of Phase 1 of the State Route 4 Wagon Trail realignment at a ceremony in Angels Camp, highlighting a roughly $52 million investment in safety, preservation and regional access with funding from federal, state and local sources including Senate Bill 1.
Chandler Unified District #80 (4242), School Districts, Arizona
HYA, the district’s search firm, hosted a community forum to collect public input as Chandler Unified School District #80 begins its superintendent search.
Valley County, Idaho
On Nov. 10 the Valley County Board of Commissioners approved findings and conclusions for three Idaho Power conditional-use permits (CUP25-018, CUP25-019, CUP25-020) and approved facts and conclusions designating Leaf Ranch as an Agricultural Protection Area (APA); staff will record APA documents and prepare required signatures.
Lee County, Illinois
County staff provided routine operational updates: the Assessor’s Office is finalizing the 2025 valuation, GIS continues parcel and 911 dataset updates, IT detailed fiber/servers and migrations, and the ROE recapped superintendent outreach and student programs.
Sierra Vista, Cochise County, Arizona
City staff presented a resolution to join the Arizona Mutual Aid Compact, saying it is a statewide compact (not with the county) that clarifies reimbursement and workers' compensation for mutual aid; staff and county emergency management answered council questions about signatories, school districts, fire districts, and public-works roles.
Atascosa County, Texas
Atascosa County Commissioners Court approved a proclamation recognizing November 2025 as National Hospice and Palliative Care Month after a presentation from New Century Hospice in Pleasanton.
LaSalle County, Illinois
Committee members discussed whether the county board rule requiring the chairperson to notify members of objections 'in writing' should specify county mailboxes as the threshold while allowing email as a courtesy; legal staff recommended a clear, uniform minimum for receipt.
Valley County, Idaho
Valley County commissioners voted on Nov. 10 to contribute $25,000 from the FY2026 grant program to McPaw's and directed staff to update the contract and prepare a separate law-enforcement access agreement.
McGregor, McLennan County, Texas
Council approved temporary road closures for a 'Tinsel Trot' 5K and one‑mile walk (Dec. 13, 2025 at 9 a.m.) and authorized a TxDOT filing for a State Highway 317 closure from 6–8 p.m. the same day for the McGregor Christmas parade.
Wausau, Marathon County, Wisconsin
The Wausau Human Resources Committee voted unanimously Nov. 10 to approve a 3% cost‑of‑living adjustment for non‑represented city employees for 2026. Staff cited Bureau of Labor Statistics data and the risk of turnover; the HR director said the fiscal impact is $387,227 and that amount was already included in the mayor’s proposed 2026 budget.
Lee County, Illinois
The Lee County Zoning & Planning Committee voted to advance three planning items — including a zoning text amendment on livestock and chicken uses — to the Executive Committee for County Board consideration.
Sweet Home SD 55, School Districts, Oregon
Trustees received student recognitions, student representative updates on academics and athletics, a bullying-prevention video and a superintendent report on attendance, enrollment and local food insecurity; staff also urged community help with substitute/paraprofessional staffing shortages.
Lexington 05, School Districts, South Carolina
District legal counsel and special‑education staff briefed trustees on IDEA disciplinary protections, emphasizing the 10‑day removal threshold, MDR process, and the requirement for functional behavior assessments and behavior intervention plans when removals become disciplinary changes in placement.
Sierra Vista, Cochise County, Arizona
City staff told the council a proposed amendment to the business license and solicitor ordinance — discussed in October — has received no public input since the resolution and will move into the ordinance phase; if adopted on Thursday it will be codified 30 days after the meeting.
Albany County, New York
Facing delayed SNAP benefit issuance, Albany County approved agreements with the Regional Food Bank of New York and United Way of the Greater Capital Region and amended the Department of Social Services budget to provide short-term gift cards and food distributions funded from unused personnel lines.
Lee County, Illinois
Lee County officials will meet with Surf Broadband after the provider received a major BEAD award for the county; committee members raised concerns that past fiber work has disrupted county services and emergency communications.
LaSalle County, Illinois
The County Committee on Appointments approved reappointments for commissioners to four drainage districts and approved meeting minutes; motions passed by voice vote and will be forwarded to the full board.
Greene County, New York
Public works staff reported multiple bridge and culvert projects in design or right-of-way, 43+ miles of surfacing work completed this year, slides requiring emergency repair and options for transfer-station reconstruction; staff also proposed security cameras for five fueling stations with multi-year equipment/licensing quotes.
Lebanon City Schools, School Districts, Ohio
Lebanon City Schools finance staff reported a downward fiscal trend (FY26) with expenses outpacing revenues and about 123 days of operating cash; the superintendent proposed a joint Warren County districts letter to explain state funding shifts and rising local property-tax burdens.
Lee County, Illinois
The Zoning & Planning Committee moved the Motor Fuel Tax (MFT) appropriation resolution to the Executive Committee for placement on the November County Board agenda; Director Dave Anderson said the MFT package covers routine maintenance items and includes a roughly $420,000 transfer to County Highway for MFT‑eligible work.
Dorchester 02, School Districts, South Carolina
Parents and citizens used public comment to raise concerns about student discipline practices and the youth suicide epidemic; trustees reminded speakers of time limits and policy on discussing individual student matters.
Sweet Home SD 55, School Districts, Oregon
A local candidate sought the board’s support for an OSBA Region 10 board seat; later in the meeting the board unanimously voted to appoint Clyde Rood and Jason Curtis to represent the district on OSBA bodies.
McGregor, McLennan County, Texas
Council approved a seven‑year extension of NextLINK's lease for equipment on the Johnson Drive water tower; the company pays $300 per month and will add improved fiber access, city staff said.
Lexington 05, School Districts, South Carolina
Trustees approved employment items, multiple construction contracts and a $50,000 property purchase for the Dutch Fork Elementary project, deferred final approval of a Chapin Eagle Club scoreboard agreement for additional review, and voted to publish enrollment and capacity data online.
Berkeley County, South Carolina
A Special Committee on Finance voted to authorize the County Supervisor to expend up to $1,000,000 from the general fund balance for the design and construction of the Live Oak project; the full County Council subsequently voted to approve the same authorization.
Lee County, Illinois
Greg Gates, representing Reagan Mass Transit, told the Lee County Zoning & Planning Committee that ridership is growing — including in rural Winnebago County — and that the agency will soon solicit bids for an Oregon office after IDOT pre‑bid concurrence.
Sweet Home SD 55, School Districts, Oregon
After an engineering inspection found structural issues in the gym at the Robertsville (Crawfordsville) facility, the Sweet Home School District 55 board unanimously directed staff to explore options for the property, including potential sale or repair studies.
Sierra Vista, Cochise County, Arizona
City staff described a new "Sentinel of Life" medal — created by the Sierra Vista Fire and Police departments — that will be presented Thursday to David Escobar; the council also proclaimed Nov. 10–14 as Veterans Small Business Week and named a veteran-owned business for an Economic Development Commission award.
St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana
The commission approved most routine rezoning requests and a conditional use permit for a commercial excavation (40-acre lake), and denied two high-profile rezonings: the Lacombe S‑2 request and the LA‑437 HC‑3 wedding‑venue request. The transcript records motions and 'motion carries' statements but does not include roll-call vote tallies.
Greene County, New York
County staff said New York began issuing full SNAP benefits after court developments; HEAP remains uncertain and limited to emergency allocations, and a county engagement report showed Greene County ranked first statewide in moving people from assistance to work (35.5%).
Sweet Home SD 55, School Districts, Oregon
The Sweet Home School District 55 board voted unanimously to authorize district staff to submit an application for an Oregon School Capital Improvement Matching Grant that could provide a $12,200,000 match for safety and classroom upgrades, with the application due Dec. 15.
Lebanon City Schools, School Districts, Ohio
Superintendent Isaac Severs told the Lebanon City Schools board on Nov. 10 that the district is meeting nutrition compliance requirements and is using a project-managed strategic-plan dashboard to track benchmarks across academics, early literacy, behavior and facilities.
Berkeley County, South Carolina
The Operations Committee approved replacing a John Deere gator, an EMS Quick Response Vehicle (QRV) and a dump truck, approving transfers to cover insurance deltas and amending the QRV request to draw from the capital fund balance instead of the general fund.
Lexington 05, School Districts, South Carolina
Administrators reported gains on 2025 school report cards, an on‑time graduation rate near 90%, and proposed a Tier‑2 after‑school tutoring program targeted to students in the 20th–30th percentile with transportation and counselor supports; trustees debated scheduling models (AB vs 4x4) and implementation details.
Josephine, Collin County, Texas
Council approved routine consent items and engineering reports, directed staff on planning and public safety reporting, authorized a front-facing cemetery fence with a not-to-exceed $30,000 budget, approved budget rollovers, and after executive session extended the city administrator’s contract under terms discussed in closed session.
Greene County, New York
County social services reported 142 homebound clients and persistent volunteer shortages that have forced administrative staff to deliver meals. Officials discussed keeping a small external contract, hiring per-diem drivers for remote routes and contracting a third-party delivery nonprofit charging about $3.40 per meal.
St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana
Commissioners denied a petition to rezone ~23 acres along LA‑437 to HC‑3 for an event venue after sustained public comment about Lee Road’s safety and suitability. The petitioner’s attorney described mitigation plans; opponents said HC‑3 allows many uses beyond a venue and posed unworkable traffic and safety risks.
Lebanon City Schools, School Districts, Ohio
Lebanon City Schools recognized about eight students from Berry and several students across the district at a live-streamed board meeting ceremony where teachers read nomination letters and students received certificates and yard signs; program sponsor Biggut's Frozen Custard provided signs.
Minneapolis City, Hennepin County, Minnesota
At its Nov. 10 meeting the Minneapolis Administration and Enterprise Oversight Committee approved adding a gift acceptance for the city attorney and assistant city attorney to the agenda and then approved a 25-item consent agenda by voice vote.
Lexington 05, School Districts, South Carolina
Missy Campbell, chief financial officer for Spartanburg School District 7, told District Five trustees that budgets should be driven by district priorities and supported by multiyear planning, conservative assumptions and strong fund‑balance practices.
Dorchester 02, School Districts, South Carolina
District safety staff reported completion of nearly all referendum‑funded security upgrades and districtwide safety audits, with only door‑alarm work outstanding. The board discussed vaping among students, limits to on‑site testing for THC, the Stop It reporting app and restoring 911 camera access.
McGregor, McLennan County, Texas
The council approved a replat for 214 Hayes Street that would change a single 14,400-sq.-ft. parcel into two 7,200-sq.-ft. buildable lots in R6 zoning; planning and zoning had recommended approval.
Del Norte County, California
Commissioners were told the state will apply for a grant to repair a busy launch-ramp parking lot at Lake Earl; the Fred Haight Drive ramp remains unrepaired and described as a large mud hole.
Syracuse City, Onondaga County, New York
The council processed items 10–57 across the agenda. Most items were adopted by roll call and announced as unanimous; item 14 was withdrawn, items 37 and 41 were held, and item 43 was tabled pending documentation. A motion to waive rules was passed to consider items 53–57, which were then adopted.
Northglenn, Adams County, Colorado
The Diversity, Inclusivity & Social Equity (DICE) board presented its 2025 year in review including Juneteenth, pride/bridal event, sensory backpacks, 'red cards' immigration resources, and a program budget; the board proposed monthly awareness campaigns, a safe-business program, and exploration of a multicultural festival for 2026.
Spokane, Spokane County, Washington
Council approved several agenda-management motions, deferred several consent items including a lobbying contract and the LRAD procurement, and suspended rules to consider a staffing‑ordinance amendment; key votes included a 4–3 deferral on lobbying contracts and a 6–1 suspension of rules.
Talent, Jackson County, Oregon
The agency created an ad hoc subcommittee of board members to review RFQ responses for a private developer to complete the Gateway site, clarify public meeting timing and likely workload, and preserve staff as technical (nonvoting) support.
McGregor, McLennan County, Texas
Council voted to approve the sale of JAG Aviation after a presentation from a buyer group tied to Gage Technologies; council approved the sale by voice vote with no opposing votes recorded.
Berkeley County, South Carolina
The Public Utilities Committee awarded SES Field Services a $2,260,850 contract to expand the landfill gas system by 50 new wells, increasing the existing 120 wells and aiming to raise gas flow to allow engines to run again. The county said prior annual revenue averaged about $63,000 but none was received in the past year due to low gas quality.
NISKAYUNA CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
The committee discussed a formal change to the public comment policy to allow one comment period focused on board business and a second at the end of meetings for general comment; members asked staff to clarify how speakers will access the required form at meetings.
Josephine, Collin County, Texas
Council approved acceptance of vehicles, equipment and property from the Josephine Volunteer Fire Department and authorized a third‑party billing agreement with Fire Recovery USA to pursue insurance reimbursement for accident and emergency responses; it also adopted an ordinance establishing mitigation rates for fire service deployments.
Talent, Jackson County, Oregon
At a Nov. 5 Talent city council study session, staff and Greentop Planning consultants presented GIS modeling and options to designate a state-required Climate Friendly Area and said the city can demonstrate the DLCD performance standard of 60,000 square feet of development area per net acre under a middle compliance pathway.
El Paso City, El Paso County, Texas
On Nov. 10, 2025, the El Paso Zoning Board of Adjustment approved a series of special-exception requests to legalize residential encroachments and carports across several neighborhoods, imposing conditions that structures resemble the main residence, remove encroachments from easements, and meet permitting requirements.
Spokane, Spokane County, Washington
Council received briefings on an $8.0M ERP contract to resolve encampments, HUD formula grants (HOME, CDBG, ESG), and CHHS’s recommendation to select CAT to operate 30 New Roots tiny homes under a $975,000 award.
St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana
The St. Tammany Parish Planning & Zoning Commission on the evening of the hearing rejected a petition to rezone 22.32 acres in Lacombe from L-1 (large-lot residential) to S-2 (suburban residential).
Josephine, Collin County, Texas
Council opened a public hearing on a city-initiated zoning text amendment to move gas stations and similar uses in the General Commercial district to a specific use permit or planned development. Staff recommended approval subject to concurrent SUP/PD protections for existing businesses; after extensive debate the council continued the public
Talent, Jackson County, Oregon
The Talent Urban Renewal Agency voted to authorize the executive director to commit $500,000 of agency funds to a proposed Gateway Business Incubator, with several board members urging more community engagement and a feasibility study to guide later spending.
NISKAYUNA CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
Niskayuna Central School District policy committee members reviewed a package of updates to special-education policies on Nov. 10, 2025, with staff proposing edits to reflect recent state and federal regulatory language and to clarify how the district administers services.
Josephine, Collin County, Texas
City consultants presented a parks and trails master plan that inventories existing open space, identifies deficits and maps priority projects; council accepted the plan as a framework for future projects and grant applications.
McGregor, McLennan County, Texas
Brent McCain told the MacGregor City Council he could not secure assistance from dispatch and firefighters during a pet emergency and that the city has been unresponsive to public-record requests; council pledged to research grievance and regional housing-authority procedures.
Dorchester 02, School Districts, South Carolina
RISE Academy representatives and Austin Bailey staff described a reading‑mentor partnership in which older students read to elementary pupils and senior citizens. A student participating in the program described the experience as 'great.' District leaders said they plan to expand the program and add a writing‑buddy component.
Del Norte County, California
Commissioners recapped a successful junior pheasant hunt, reported a $1,000 donation to the Grange nonprofit to support youth hunting activities, and said Fish and Game staff will meet with local and Humboldt County school officials to pursue hunter-education curriculum that can earn biology or PE credit.
Syracuse City, Onondaga County, New York
Councilors introduced and adopted an item supporting the Exalt alternative-to-incarceration program, with a councilor urging strong management and measurable outcomes rather than a short-term funded program that produces little change.
Spokane, Spokane County, Washington
Chief of Police asked the council to defer a request to buy two LRAD units so staff can consult the vendor and community; councilors debated safety uses and state restrictions and voted to indefinitely defer the purchase.
Northglenn, Adams County, Colorado
On second reading the council approved ordinance CB20-33 to affirm Northglenn's existing permitting review process for electric vehicle chargers and to opt out of adopting the state's model land-use code under HB24-1173; staff will file required compliance reports and the Planning Commission had recommended the opt-out.
Boulder, Boulder County, Colorado
Claire presented new research showing that the U.S. Navy Japanese language school operated in Boulder from 1942 to 1946, recruiting instructors (sensei) from internment sites and producing over 1,100 navy officers fluent in Japanese.
Wasilla, Matanuska-Susitna Borough, Alaska
The council introduced Ordinance 2538 to add two MATCOM positions paid by a $340,000 borough amendment and adopted Resolution 2535 to retitle an existing MATCOM supervisor to Dispatch Supervisor/Training Coordinator.
Josephine, Collin County, Texas
Dozens of residents urged Josephine officials to press Collin County to pause approvals for the EPIC/Double R Meadow development, citing water, traffic and emergency-response concerns and invoking an Attorney General inquiry.
Spokane, Spokane County, Washington
Airport officials told the City Council the 2026 consolidated budget is financially self‑sufficient, projecting roughly 4.5 million passengers and $127.6 million in capital spending — including Concourse C — and warned a proposed parking tax could reduce revenue and raise airline costs.
Berkeley County, South Carolina
The Land Use Committee postponed a request to rezone about 4.66 acres for a 47-townhome development and approved several other zoning-map amendments across Berkeley County. The postponed item (Bill 25-56) will return to the December committee meeting; multiple other bills were approved by voice votes.
Todd County School District 66-1, School Districts, South Dakota
The superintendent told the Todd County School District 66-1 board that a recent accreditation review identified three minor documentation items the district must correct within about three months to secure a five-year accreditation.
Del Norte County, California
At a Fish and Wildlife commission meeting commissioners said state wildlife staff lack funds to study Lake Earl water quality and lake-level needs. The commission moved to draft a county management plan, discuss submitting it to the Board of Supervisors, and prepare CEQA materials to allow county-managed breaching and lake-level control.
EDINA PUBLIC SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Boards, Minnesota
The board approved a tentative two‑year collective bargaining agreement for Health Service Associates: step advancements, 3% and 2.6% raises for non‑RN HSAs, 2% for RN HSAs each year, retroactive to July 1, 2025, and five added paid holidays in year two; the package totals an estimated 8.75% cost over two years (MSBA formula).
Yankton City, Yankton County, South Dakota
The Yankton City Commission on Nov. 10 approved a series of routine actions including a lease renewal for The Center, renewal of alcoholic-beverage licenses, a one-day special-event license for May 2, 2026, a construction change order extending a water-main project to June 2026, and a resolution authorizing disposal of surplus police cameras.
PIEDMONT, School Districts, Oklahoma
The Piedmont board approved the consent agenda, voted to convene an executive session under 25 O.S. 307(B)(1) to discuss appointments listed on attachment C, and approved employment items on attachment C.
Syracuse City, Onondaga County, New York
The Syracuse City Council unanimously approved installation of honorary street signs honoring the Syracuse 8 after remarks from Carmen Harlow, who recalled the 1970 protests and Syracuse University's subsequent apology. Councilors asked staff to coordinate installation timing with the group's availability.
Wasilla, Matanuska-Susitna Borough, Alaska
Council introduced Ordinance 2537 to repeal the Downtown Overlay District from Wasilla Municipal Code and set a public hearing for Nov. 24. Councilmembers asked planning staff to provide more detailed minutes and clarity about how prohibited uses will be handled once the overlay is removed.
EDINA PUBLIC SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Boards, Minnesota
The board authorized staff to pursue general obligation refunding bonds to refinance 2017A debt if minimum savings thresholds are met; finance staff warned market volatility reduced anticipated savings and will delay execution until conditions improve.
Dorchester 02, School Districts, South Carolina
Superintendent Doherty presented the district’s 2024–25 report card showing eight schools rated 'excellent', gains in ELA and math and a district graduation rate of 91.4%. He cautioned that new state testing standards limit direct comparisons to prior years.
PIEDMONT, School Districts, Oklahoma
The district business officer told the board the general fund is about 93% encumbered/spent for the year, revenue collections increased and the board approved a sinking fund encumbrance of $61,002.50.
Boulder, Boulder County, Colorado
The Boulder Landmarks Board on Nov. 5 debated whether to ask City Council to clarify how demolition review and discretionary site review interact and recommended updating the board’s window-and-door guidelines and pursuing developer outreach as projects the council could adopt.
Wasilla, Matanuska-Susitna Borough, Alaska
The council approved Resolution 25‑36 and AM 2556 to transfer $115,780 from the Newcomb Park restroom project to fund electrical utility extensions for restroom construction at Bumpa softball and soccer areas, and approved a utility service agreement with Matanuska Electric Association for $115,780.
Madison City, Jefferson County, Indiana
An application for a small-cell utility pole (Boland Communications/State of Indiana) at ~3149/50 Drive was introduced but no representative appeared; the board tabled the item to the next regular meeting.
Todd County School District 66-1, School Districts, South Dakota
The Todd County School District 66-1 board unanimously approved its consent agenda, routine policy updates and long-term substitute waivers, decided to keep its June primary election date for 2026, and voted to provide a monetary donation to students traveling to a Design for Change conference in Japan.
Wasilla, Matanuska-Susitna Borough, Alaska
The Wasilla City Council on Nov. 10 adopted Ordinance 2536, appropriating $269,353 from the general fund for schematic and design work for a Wasilla Public Library expansion and approved AM 2560, a contract award to ECI for $269,353 to provide architectural design services.
Northglenn, Adams County, Colorado
Deputy Chief Peter Rice told the City Council that Flock license-plate readers are an investigatory tool that hold raw reads for 30 days, cannot perform facial recognition, and are limited to law-enforcement access; residents and councilors pressed for clearer public transparency, training and a list of partner jurisdictions.
PIEDMONT, School Districts, Oklahoma
Superintendent delivered a report highlighting Veterans Assemblies, a $41,000 round of foundation grants, Capturing Kids' Hearts training at Piedmont Elementary funded with $5,000, and enrollment essentially holding steady from October to November.
EDINA PUBLIC SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Boards, Minnesota
Board discussed proposed revisions to Policy 911 (district volunteers). Administration clarified the appendix: casual PTO volunteers do not require criminal background checks, but adults in one‑on‑one or small‑group student contact must be screened; board asked for cost/volume data.
Brookings School District 05-1, School Districts, South Dakota
Brookings High School FFA members presented chapter achievements, reported 168 local members, described recent national convention results and community-service projects, and thanked the board for support.
Lennox, Lincoln County, South Dakota
Council approved the first reading of Ordinance No. 663 (FY26 appropriations) after noting the Oct. 27 public hearing produced no recommended changes; second reading is planned for Nov. 24.
Wasilla, Matanuska-Susitna Borough, Alaska
Scott Bell, Wasilla’s Recreation Services Director, briefed the City Council on Nov. 10 about recent Menard Center improvements, including a turf replacement budgeted at about $318,000, LED lighting upgrades, mechanical repairs and a new ADA bottle‑fill fountain.
Brookings School District 05-1, School Districts, South Dakota
Board members who attended a city neighborhood forum relayed community concerns about a proposed police station sited on Brookings School District land, including the loss of play space, where registered offenders would register, and the need for a clear replacement plan; the city has not presented a formal proposal to the board.
Auburn, Placer County, California
The council approved a sub-JOA to share administrative, command-and-control and prevention functions with Placer Hills Fire Protection District, citing cost pressures and staffing constraints; the Auburn firefighters association said labor was included in discussions and supports the plan.
East Penn SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania
At its Nov. 10 meeting, East Penn School District heard a detailed Student Government Association report on clubs, college visits, theater and athletics and was introduced to a new director of community relations, Dane Buttafuoco.
St. Mary Parish, School Boards, Louisiana
At a special meeting Nov. 10, the St. Mary Parish School Board entered executive session under Louisiana law to discuss the superintendent's request for medical leave, approved the leave, and voted to temporarily assign the superintendent's duties to the assistant superintendent with a $4,000 monthly stipend plus a $1,000 car allowance.
Easly City, Pickens, South Carolina
The council approved an opioid-recovery grant amendment, dedicated land for an inclusive playground and accepted neighborhood roads while tabling a downtown property sale and a planning-commission appointment for further review.
Livonia Public Schools School District, School Boards, Michigan
District staff told the Operations Committee that final bid packages for the 2021 bond’s last phase generated strong contractor participation and that the recommended contract totals are within program allowances; the board will vote on the recommendation next week.
Forest Hills Public Schools, School Boards, Michigan
Multiple residents used the public comment period to urge removal of sexually explicit books from school libraries, cite a recent Supreme Court ruling on parental opt‑outs, and question spending priorities and underused district properties.
Livonia Public Schools School District, School Boards, Michigan
District staff introduced updates to board policy JD to clarify grade-band rules for personal electronic devices and proposed changing outdated language in nondiscrimination policy JAE (replacing 'handicap' with 'disability'); both items were scheduled for first reading on Nov. 17.
East Penn SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania
The East Penn School District board on Nov. 10 approved minutes, personnel, business and curriculum items by unanimous roll call and spent substantial time honoring three outgoing directors and recognizing retiring staff.
Town of Lakeville, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
Council gave final details for the 'All That Glitters' holiday craft show — Dec. 5 (5–8 p.m.) and Dec. 6 (10 a.m.–3 p.m.) at Loompon Lodge, Ted Williams Camp — including free gift wrapping and food/beverage arrangements.
Madison City, Jefferson County, Indiana
The Madison Board of Zoning Appeals granted a variance allowing a porch/carport encroachment at 1145 West 2nd St. and approved a variance permitting a two-car garage at 510 West Main with a revised two-foot north setback; both motions passed by roll-call votes.
Harrison County, Mississippi
The Harrison County Board approved its consent agenda along with multiple contract change orders, acceptances of road improvements, an election agreement for March 10, 2026, and the engagement of an audit firm for fiscal years 2024–25.
Waynesboro, Augusta County, Virginia
At the Nov. 10 meeting a resident alleged that a council member used language and funding priorities from his previous proposal, accused the council of excluding Black representation from a grant program, and said a FOIA request was charged $317 — a fee he called price gouging.
EDINA PUBLIC SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Boards, Minnesota
Interim Superintendent Dan Bittman reported family preference for placing dual‑language programming at the Valley View feeder school for continuity; staff raised logistical concerns. Administration will collect more feedback and bring a recommendation later this year.
Lennox, Lincoln County, South Dakota
City staff proposed ceasing provision of EMS outside municipal boundaries by January 2027 and pursuing formation of an ambulance district to create a sustainable funding model. Council discussed levy estimates, governance and asset transfer options and asked staff to draft a resolution and continue outreach with neighboring jurisdictions.
Newcastle, McClain County, Oklahoma
Council approved the Lamar's Landing planned unit development (PUD) and a variance allowing corrugated HDPE storm pipe encased in flowable fill — limited by a condition requiring one foot of cover plus coordination with the city’s consulting engineer and a five‑year maintenance bond.
Columbus City Council, Columbus, Franklin County, Ohio
Commissioners spent the Nov. 10 meeting reviewing several conceptual submittals — including a rear three‑story modern addition to a historic brick house and a proposed new three‑story single‑family residence — and requested clearer elevations, 3‑D views, and streetscape comparisons before any approvals.
Louisburg , Franklin County, North Carolina
Mayor Christopher Neal used his report to thank residents for their organizing and alleged that 'HB 183' from the North Carolina General Assembly singled out Lewisburg with election rule changes; the claim was presented as the mayor’s characterization and was not disputed on the record.
Brookings School District 05-1, School Districts, South Dakota
Superintendent Stacy told the Brookings School District 05-1 board that changes to the state calendar require the district to choose either June 2 or Nov. 3, 2026 for its next school board election and to meet compressed publication deadlines if it selects the June date.
Queen Anne's County, Maryland
Staff said preventive maintenance inspections reduced repeat work orders at several properties and outlined major renovation counts at Fisher Manor, Terrapin Grove, Foxtown, Graysonville Terrace and scattered-site houses; maintenance staff shortages mean the authority still relies on outside contractors for large projects.
Waynesboro, Augusta County, Virginia
A longtime resident praised rising bus ridership and urged the city to add benches at stops and install a passenger-activated signal so drivers can more reliably know to stop for riders.
Louisburg , Franklin County, North Carolina
Lewisburg presented a proclamation recognizing Franklin County Hunger and Homeless Awareness Month, and Interfaith Council representative Miss Kegley invited residents to a vigil on Nov. 18 and a free Thanksgiving dinner on Nov. 27 (she said about 400 people were expected).
Harrison County, Mississippi
Benefits consultants told the Harrison County Board the county's employee plan is being driven by high-cost pharmacy claims and proposed formulary changes plus an optional KanaRx mail-order program with a $3 per-member monthly fee and guaranteed ROI.
Easly City, Pickens, South Carolina
Council tabled consideration of a proposed conveyance of West End Hall after Councilwoman Rainey said the public and council lacked adequate notice and time to review appraisal materials.
Newcastle, McClain County, Oklahoma
The city's independent auditor delivered a clean opinion on the financial statements and a clean compliance opinion on federal grants, but noted a non‑material collateral timing issue with a local bank that has been corrected. Council formally acknowledged the reports.
Town of Lakeville, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
At its Nov. 10 meeting the Lakeville Arts Council approved most in-town grant requests, fully funded a youth–senior storytelling project, split limited remaining funds among two local events, and declined 11 out-of-town applications that had not secured local venues.
Livonia Public Schools School District, School Boards, Michigan
The Livonia Public Schools Operations Committee on Nov. 10 recommended that the full board consider a package of facility purchases next week, including a new central-office generator, grant-funded hydration stations, road salt, lockdown shades and large portable fans.
Columbus City Council, Columbus, Franklin County, Ohio
The Italian Village Commission on Nov. 10 approved multiple Certificates of Appropriateness by voice vote, imposing conditions that require applicants to provide revised drawings or to repair site impacts, and continued several larger conceptual projects for further design refinement.
Waynesboro, Augusta County, Virginia
Two Evershire residents told the council that subdivision design leaves insufficient room to enter and exit driveways; one resident said a city employee suggested she sell her home and asked officials to withhold road acceptance until the developer corrects the problem.
Griggs County, North Dakota
The Griggs County Board authorized recruitment to fill an NDSU extension agent vacancy, approved the county’s federal‑aid maintenance certification and granted out‑of‑state travel for the county recorder to attend a national recorder conference.
Easly City, Pickens, South Carolina
Council members voted to dedicate city-owned land as the future site of a fully inclusive downtown playground after a presentation from Carolina Parks and Play.
Newcastle, McClain County, Oklahoma
The council authorized purchase of a Caterpillar 320 excavator for $257,750 and approved financing through First National Bank at approximately 4.09% for 10 years.
Waynesboro, Augusta County, Virginia
City staff described an ordinance that would add Sherwood Avenue to the list of streets restricted for truck traffic and remove Oak Lane; council introduced the measure and scheduled final consideration for Nov. 24.