What happened on Tuesday, 18 November 2025
United Nations, Federal
At a UN press briefing, the spokesperson said partners are expanding shelter, health and food services in Gaza and that the UN is committed to implementing roles in the recent Security Council resolution, while calling on parties to lift access restrictions so aid can reach civilians.
Caldwell-West School District, School Districts, New Jersey
At its Nov. 17 meeting the Caldwell-West School District Board unanimously approved minutes and consent items covering curriculum, personnel, finance/facilities and policy (each passed 4–0), then voted to enter executive session; the board also canceled its Dec. 8 meeting, moving the regular December meeting to Dec. 15.
Flossmoor SD 161, School Boards, Illinois
After a long discussion of levy models and capital needs, District 161’s board expressed consensus behind the finance committee’s recommendation to recapture $1 million of a property tax relief grant this year and consider the second $1 million next year; a tentative 2025 levy was approved by roll call for publication.
Roanoke City (Independent City), Virginia
Council unanimously adopted a series of measures on Nov. 17: a regional fire training‑facilities grant (flashover simulator), VDOT funding reallocations for the Tinker Creek Greenway, a VDOT reconciliation refund, a state/local cybersecurity consent agreement, SBDC operating funds for 2026 and a historic‑marker resolution for Junius Blair Fishburne.
Goodyear, Maricopa County, Arizona
Goodyear approved a resolution creating a special public improvement project area and authorizing cost recovery for the Camelback Road widening (CIP #42038). The project will add lanes, signals, sidewalks and bike lanes along ~2.7 miles; total construction cost estimates are roughly $30 million and parcel cost allocations total about $13.5 million. Council vote was 7–0.
Elkhart City, Elkhart County, Indiana
The board gave final acceptance to Elkhart East Area A infrastructure, approved an 18‑month preventative maintenance agreement for City Hall HVAC (not to exceed $39,746) and approved change orders for the SALT facility that leave the project substantially complete and ready for service in coming weeks.
Flossmoor SD 161, School Boards, Illinois
A consultant presented seven recommendations after a building pressurization test showed large perimeter gaps, failing dampers and significant overnight humidity/temperature infiltration at Flossmoor Hills; the board approved phased repairs in upcoming construction bids and expects cost breakdowns at the next meeting.
Caldwell-West School District, School Districts, New Jersey
District curriculum and technology committee reported on ESL consulting and a shift in teacher evaluation toward student discourse, reviewed cohort assessment data, and introduced a peer partnership program at GCMS; the board requested a family-fee cap be explored.
Roanoke City (Independent City), Virginia
Downtown Roanoke Inc. told council its ambassador program now provides 300+ weekly service hours at an annual cost of about $570,000 funded by DRI, ARPA and grants; DRI said it has secured $60,000 toward a roughly $100,000 per‑year unsheltered shuttle pilot to connect people to services.
Thousand Oaks, Ventura County, California
The Thousand Oaks Planning Commission approved consent items including a general-plan conformity finding for transferring 524 West Jan's Road to the Conejo Recreation and Park District and heard department reports previewing an ADU ordinance update, a CDBG transfer (amount not specified) and a Jan. 12 public hearing on disposition of 401–403 Hillcrest Drive.
Okaloosa County, Florida
Speakers from the SS United States Preservation Foundation told the commission the vessel contains substantial zinc chromate and hexavalent chromium risks—citing estimates as high as 60,000 pounds to 50 tons—and urged the county to address remediation before any scuttling or reef deployment.
Goodyear, Maricopa County, Arizona
The Goodyear City Council unanimously approved a use permit for a 1,500‑sq‑ft Walmart convenience store and adjacent gas station inside the Walmart parking lot; the developer must add a traffic signal and circulation improvements. Council vote was 7–0.
Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia
The Atlanta City Council adopted a resolution establishing a Neighborhood Reinvestment Initiative commission to advise on expansion and renewal of eight active Tax Allocation Districts (TADs); administration requested an accelerated March 31 timeline for recommendations.
Thousand Oaks, Ventura County, California
On Nov. 17, 2025 the Thousand Oaks Planning Commission approved a protected-tree permit to remove one coast live oak at 2183 Ken Ross Court, citing structural damage to the home and a CEQA categorical exemption; the vote was 4-0 and the decision may be appealed within 10 days.
Lisle, DuPage County, Illinois
Michael Lowe announced efforts to restart a Kiwanis club in Lisle and invited volunteers; a second resident criticized the village's handling of Oakview water issues, citing higher bills for Oakview homeowners and requesting greater outreach and responses from officials.
Roanoke City (Independent City), Virginia
Secure Solar Futures presented a power‑purchase agreement for Roanoke City Public Schools that would finance up to 10 MW of solar and roof restoration at no capital cost to the district, with presenters saying the three phases could yield more than $56–60 million in net energy savings over decades.
Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia
After public comment and legal staff explanations about blackout rules, the Atlanta City Council voted 8–6 to file (send back for further review) a contested airport curbside-management procurement that critics said showed responsiveness irregularities.
Goodyear, Maricopa County, Arizona
Community Facilities District boards approved final assessments and authorized up to $10.668 million in special assessment revenue bonds for Montecito Assessment District No. 4 in Estrella Mountain Ranch; the per‑lot assessment is about $21,000. Votes were unanimous (7–0).
Port Hueneme City, Ventura County, California
A board member reported on OceanWell Vision's desalination pod concept—deep‑ocean pods that use pressure (about 1,300 feet) to reduce energy needs and back‑flush brine; the presenter said a realistic timeline to provide water to people is 'probably 6 to 8 years' and noted ongoing tests with Las Virgenes Water District.
Elkhart City, Elkhart County, Indiana
Following engineering review, the Board of Works found a permit-holder in violation for exceeding local mercury limits (permit #2025-03) and assessed a $500 penalty; company representative disputed the source and said they retested the discharge.
Bernalillo County, New Mexico
Treasurer Eichenberg told the Board of Finance that long-delinquent property taxes (subject to a 10-year statutory presumption) have fallen off the rolls and proposed an MOU for county staff to assist the state property tax division with searches and title work to accelerate collections.
Cuyahoga County, Ohio
Committee heard proponents and opponents of Ordinance 2025-0011, which would allow tenants to halt evictions by paying owed rent plus reasonable late fees; sponsors and Legal Aid cited potential to keep people housed, while public commenters and some members urged more data and landlord testimony. The committee held the ordinance for a later hearing.
Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia
Dozens of Atlanta residents and short-term-rental hosts spoke during public comment on Nov. 17, arguing over proposed zoning restrictions: hosts and industry groups warned of lost income and tourism capacity while residents and building occupants cited safety and investor takeover concerns.
Bay City, Bay County, Michigan
The Bay City Historic District Commission approved certificates of appropriateness for several residential projects, accepted one application withdrawal after the owner chose restoration, and heard public comment from a local historic‑window restorer. Staff reported ongoing property‑maintenance and code‑enforcement matters.
Okaloosa County, Florida
The board approved a Triumph-funded bid package to begin mass earth grading for Project Opal (Williams International) and authorized requesting a Triumph amendment to allocate roughly $12 million (70/30 split) toward a Pineview School signal and an access road tied to the Southwest Crestview Bypass.
Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia
Interim Inspector General LaDonn Blackett told the City Council the office’s governing board will meet Nov. 20 at 6 p.m. and published the OIG tip line and email for reporting concerns; Blackett also introduced senior staff who will lead investigations and audits.
Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection, Executive , Massachusetts
The U.S. Army Corps presented Cape Cod Canal operations at the OSAC meeting, describing marine traffic controllers, radar/AIS/camera sensors, patrol boats and the Vessel Movement Reporting System, and noting the canal moves roughly two billion gallons of petroleum annually — a factor in spill‑response planning.
Bernalillo County, New Mexico
The Bernalillo County Board of Finance on Nov. 18 approved the treasurer's quarterly investment strategy 5-0 after presentations on portfolio adjustments, liquidity plans and ARPA-related drawdowns. The treasurer and advisors recommended reducing the core portfolio range to $350M$450M to preserve operating liquidity.
Marshfield, Wood County, Wisconsin
The commission approved the second review of the operations & maintenance budget and capital budget, approved the audit statement of work, and approved bills, payroll and prior meeting minutes; commissioners discussed cash flow impacts from lead service replacements and large substation projects during debate on budgets.
Lisle, DuPage County, Illinois
At its Nov. 17 meeting the Village Board approved the consent agenda (including a $530,192.94 invoice list and a Lights of Lisle special-event permit), adopted an ordinance terminating the 2611 Corporate West Drive TIF, and approved a minor amendment to the Lincoln Avenue/Route 53 TIF legal description; all measures passed by roll call.
Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia
Atlanta City Council presented a proclamation and the inaugural 'Spirit of Atlanta' award to outgoing Council President Doug Shipman on Nov. 17, recognizing four years of leadership; Shipman thanked colleagues and noted collaboration with city administration.
Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Commission, Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee
The Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Commission retroactively approved an October Walk Month proclamation and approved a statement urging concrete-protected cycle track and continued BPAC involvement for Commerce Street redesign.
Spokane County, Washington
Legal counsel told commissioners the board will consider extending Liberty Lake's TIF through 2034, raising the improvement cap and including permanent affordable housing; documents show a county placeholder contribution of $200,000 with other jurisdictions pledging larger shares.
Bay City, Bay County, Michigan
After competing presentations from the ACLU and Flock Group, hours of commissioner questioning and more than two dozen public commenters urging rejection, the Bay City City Commission voted 2–6 to defeat a two‑year contract to install license‑plate readers; commissioners referred a separate funding reallocation resolution to staff for follow‑up.
Elkhart City, Elkhart County, Indiana
The board authorized advertising bids for an ADA barrier-removal project in city buildings (budgeted from a council-approved $800,000 ADA allocation) and for accessible pedestrian signals at six intersections to aid people with vision and hearing impairments.
United Nations, Federal
An unnamed U.S. official announced that the U.N. Security Council adopted a U.S.-sponsored resolution on Gaza, endorsing a transitional "Board of Peace," authorizing a stabilization force and calling for demilitarization; the speaker credited recent regional diplomacy and reported ongoing humanitarian flows and remaining hostages.
Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection, Executive , Massachusetts
The New England Wildlife Center described training, field kits and hospital upgrades funded by MOSFRA grants — including a recent $75,000 award — and said the center’s teams washed and released 45 of about 50 oiled birds from a recent spill, stressing the labor‑intensive nature of wildlife rehabilitation.
Spokane County, Washington
County planning staff briefed the Planning Commission on the DEIS and proposed Critical Areas Ordinance revisions, highlighting aquifer risks, wetland buffer and mitigation issues, and trade-offs between accommodating growth through denser infill or modest UGA expansion.
Port Hueneme City, Ventura County, California
Members described a stalled Delta Conveyance Project and rising climate-driven 'whiplash' of drought and flood, saying imported supplies are less reliable and arguing for investment in local, drought‑resilient sources.
Okaloosa County, Florida
After a legal briefing and commissioner debate about safety and public perception, the Board unanimously voted to retain the county's existing concealed-carry policy for employees and asked staff to notify employees of the county's stance and share best-practice updates.
United Nations, Federal
A delegate told the United Nations Security Council that armed conflict is driving a global food crisis, citing recent famines and urging four steps: unimpeded humanitarian access, resilient food systems, scaled climate adaptation finance, and political solutions to prevent starvation tactics.
Spokane County, Washington
During the board's open forum, Becky Dickerhoof warned that the CoC NOFO reductions will risk returning people to homelessness and urged enactment of the RCW 82.14.530 "15/90" tax authority; Jared Newenhouse of Ziply Fiber asked the county to finalize a pending franchise agreement so construction can begin.
Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Commission, Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee
Transportation licensing staff told the commission that the docked bike‑share contract remains under negotiation with Metro Legal and the mayor’s office; commissioners asked for a finance report on fees collected and how they have been spent.
Lisle, DuPage County, Illinois
SB Friedman told the Village Board the Downtown TIF generated about $192,000 in revenue and spent roughly $120,000 on studies over 10 years, leaving a $71,757 fund balance; a redevelopment agreement with F & C Development was terminated after missed deadlines, and consultants said the village can either extend the TIF or dissolve and reestablish it.
Marshfield, Wood County, Wisconsin
The commission reviewed a draft governance policy for the dark‑fiber/communications utility that proposes a 12% rate of return; commissioners asked for a cost‑of‑service study, dollar impacts on city and school district customers, and replacement‑cost estimates before adopting final rates.
Lake County, California
The commission adopted IS20-38 and approved Major Use Permit UP20-32 for J Grade Organics at Jerusalem Grade Road (Middletown) after staff concluded identified impacts (aesthetics, hydrology, biological resources, noise and wildfire) could be mitigated; commissioners confirmed canopy and acreage calculations fit ordinance requirements.
Benton Harbor, Berrien County, Michigan
Benton Harbor Sunrise Rotary Club requested commission approval to formally adopt and maintain a bridge as a memorial to Tawana (Marie) Floyd; public commenters and several commissioners supported the plan and emphasized cleanup and signage efforts.
Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection, Executive , Massachusetts
At the OSAC meeting in Plymouth, MassDEP staff reported a roughly $46 million trust-fund balance, detailed replacement and inspection plans for 81 statewide oil-spill trailers, previewed a new round of MOSFRA grants (expected to total more than $1 million) and outlined 2026 geographic response exercises and Boston Harbor sensor installations.
Elkhart City, Elkhart County, Indiana
Elkhart City Board of Works approved the claim and allowance docket totaling $5,700,410.06, ratified several SRF and contractor payments for Oakland Avenue and other projects, authorized advertising of multiple ADA and pedestrian-signal bids, and voted to transfer funds for an emergency Beck Drive repair; one appropriation item was tabled for clarification.
Port Hueneme City, Ventura County, California
The Port Hueneme Water Agency met in closed session to discuss anticipated litigation tied to a three‑party agreement with the cities of Port Hueneme and Oxnard and Calleagues Municipal Water District over water credits and pumping allocations; counsel said 'significant exposure to litigation exists,' and the agency reported no reportable action afterward.
Lake County, California
The commission adopted a mitigated negative declaration (IS20-104) and approved Wildcat Farms' Major Use Permit UP20-88 for 51,564 sq ft of canopy, after staff review of hydrology, biological and air-quality mitigations and public comment on road impacts and water availability.
Benton Harbor, Berrien County, Michigan
The commission received a presentation of a Berrien County resolution urging the Michigan Legislature to pass House Bills 5152 and 5153, described as measures to stop third-party firms from preying on homeowners during and after foreclosure by restricting assignment of surplus proceeds and requiring clearer notices.
Okaloosa County, Florida
Col. Mark Hamilton briefed the Okaloosa County commission on Hurlburt Field's readiness mission and asked for continued county partnership on traffic mitigation, affordable housing, child care and mental-health resources to support airmen and families.
Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Commission, Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee
NDOT and consultant Arcadis presented a draft access management manual that would consolidate conflicting driveway and access rules from Metro code chapters 13 and 17, add a formal waiver process and prioritize Vision Zero safety practices across arterials, collectors and downtown contexts.
Marshfield, Wood County, Wisconsin
Marshfield utility staff and 1 Energy Renewables presented four proposed behind‑the‑meter solar arrays sited on utility‑owned land outside city limits; projects range from roughly 2–5 MW, will require county permitting and wellhead‑protection coordination, and staff says designs aim to protect recreational space and municipal wells.
Lake County, California
The commission adopted a mitigated negative declaration and approved a Major Use Permit and development review for the J Lodge community club and two dwellings (UP21-46/DR22-10) in Loch Lomond, subject to conditions including preconstruction biological surveys and coordination with Environmental Health on an underground fuel tank.
Wallingford School District, School Districts, Connecticut
The district's nutrition director told the board the cafeteria had a $40,174 loss in October and a year-to-date loss of $25,375; participation rates were 15% for breakfast overall and 47.1% for lunch overall. The board accepted the report by consensus.
Spokane County, Washington
The Board of County Commissioners unanimously approved extending the Liberty Lake tax-increment financing district to July 1, 2034, increased public improvement cost estimates from $20 million to $30 million, and added permanent affordable housing as a permissible use; several partner taxing districts committed annual contributions, reducing Spokane County's share.
Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Commission, Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee
Ryman Hospitality and design firm Barge presented plans for a roughly 640‑foot, 12‑foot‑clear elevated greenway adjacent to Ascend Amphitheater, pledged up to $1.1 million for construction and said the structure would be handed to Metro and remain open 24/7; designers said they are coordinating with railroad, tree and parks stakeholders.
Lake County, California
The Lake County Planning Commission found a proposed vacation of a section of Roberts Road in Middletown consistent with the county General Plan (GPC 22-13) and determined the action exempt from CEQA; neighbors raised access, fire-turnout and environmental concerns during public comment.
Pike County, Kentucky
Transcript is a sports broadcast (college basketball game) and not eligible for civic meeting/article generation.
Wallingford School District, School Districts, Connecticut
Superintendent Belizzi and maintenance staff reviewed POW-flag replacements and proposed solar lighting across schools, estimating total installation around $4,000–$5,000 and noting battery replacement every ~3 years; the board asked staff to coordinate policy with the town.
Spokane County, Washington
Sheriff's staff and budget analysts presented three budget options for detention operations, reported an uptick of about 88 beds after suspending book‑and‑release, and outlined net costs of Electronic Home Monitoring (EHM) and education programs.
Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Commission, Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee
Metro transportation staff summarized progress and near-term priorities for the 'Choose How You Move' program, including an October $104 million capital drawdown to accelerate sidewalks, signals, service and safety projects; staff asked BPAC to review materials and provide community-facing questions.
Wallingford School District, School Districts, Connecticut
The Wallingford School District operations meeting approved a $134,677 transfer from the operating budget to replace two failing air handlers at Dag Hammarskjöld, an Lyman Hall unit and to complete tennis-court repairs. Staff warned manufacturers no longer support parts for the aging HVAC equipment.
Spokane County, Washington
Staff recommended removing a county requirement that animal protection officers receive special sheriff commissions, instead tying local code to state RCWs and clarifying training, powers and nonlethal tools for SCRAPS officers.
Anacortes, Skagit County, Washington
Planning staff presented code amendments to allow small duplexes, triplexes and townhouses in targeted zones and to update lot sizes and middle‑housing mapping. Council asked for clarifications on indoor recreation in industrial zones, collector street lists, and supported a 1,400 sq ft maximum for small duplex units.
CCSD 62, School Boards, Illinois
District 62 presented its Illinois State Report Card and assessment results: roughly 60% of students met or exceeded ELA expectations and 49.6% met or exceeded math standards, the district said, with all schools rated 'commendable' and persistent opportunity gaps remaining for students with IEPs and multilingual learners.
Muncie City, Delaware County, Indiana
Prairie Creek staff reported removing more than 77 docks and winterizing facilities, while the board approved a September adventure race and advanced a multiuse trail plan that reduced the city match to under $20,000 thanks to grant support; the group also discussed a roughly $100,000 campground dump station estimate and set an appeals process for leaseholders.
Spokane County, Washington
The Spokane County Board of County Commissioners voted Nov. 17 to keep the general, road and conservation-futures levies at 0% for 2026, banking the 1% capacity for future years as staff and commissioners continued work to close a projected $17 million shortfall in 2027.
Town of Sellersburg, Clark County, Indiana
The Town of Sellersburg Plan Commission approved a replat of the Saint Joe Place subdivision that splits seven duplex lots into 14 individual lots after the applicant presented covenants and the commission determined the plat met UDO/UBO requirements; vote was recorded as a majority with one dissent.
Lafayette, Contra Costa County, California
The commission unanimously approved a 412‑square‑foot front addition and a small variance to encroach 24 square feet into the front setback; staff found the addition modest, well screened and exempt from CEQA and no public comments were received.
Oak Park, Oakland County, Michigan
Multiple residents told the council they witnessed a Roanoke/Woodside incident involving Border Patrol agents allegedly using a taser and excessive force; the council urged residents to provide video evidence to Chief Cooper for review and discussed exploring an ordinance to limit cooperation with unidentified federal agents.
Spokane County, Washington
Program director Amy Vega told commissioners the courthouse children's waiting room faces an $80,000–$90,000 funding gap and requested a $20,000 county contribution for 2026 to bridge fundraising while pursuing grants and volunteer recruitment.
Muncie City, Delaware County, Indiana
Muncie Sanitary District proposed an interlocal agreement to assume trash and recycling duties for City of Muncie parks in exchange for a 2020 leach packer truck; the Prairie Creek advisory board voted to recommend the draft to the Board of Works for final approval.
Veterans Affairs & Emergency Preparedness, House of Representatives, Legislative, Pennsylvania
At a joint House hearing on HR 157, veterans, clinicians and a veterans’ nonprofit urged Congress and the Department of Veterans Affairs to expand access to stellate ganglion block (SGB) therapy for PTSD, citing clinical studies, personal recoveries and limited VA availability.
SILVER CONSOLIDATED SCHOOLS, School Districts, New Mexico
A finance adviser told the Silver Consolidated Schools board the district can proceed with a planned $6 million bond issuance (part of a $25M voter‑approved program), recommended a negotiated sale and suggested pursuing two credit ratings at an estimated combined cost of ~$60,000.
Wetumpka, Elmore County, Alabama
At a regular meeting, the Wetumpka City Council approved routine measures — adopting a procedural order, payments for paving, a $381.88 monthly charge to upgrade parking-lot lighting to LEDs, an agreement with Alabama Power for holiday attachments, and a permit for a Feb. 14 Mardi Gras parade — then recessed for an executive session on Rivertown property negotiations.
Lafayette, Contra Costa County, California
The Lafayette Planning Commission approved a concrete retaining wall and grading permit at 1166 Camino Vallecito to halt an active slide that is damaging a house; approval includes conditions requiring engineering sign‑off or a recorded drainage easement, removal of the failed prior wall from plans, and a railing set‑back to avoid a code variance.
Town of Zionsville, Boone County, Indiana
On Nov. 18, 2025 the Zionsville Redevelopment Commission approved its 2026 budget and required spending plan, tabled the Creekside Corporate Park Lot 1 term sheet to next month, and received its annual TIF report from Tim Berry of CROW, who noted the Zionsville EDA is set to expire on May 8, 2030.
Community Review Board Meetings, Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee
The board scheduled a joint MOU review with MNPD for Dec. 4, set a budget committee meeting for Dec. 9, announced a town hall for April 4, 2026, and reviewed community outreach including a coat drive (donations due Dec. 2) and a fall festival that drew ~150 attendees.
SILVER CONSOLIDATED SCHOOLS, School Districts, New Mexico
Decker Architects presented schematic concepts for the CLIF combined school, telling the Silver Consolidated Schools board that design committee members favor two ‘flow’ schemes and that renovating the existing gym would cost about 58–59% of new construction, a key factor in the district’s decision.
Decatur City, Morgan County, Alabama
At the Nov. 17 work session, Lisa Bradley urged the council to adopt clearer disciplinary and due-process procedures at the Decatur Police Department after repeated shootings, saying the community needs compassion and clear rules for employment actions.
Anacortes, Skagit County, Washington
Council voted to raise the city utility tax from 7% to 9% for water customers (residential, commercial, refineries) and directed staff to explore whether tiered rates or customer-class distinctions are legally feasible via outside counsel.
Calais, Washington County, Maine
Saint Croix Regional Health Family Health Center asked the Calais Planning Board for permission to convert 97 Main Street/6 Lowell Street into medical offices with 12 exam rooms, 12 offices and three second-floor staff studios; the board noted the site is commercially zoned and no formal approval was recorded.
New York City Geographic District #28, School Districts, New York
District 28 CEC hosted a virtual high school admissions fair where about 15 Queens public high schools presented program highlights and the Office of Student Enrollment explained MySchools features — including the OfferChances indicator and how random numbers affect offers.
Scottsdale, Maricopa County, Arizona
Council approved a revocable license allowing Old Town Farmers Market to use the City Hall parking lot beginning October 2026, amended to extend the market’s current agreement until a mutually acceptable transition date after staff caught a termination error in the proposed contract.
Lafayette, Contra Costa County, California
The Lafayette Planning Commission unanimously approved three Phase 1 hillside development permits for new single‑family homes at 1227, 1231 and 1233 Cambridge Drive, clearing siting and massing while leaving grading, drainage and architectural details to Phase 2 review. Neighbors pressed the commission about turnaround, parking and wildfire safety; staff added conditions, including fire‑mitigation measures and a corrected condition to apply alternate materials/methods to all lots.
Springfield SD 186, School Boards, Illinois
The District 186 board approved consent agenda items, adopted personnel recommendations, authorized a $4,500 addendum to the IASB superintendent-search contract, and approved expulsions for several students; votes were recorded as unanimous aye votes.
Judicial - Appeals Court Oral Arguments, Judicial, Massachusetts
Mother appealed termination and post‑adoption contact findings, arguing lack of nexus between alleged mental‑health history and parenting deficiencies; DCF and child's attorney defended trial court's findings on unmet needs, inconsistent visitation and the child's expressed wishes. Panel took case under advisement.
United Nations, Federal
A presiding speaker announced the adoption of a draft resolution (recorded as “resolution 28 0 3 20 25”) after a vote the transcript records as 14 in favor, 0 against and 2 abstentions; the transcript does not list mover/second or individual votes.
Van Buren County, Tennessee
A resident and business owner, Larry Austin, told commissioners he received a notice of lien and asked for clarity about a five-year warranty deed; the county attorney said documents and minutes lack clarity and recommended determining the county's obligation once records are aligned.
Anacortes, Skagit County, Washington
Council authorized a $301,413.21 modification to the Cola/Colacurcio Brothers contract to deepen signal-pole foundations at 12th & Commercial (Safeway intersection) after staff explained unexpected poor soil conditions requiring 25‑ft foundations; motion passed unanimously.
Judicial - Appeals Court Oral Arguments, Judicial, Massachusetts
Appellate counsel argued trial judge abused discretion by denying retroactive child support and by treating a short marriage as a longer economic partnership; the panel probed timing of filings, litigation history and whether custodial contributions warrant different asset allocation.
Oak Park, Oakland County, Michigan
Council approved 2026 CDBG allocations using last year’s entitlement ($122,359 as placeholder), a substantive budget amendment rolling over FY24‑25 projects, payment approvals for legal invoices, event hub pay application of $720,050.09, and awarded the city master‑plan update to Giffels Webster for $69,885.
Spokane County, Washington
The Spokane Conservation District proposed raising parcel fees from $10 to $15 and using state law HB 1488 to adopt a three‑year inflation adjustment; director Lisa Carter said the fees help leverage grants and support programs that multiply county funding.
North Canton City Council, North Canton, Stark County, Ohio
The council clerk presented the 2025 annual report summarizing meetings and legislation for the year; Councilwoman Stephanie Warren received a bronze gavel award for 13 years of service, a full-time firefighter (Abdul Catchings) was sworn in, and the North Canton Cares Pantry update was highlighted.
Gardner City, Worcester County, Massachusetts
Trustees set the school grant application period from Dec. 1 through Jan. 30 and heard staff report that only $2,516.25 remained unspent from the current award pool, with roughly $1,000 more expected to be claimed by year end.
Judicial - Appeals Court Oral Arguments, Judicial, Massachusetts
Resi LLC appealed a local conservation commission denial that found a ~28 sq ft permanent loss of significant shellfish habitat, while DEP issued a superseding order approving the pier; arguments focused on adjacent‑area impacts, insufficient applicant disclosures about boats, and whether local bylaw language permits denial.
Community Review Board Meetings, Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee
The Community Review Board reviewed a complaint alleging a lieutenant drove ~87 mph on I-24; staff confirmed track‑star data and OPA’s investigation, but the board voted to ask the chief and OPA to explain why the incident did not breach a prior ‘‘last chance’’ agreement and to reexamine the punishment.
Madison, School Districts, Florida
Trustees debated whether conveyances should include maintenance and insurance requirements and asked the board attorney to draft objective, enforceable criteria and a notice/repair schedule for review before final action.
Decatur City, Morgan County, Alabama
In a 5'0'0vote session, the Decatur City Council approved a citywide zoning rewrite and passed multiple resolutions: liquor license, unsafe-conditions abatements, acceptance of Lafayette Cemetery, award of Princess Theater repairs to Core Construction, purchase of a slope tractor, and approval to apply for a $350,000 ADEM hazardous-waste grant.
Anacortes, Skagit County, Washington
Council opened public hearings on the 2026 operating budget and Capital Facilities Plan, approved a process to finalize the budget Nov. 24, and debated allocating opioid-settlement funds — staff proposed $80,000 toward a school resource officer and $30,000 to the Anacortes Family Center while some council members urged preserving more for the county STAR Center.
Judicial - Appeals Court Oral Arguments, Judicial, Massachusetts
Panel heard competing arguments over whether an unwritten MIAA enforcement policy that produced forfeiture sanctions was arbitrary and whether appeals are moot or capable of repetition; MIAA warns plaintiffs could owe contractual attorney fees if successful. Court took matter under advisement.
North Canton City Council, North Canton, Stark County, Ohio
Council authorized the administration to advertise and receive bids for police department renovations and to replace the aging city hall HVAC system, declaring the measure an emergency to speed contracting after members described the current HVAC as failing.
Scottsdale, Maricopa County, Arizona
Public speakers demanded removal or prohibition of Flock license‑plate readers; council simplified language asking to 'promote responsible and transparent use of technologies' and retained enough language so city lobbyists can take positions on future legislation.
Judicial - Appeals Court Oral Arguments, Judicial, Massachusetts
Appellant argues unrebutted affidavit describing daily dust, vibration and a truck route with "140 trucks a day" created particularized harm that the trial court misread; appellee disputes proximity and factual sufficiency. Panel took matter under advisement.
Gardner City, Worcester County, Massachusetts
Trustees voted Nov. 17 to segregate $322,769.70 (described as 90% of year‑to‑date gains and income) for upcoming grant distributions and approved an investment report showing a current account value of about $2,892,799.
Springfield SD 186, School Boards, Illinois
At public comment, parent and educator Melissa Hostetter urged stricter controls on district-issued Chromebooks, recommending device locks, disabling YouTube, limiting device use for younger grades and preparing for potential parent opt-outs.
Van Buren County, Tennessee
A resolution endorsing initial exploration of Flock Safety visual monitoring devices — described in the meeting as license-plate readers — was approved and authorizes the sheriff to collect acquisition and installation information; one commissioner registered opposition citing privacy concerns.
Madison, School Districts, Florida
Trustees approved supplemental salary schedules for Madison County Central and High School with recusals for conflicted members and separate recorded votes to approve conflicted individuals' entries (Matt Thompson and Jeremy Carroll).
Lyons Twp HSD 204, School Boards, Illinois
Superintendent Dr. Wartman announced students and staff will begin using a new South Campus cafeteria this week and the PTABIC updated trustees on restorative practices, stressing proactive classroom work and the restorative intervention room's supportive role.
Oak Park, Oakland County, Michigan
Council voted 4–1 to establish an obsolete property rehabilitation district for 21800 Greenfield, a prerequisite under state statute that allows Value Wholesale/BM Ventures to apply next meeting for up to 12 years of tax freezing on a $12,000,000 investment expected to create 73 jobs averaging $36.97/hour.
Judicial - Appeals Court Oral Arguments, Judicial, Massachusetts
In an appeal over withheld wages, the court pressed whether a worker’s affidavit claiming a $15 hourly promise — contradicting payroll records showing $13 — and a June 7 check that bounced create genuine factual disputes under Mass. Wage Act §150 and SJC precedent; the panel took the case under advisement.
Spokane County, Washington
County staff recommended keeping SAMHSA block grants and 9‑8‑8 funding separate and urged maintaining Medicaid funding amid looming federal appropriations negotiations, citing risks for local behavioral‑health and crisis services.
North Canton City Council, North Canton, Stark County, Ohio
City council accepted amounts and tax rates set by the budget commission and approved several ordinances to fund 2026 operations, including appropriations and personnel-rule amendments; council also suspended rules to accelerate consideration of tax certification and capital bids.
Lyons Twp HSD 204, School Boards, Illinois
The district board approved a tentative 2025 tax levy totaling $89,045,667 (a $3.65 million, 4.28% increase). Trustees will hold a public hearing in December and adopt a final levy after reviewing final Cook County figures.
Decatur City, Morgan County, Alabama
The Decatur City Council voted 5–0 to adopt a rewritten zoning ordinance and updated zoning map designed to implement the city'wide comprehensive plan, adding standards such as landscape buffers and rules for accessory dwelling units. The ordinance takes effect Jan. 1, 2026.
Gaston County Schools, School Districts, North Carolina
At its Nov. 17 meeting the Gaston County Board of Education highlighted JROTC programs across five high schools, named local educators and students for state honors, and recognized cafeteria staffs for consistently high scores.
Scottsdale, Maricopa County, Arizona
After heated public comment, Scottsdale’s council approved a memorandum of understanding with Axon Enterprise that reduces proposed residential units to 1,200 (600 apartments, 600 condominiums), adopts a self‑certification ordinance and makes litigation contingent on Axon signing the MOU and a Prop 207 waiver by Nov. 19, 2025.
Madison, School Districts, Florida
Trustees approved surplus lists for Lee and Pinetta elementaries, agreed to auction most items, removed two vintage spring 'bouncy' cars for return to the donor's family, and approved returning a dedication plaque to the Buchanan family.
Kalamazoo City, Kalamazoo County, Michigan
The City Commission approved an interim employment agreement with Patsy A. Moore to serve as city manager from Nov. 18 (12:01 a.m.) through Jan. 4, 2026. Attorney Liao outlined key terms and the commission voted unanimously.
Van Buren County, Tennessee
The county adopted a resolution establishing a policy for cremation of unidentified or unclaimed human remains and requiring family reimbursement if relatives later claim remains; the county will solicit annual bids for cremation services.
Lyons Twp HSD 204, School Boards, Illinois
The Lyons Twp HSD 204 Board approved a 2025 10-year life-safety survey plan and endorsed a phased approach to address prioritized A/B/C items, with staff proposing roughly $500,000 per year from operating funds and options to use levies or borrowing for larger needs.
Springfield SD 186, School Boards, Illinois
District 186 staff presented October financials and a proposed 2025 tax-levy ‘ask’ that would raise the levy request by 4.56% (an estimated tax-rate increase of about 3.54%); adoption and a Truth in Taxation hearing are scheduled for Dec. 1.
New Haven County, Connecticut
The Alders approved a consent agenda including a zoning sign change for a hospital, multiple tax-abatement requests, a budget transfer to close FY2024–25 and an amendment to a services agreement; several announcements and a community enrollment event were made before adjournment.
Madison, School Districts, Florida
A vendor presentation on an eight-unit electric school-bus contract prompted detailed questions about pricing, maintenance, mileage fees and infrastructure costs; board members said correct contract documents had not been uploaded and voted to table the item for further review.
Van Buren County, Tennessee
After debate about new vs. used vehicles, commissioners approved moving $50,000 from fund balance for truck purchases (6–4) and accepted a $125,000 grant toward a new garbage truck, authorizing solid-waste committee to finalize motor and procurement details.
Gaston County Schools, School Districts, North Carolina
Multiple public commenters on Nov. 17 urged the Gaston County Board of Education to address a teacher reprimand and morale, chronic bus driver shortages, inclusion of Juneteenth in curriculum, and community interest in an off‑campus religious release program, LifeWise Academy.
Oak Park, Oakland County, Michigan
An OHM Advisors study proposed a 3‑lane road diet at 9 Mile and Coolidge, a 12‑ft shared use path, and a proof‑of‑concept mixed‑use redevelopment that could add roughly 700–800 housing units and parking decks; implementation would require streetscape work, zoning changes, grant funding and property‑owner buy‑in.
Polk County, Texas
Polk County commissioners approved the canvass of November propositions on Nov. 17, 2025; county elections staff reported a 9.37% turnout and commissioners noted that turnout for ballot propositions is typically low.
Marshall County, Indiana
Marshall County approved several utility permits, authorized a presidential signature on a federal bridge commitment for a Michigan Road bridge (bridge number referenced inconsistently in the record) and approved a $20,000 RQAW agreement to study an intersection on Dewey Street and South Michigan.
Trinity County, California
At 1 p.m. Monday, Nov. 17, the Trinity County Board of Supervisors convened briefly, then adjourned into closed session under Government Code, Section 549545E to discuss a public employee appointment for the County Administrative Officer (CAO). No public comments were recorded.
Dysart Unified District (4243), School Districts, Arizona
Principals and teachers showcased Sundown Mountain's credit-recovery program and Sunset Hills Elementary's PLC-driven third-grade approach; Superintendent Dr. Crodo also recognized Nicholas Schneider, a National Merit semifinalist from Shadow Ridge High School.
Princeton, Bureau County, Illinois
The council approved Resolution R-25-028 (temporary closure of Illinois Route 26 for the Putnam parade), approved departmental invoices totaling $1,886,763.58, approved minutes from 11/03/2025, and appointed Richard Heaton to the Public Arts Commission for a three-year term ending 04/20/2028.
Delaware County, Indiana
At its Nov. 17 meeting the commission approved the Lochmuller bridge-inspection contract ($690,459), accepted donated work for a sheriff's gun-range upgrade, adopted multiple ordinances including zoning and grant-fund creation, and approved claims and payroll; one high-profile motion to change retiree insurance died for lack of a second.
Medina County, Ohio
A concise list of motions and recorded outcomes from the Medina County commissioners meeting: unanimous approvals for minutes, bridge and sanitary resolutions, HR personnel changes, finance resolutions including $1,950,109.61 in weekly bills, restroom change order, multiple reappointments, and formal adjournment to executive session.
Wausau, Marathon County, Wisconsin
The Board of Public Works approved a series of contractor payments and change orders for municipal projects — including chiller replacement, siphon work, street construction, retaining wall materials and pavement marking — and later voted to go into closed session to deliberate claims under Wis. Stat. §19.85(1)(g).
Gaston County Schools, School Districts, North Carolina
The Gaston County Board of Education on Nov. 17 approved a $461,700,000 budget for 2025–26, noted a $7.2 million cut in low-wealth state supplemental funding, and approved a 3.5% November bonus for classified hourly employees. Board members discussed enrollment growth and charter pass-throughs.
Hunt County, Texas
At a Nov. 17 special session, Hunt County elections staff read county totals for the Nov. 4 constitutional amendment propositions and commissioners voted by voice to approve the canvass; staff reported 32 provisional ballots were presented, eight accepted and 24 rejected.
Delaware County, Indiana
Delaware County created fund lines and suspended rules Nov. 17 to accept a $50,000 AEP grant for an Oakville-area tornado siren (siren estimated at $34,747) and to create a $10,000 fund for a Health Department injury-prevention grant for swimming and water-safety classes; both were adopted to allow the state and grantors to complete contract setup.
New Haven County, Connecticut
The Alders voted to apply for and accept a $100,000 Kaiser Renee Center grant to support gun-violence research and education, partnering with Yale New Haven Hospital and community organizations to pursue public-health approaches to reducing violence.
Van Buren County, Tennessee
The Van Buren County Commission approved transfers from opioid-abatement funds to support a community outreach coordinator at the local prevention coalition and a $1,500 allocation for the sheriff’s DARE program; later a related fund-balance transfer of $27,758.69 was approved to cover those and related expenses.
Dysart Unified District (4243), School Districts, Arizona
Lisa Everett told the board she believed three members opposed a resolution against BNSF's Whitman intermodal hub for personal reasons and urged them to resign, saying personal animosity should not override students' safety and well-being.
Delaware County, Indiana
Debate over Ordinance 2025-31 to change retiree insurance from a 70/30 county/employee split to 50/50 and to remove spouse coverage ended without a second; commissioners will draft clarified ordinance language for the next meeting reflecting the agreed 70/30 split and removal of spouse coverage effective Jan. 1.
Wausau, Marathon County, Wisconsin
The Board of Public Works approved a disbursement request for the city's lead service-line replacement work and directed staff to prepare the first reimbursement submission; the amount was read aloud during the meeting and the transcript contains an inconsistent numeric reading.
Kalamazoo City, Kalamazoo County, Michigan
Speakers at public comment pressed the commission to help preserve a parcel near Asylum Lake Preserve and urged the city to consider acquisition or eminent domain; the clerk clarified the parcel acquisition is a county project and a resolution about the property was included in the commission packet for information.
Saginaw, Saginaw County, Michigan
City Manager announced the city received the Government Finance Officers Association budget award (18th consecutive year), detailed $1.6M+ improvements at Hoyt Park tied to the Memorial Cup legacy project, and urged residents to complete a housing and economic development survey available through Dec. 12.
Montgomery County, Alabama
Montgomery County Commission approved a slate of routine agenda items including contract amendments, bid awards, appropriations to youth organizations, a holiday resolution and a digital records conversion contract (one commissioner recused).
Delaware County, Indiana
The county approved a four-year contract with Lochmuller Group to inspect all 197 bridges for which the county is responsible; inspections are federally required, funded roughly 80% federal and 20% local, and include specialized fracture-critical and underwater inspections.
Lee's Summit R-VII, School Districts, Missouri
Dr. Barger asked the committee to approve buying a larger trailer for Lee's Summit North Marching Band so the district can hire a professional driver and reduce volunteer logistics; the item was presented with no follow-up questions and is on staff's procurement list.
Dysart Unified District (4243), School Districts, Arizona
Dysart Unified School District officials told the board the district has its highest number of A-rated schools on record, no C-rated schools for a second consecutive year, all four high schools remain A-rated and the district label remains an A; one B-rated school is under appeal.
Medina County, Ohio
Sanitary Engineer Jeremy Cinco presented and commissioners approved three resolutions authorizing change orders for the Hinkley wastewater treatment plant and the Santa Teresa rehabilitation project, and declaring the necessity to restore Champion Creek riverbank and advertise for bids.
Oak Park, Oakland County, Michigan
MDOT engineers told the Oak Park City Council that a weekend traffic switch moved westbound traffic onto the completed eastbound pavement and that several Oak Park exits will be closed through 2026; MDOT provided contact info, bridge completion estimates, and said contractors face post‑deadline penalties but no early‑completion bonuses.
Delaware County, Indiana
Commissioners approved accepting donated equipment and operator apprentices to complete berms at the county gun range, citing a prior estimate of about $370,000 to finish the project; county counsel will review or draft an agreement to protect both the county and the donating union/company.
Cortland City Council, Cortland, Trumbull County, Ohio
Council and the mayor reviewed two proposals from Republic Services: a one-year price increase versus a five-year contract that would supply 65-gallon wheeled recycling carts and move recycling to every-other-week pickup; staff said yard waste and current services would continue and outreach would precede changes.
Montgomery County, Alabama
Commissioners discussed ongoing operating losses at Montgomery Whitewater, said the facility serves as an anchor for redevelopment near Maxwell Boulevard, and directed staff to prepare a plan for sustaining the facility; no funding vote occurred at this meeting.
Marshall County, Indiana
After selling a prior tower agreement, Marshall County authorized a Hyperwave Ethernet services agreement for the jail to separate networks and discussed ongoing BrightSpeed copper-line problems; commissioners asked residents experiencing service issues to email Adam at the county address to help isolate trouble spots.
Princeton, Bureau County, Illinois
The Princeton City Council voted to award a design-build contract to Ringling Johnson Construction for a proposed fire department expansion, approving a not-to-exceed figure and authorizing designers to finalize a guaranteed maximum price; council discussed timeline, funding sources and equipment.
Delaware County, Indiana
IRAC/pilot recovery services reported 2,355 brief engagements and multiple successful treatment referrals; presenters said UMass pilot-site analysis found reductions in fatal overdoses and other system measures, and the program will shift to a state fee-for-service Recovery Works model Jan. 1.
Montgomery County, Alabama
Ricky Goldman of New Design For Living asked Montgomery County commissioners to vet and consider supporting his faith-based recovery program, saying it aims to install neighborhood satellite divisions to provide addiction education, prevention and 12‑step–based treatment.
Kalamazoo City, Kalamazoo County, Michigan
The City Commission unanimously approved a $300,000 city contribution to a $700,000 winter‑shelter plan on Nov. 17, 2025. Providers named in the plan include Housing Resources Inc. (shelter coordination), Ministry with Community (day and overnight shelter) and Dignity in Motion (hotel beds for medically vulnerable).
Lee's Summit R-VII, School Districts, Missouri
Facilities staff said replacing three rooftop HVAC units at Lee's Summit North will likely cost about $7.3 million total (installation plus equipment), with equipment purchase listed near $4.148 million; work is expected to be installed over summers 2026 and 2027 and will be funded from the 2025 bond program.
Hunt County, Texas
At a Nov. 17 special session, the county's presiding election judge told commissioners a recent change to the election code and growing voter volumes are straining staff and facilities and will require additional voting machines, printers and budgeting for surveillance equipment by 2030.
Delaware County, Indiana
At a public hearing Nov. 17, family representatives urged Delaware County commissioners to postpone two proposed bridge/road vacations — one near East Wade Street and one on County Road 200 West — citing pending land auctions, potential multiple buyers and uncertainty over access; commissioners introduced but did not adopt the ordinances to preserve public comment time.
Dysart Unified District (4243), School Districts, Arizona
The Dysart Unified School District Governing Board approved a facility-use agreement with the City of Surprise that allows the city to present shows at the Vista Center for the Arts through June 30, 2031, while the district retains scheduling control and revenue from district events.
Cortland City Council, Cortland, Trumbull County, Ohio
At its Nov. 13 meeting the Cortland City Council approved payment of $100,521.98 in bills, accepted the October bank reconciliation, and completed the third reading and adoption of an ordinance restricting access to city email accounts; several other first readings and resolutions were taken up.
Kalamazoo City, Kalamazoo County, Michigan
Several public commenters used the Nov. 17 public comment period to press the new commission on housing and to allege law enforcement misconduct and coercive practices by a local service provider.
Saginaw, Saginaw County, Michigan
Council took up an ordinance amending Title 15, Chapter 151 (property maintenance—non-owner-occupied registries and fees). Members and staff clarified whether the item was a final adoption or a layover; the record shows a motion to adopt was made and seconded and staff addressed the procedural question on the record.
Lampasas, Lampasas County, Texas
Council approved a set of actions including authorization of the Sportsman Solutions contract, rezoning of 500 N. Willis, reimbursement to the Chamber, acceptance of developer utilities conveyance, and an interlocal agreement for Hamilton EMS cost-sharing; staff listed other procurement and engineering items for follow-up.
Marshall County, Indiana
The Marshall County Board of Commissioners voted to adopt Resolution 2025-15—described in the meeting as a ‘Sanctuary County’ resolution—saying the county recognizes Second Amendment rights while noting it does not supersede criminal prohibitions or federal background-check requirements.
Council Announcements & Meetings, Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee
The committee approved a slate of consent items, accepted several grant amendments and cooperative purchasing agreements, deferred two grant applications to December 16 and postponed a transportation fee bill to January 20. Votes were taken by voice and several items prompted clarifying questions from council members.
Delray Beach, Palm Beach County, Florida
The Planning & Zoning Board unanimously recommended approval of a conditional use to allow a boutique grooming and pet‑treat retail operation (appointment‑based, no boarding) at 5048 West Atlantic Avenue in a commercial plaza; staff said the operation meets enclosure, parking and noise safeguards.
CCSD 62, School Boards, Illinois
Art teachers in CCSD 62 described a collaborative process in which NJHS students researched culturally relevant animals, staff iteratively sketched and digitized designs, and the community voted on final mascots to give each school an individual logo within a cohesive district look.
Tiffin City Council, Tiffin, Seneca County, Ohio
After committee review, councilors introduced an ordinance (Ord. 2025‑94) that would replace the vague "reasonable control" standard with specific leash/tether rules (maximum tether length 8 feet) and off‑leash area conditions; committee asked for public notice before implementation.
Medina County, Ohio
Brett Thomas presented five finance resolutions including revenue adjustments, cash transfers (including proceeds from the sale of a professional building into the capital improvements budget), travel expenses and weekly bills totaling $1,950,109.61, all approved unanimously by the board.
Punta Gorda City, Charlotte County, Florida
Council considered awarding a seawall reseal/replacement contract, reviewed an FPL street-light conversion opportunity (staff said some lights are FDOT-owned), and a resident urged FDOT action after describing a hazardous 2-inch drop at the Olympia/Marion crossing.
Birmingham City, Oakland County, Michigan
Following a closed‑session legal briefing, the commission said documents suggest the Community House property may be held as a public trust and that the commission will pursue all available means to prevent the building’s sale into private hands.
Lee's Summit R-VII, School Districts, Missouri
Facilities director Mr. Gorrell explained the district will shortlist three construction managers via RFQ and then ask each to provide lump-sum bids on individual 2025 bond projects; an alternate firm (Straub) is listed to cover staffing gaps. Contracts for each project will return to the board for award to the low bidder.
Kalispell, Flathead County, Montana
Council approved a consent agenda that included a $776,128 contract award to In Situ Form Technologies for sanitary sewer rehabilitation and amended a mayoral proclamation supporting the Flathead Food Bank to explicitly recognize independent local food banks after public comment from local pantry organizers.
Kalamazoo City, Kalamazoo County, Michigan
The Kalamazoo County Board of Canvassers certified Nov. election results at the Nov. 17 commission meeting, and the newly elected commissioners and mayor were presented with pins and administered the constitutional oath of office.
Appropriations, House of Representatives, Legislative, Pennsylvania
The Appropriations committee advanced five House bills — HB 12-33 (battery stewardship), HB 17-20 and HB 17-87 (audit filing/publication dates), HB 18-11 (removes per-acre cap for Game Commission land purchases), and HB 18-71 (authorizes commercial security systems). Votes were either roll-call or announced along party lines and all bills passed the committee.
Council Announcements & Meetings, Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee
The Budget & Finance Committee deferred bill 20 25 11 13, which would create a Midtown Central Business Improvement District, after public commenters urged delay and council members asked for more financial detail and legal review; the sponsor said outreach is ongoing and Metro Legal will follow up before the next meeting.
Lampasas, Lampasas County, Texas
Council voted to reimburse the Lampasas County Chamber of Commerce and Business Center $31,257.85 for its biannual report and related visitor-center expenses after staff presentation and a motion to approve.
Tippecanoe County, Indiana
During public comment the board welcomed new 4‑H extension educator Kelsey Moreno and 4‑H agent Will Walls, and recognized Paula Bennett with an award for more than 26 years with Tippecanoe County, including roles as ADA/Title VI coordinator and public information officer.
Birmingham City, Oakland County, Michigan
The commission amended its meeting ordinance to set regular meetings to 7 p.m.–midnight (extensions by majority in 30‑minute increments) and voted to have staff evaluate using AI to assist draft minutes.
Saginaw, Saginaw County, Michigan
After months of consultant review, the Saginaw City Council voted 6–2 to withdraw funding from SGTI and terminate a subrecipient agreement related to the SANE project, citing missing deliverables, changing budgets and Treasury compliance risks.
Punta Gorda City, Charlotte County, Florida
The city placed a notice of termination of lease for Punta Gorda Coffee & Tea and Punta Gorda Chocolate and Wine on the agenda; Council member Janine Pope said she will consult the city attorney and may recuse herself, and staff said previously approved rent forgiveness was not included in the remaining-loss calculation.
Cortland City Council, Cortland, Trumbull County, Ohio
Council members and petition organizers presented emails they say show a breakdown in relations with the mayor, who in a June letter denied the allegations and warned of legal action; petitioners say they submitted 511 signatures and the clerk will certify whether the recall petition meets charter requirements.
Medina County, Ohio
County leaders expressed skepticism about a state forecast projecting population decline and supported commissioning a $7,000 demographic analysis from International Strategic Analysis to produce a locally informed 25-year forecast to guide planning and the solid waste management update.
Delray Beach, Palm Beach County, Florida
After more than an hour of public comment from nearby residents, the Planning & Zoning Board voted 5‑2 to deny a Level 4 site plan and conditional‑use request for a one‑tunnel automatic car wash at 14145 S. Military Trail, citing neighborhood stability, traffic safety and environmental concerns.
Punta Gorda City, Charlotte County, Florida
The council placed a first reading on the public hearing agenda to repeal Chapter 17 and adopt a new Chapter 17 utilities ordinance; no public testimony or votes took place at the pre-agenda meeting.
Medford Public Schools, School Boards, Massachusetts
The committee unanimously approved a resolution directing administration to draft an annual 504-plan notice for families and to form an ad-hoc committee with the registrar of voters to strengthen student voter education and preregistration.
Tiffin City Council, Tiffin, Seneca County, Ohio
Councilors instructed law to draft TIF and tax‑abatement legislation and approved adding an emergency to the Hedges Boyer Park labyrinth project (ordinance 25‑93); the council also approved the continuation of the city’s designated outdoor refreshment area (Ord. 25‑85) 7–0.
Kalamazoo City, Kalamazoo County, Michigan
The commission used its Nov. 17 meeting to honor outgoing Commissioner Don Cooney and Commissioner Keanna Decker and to present City Manager James K. Ritzema with a proclamation and the key to the city, with colleagues praising their public service.
Birmingham City, Oakland County, Michigan
The commission approved a $1.7M‑class design for a fully inclusive playground at Poppleton Park (budgeted originally at $1M), accepted a $50,000 Rotary donation, and authorized five inset ADA parking spaces along Oxford Street with a not‑to‑exceed budget of $80,000.
Lee's Summit R-VII, School Districts, Missouri
The district's treasurer told the finance committee the state is paying roughly $6,900 per pupil versus a budget target of $7,145, creating a possible $4.1 million revenue gap (and up to $7 million in a worse scenario). Staff recommended using reserves as needed and moving some term investments to liquid accounts to ensure cash access.
Punta Gorda City, Charlotte County, Florida
City leaders announced a successful grant award of $22,000,000 for well-field and related water/wastewater projects and said the projects are eligible for State Revolving Fund (SRF) financing; transcript figures about the total available funds are inconsistent and staff said the city will provide clarification.
West Chester, Chester County, Pennsylvania
Planning staff reported an application for 304 West Lafayette seeking relief from a rule prohibiting parking within 5 feet of a property line to permit an alley parking layout and an EV charger; staff said the solicitor prefers sending the proposal to Smart Growth before scheduling a zoning hearing board date.
Tippecanoe County, Indiana
The board took fuel, paver and dump-truck proposals under advisement for later technical comparison; it also authorized applying for an MSAG/GIS seed grant to clean 9‑1‑1 mapping data and approved a service agreement for community corrections tied to the regional opioid settlement effort.
Lampasas, Lampasas County, Texas
After a public hearing and a 4–0 planning board recommendation, council moved and voted to rezone part of Lot 4, Lot 1 (500 N. Willis) from single-family residential (SF-20) to commercial C; staff noted surrounding mixed residential and commercial uses and previous subdivision of the parcel.
CORNWALL CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
Superintendent Megan Narginio and student representatives reported on recent tenure awards, Thanksgiving and Veterans Day activities, school performances and sports; the board also updated the public on the superintendent search timeline and opened a public survey.
Kalispell, Flathead County, Montana
On first reading the council approved Ordinance 1947 to amend Kalispell Municipal Code §2-36, allowing the council to waive the city manager residency requirement by contract. Councilors debated preferring an in-city manager while supporting negotiation flexibility for special circumstances.
Delray Beach, Palm Beach County, Florida
The Delray Beach Planning & Zoning Board voted to recommend City Commission approval of a waiver reducing the front setback for Building 4 South of the Atlanta Crossing project to 2.5 feet to accommodate a porte‑cochere, structural pier for public art and pool support. Staff said the change meets the 2013 LDR standards tied to an earlier settlement agreement.
Medina County, Ohio
The Medina County Board of Commissioners unanimously approved three resolutions finding that public convenience and welfare require replacement of bridges on Chippewa, Friendsville and Kennard roads, clearing the way for project planning and future procurement steps.
Gurnee, Lake County, Illinois
Trustees approved the consent agenda (minutes, surplus property resolution, staff training, payroll and bills), Ordinance 2025-78 converting an existing Primo sign to an electronic message board, awarded electrical work for police access control to Kelso Burnett ($95,865), and approved a finished roof installation to DCG Roofing ($69,247.50).
CORNWALL CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Districts, New York
The Cornwall Central School District Board of Education voted to deny a Village of Cornwall-on-Hudson request to exempt village-owned water-supply property from school district taxes after trustees raised budget and fairness concerns, including an estimated district cost increase of roughly $120,000 if granted.
Portage City, Columbia County, Wisconsin
The Portage City Plan Commission voted unanimously to recommend that the common council adopt a resolution amending Tax Incremental District (TID) No. 8 to add roughly five acres for a proposed 72‑unit multifamily development; staff and the city’s municipal advisor said the project could generate about $12 million in new taxable value and include roughly $1.8 million in pay‑as‑you‑go incentives.
Missoula, Missoula County, Montana
In a public-access interview, Missoula Housing Authority Executive Director Sam Oliver said the agency discontinued a nearly 3,800-household centralized wait list in favor of weekly published vacancies, aims to deploy online applications within a year, will rehab 96 Wildflower Apartments using low-income housing tax credits, and highlighted Family Self-Sufficiency program gains.
Tiffin City Council, Tiffin, Seneca County, Ohio
Council approved ordinance 2025-92 to authorize temporary and permanent easements for the Tiffin interceptor upgrade, suspending the three‑reading rule and passing emergency measures 7–0; city engineer said appraisals and negotiations are underway and administration requested authority to expend roughly $90,000 to compensate property owners.
Tippecanoe County, Indiana
County commissioners approved a master service agreement that establishes general terms for future projects with Tech Systems Global Services LLC; no fee schedules or active projects were included, and the agreement can be terminated on 60 days' notice.
Nueces County, Texas
The Nueces County Commissioners Court on Nov. 17 voted to canvass and declare the November election results under Chapter 67 of the Texas Election Code; the voice vote was unanimous among members present and Commissioner Tessie was absent. The court had no public comment and adjourned shortly after the vote.
Medford Public Schools, School Boards, Massachusetts
Chad Fallon told the School Committee the CTE program received roughly $542,000 in recent awards (Perkins, Department of Education allocations and more), including a $404,000 Skills Capital award to upgrade auto‑tech for EV training and funds to develop new Chapter 74 programs.
Lampasas, Lampasas County, Texas
City staff said roughly $1.4 million in flood damages will be submitted to FEMA (city pays upfront and may receive up to 75% reimbursement); residents urged faster drainage repairs and council asked staff to prioritize local drainage projects over some street resurfacing work.
Missoula, Missoula County, Montana
This transcript is a community TV interview profiling the 4 History Buffs club at the Missoula Public Library; it does not record government deliberations, votes, or public-policy decisions and is not eligible for civic meeting article generation.
San Mateo County, California
San Mateo County said the Pescadero High School waterline extension is 100% state‑grant funded ($4,191,000) and limited to the school and a new fire station; staff reviewed supply‑study findings and said alternatives require substantial treatment and funding and that a secondary source is years away.
West Chester, Chester County, Pennsylvania
Staff presented the Parks for All borough park, recreation and open-space plan as a comprehensive-plan amendment intended to support fee-in-lieu calculations; commissioners asked whether elevated private courtyards should count as recreation space and requested a presentation by project staff to clarify calculations and implementation steps.
Tippecanoe County, Indiana
The Tippecanoe County Sheriff described a Guardian RFID wristband system for the jail, with year-one cost of $20,749.86 and $13,495.50 annually thereafter; commissioners approved the contract, to be funded from commissary funds.
Gurnee, Lake County, Illinois
Two residents told the Village Board that recent immigration enforcement activity — including a chase that entered Warren High School — has shaken immigrant families; they asked the board to draft a resolution limiting immigration enforcement on village property.
Birmingham City, Oakland County, Michigan
City commission voted to submit the 2026 Community Development Block Grant application to Oakland County, directing $5,107 to public yard services and $28,945 for removing architectural barriers at Museum Park, totaling $34,052.
Tippecanoe County, Indiana
The board approved Ordinance 2025‑40 on first reading to raise various building permit fees (e.g., $50→$75; 0.14/ft²→0.20/ft²). Staff said fees were last adjusted in 2019; commissioners scheduled second reading for Dec. 15.
Kalispell, Flathead County, Montana
The council voted to call a Dec. 1 public hearing under Resolution 6300 to consider transferring general-fund dollars to a central garage fund to procure site and design services; staff said the action allows professional services procurement but does not obligate construction funds.
San Mateo County, California
County staff proposed a five‑year rate schedule for CSA 11 that would raise charges roughly 22% per year (compounding) to cover operations, repay loans, and build a target reserve; a public hearing is set for March 24 and Prop 218 protest rules apply.
Tiffin City Council, Tiffin, Seneca County, Ohio
The Tiffin City Council voted 7–0 Nov. 17 to immediately pass an amended 2025 budget ordinance (amended Ord. 2025-97) that adds one-time appropriations for insurance increases, a $50,000 fire engine repair and small donations to police and fire; councilers also adjusted a general-fund line from $5,500 to $17,000.
Department of Public Health, Departments and Agencies, Organizations, Executive, Connecticut
Report author and committee members noted HPSA redesigns are pending federal approval and recommended creating a standing committee and exit survey to track residency outcomes and implementation of workforce recommendations.
Medford Public Schools, School Boards, Massachusetts
After a presentation of an HMFH space-utilization study, the district recommended further review of 'Option 2' (elementary K–4, McGlynn 5–6, Andrews 7–8). The School Committee voted 7–0 to table adoption and convene a task force for feasibility, public input and deliverables.
Tippecanoe County, Indiana
The Tippecanoe County Board of Commissioners adopted Ordinance 2025‑37 on second and final reading to codify permit and bond requirements for new sidewalks, require owners to remove snow/ice and allow the county to make repairs and charge owners if they do not.
Germantown, Washington County, Wisconsin
The Village Board adopted the 2026 budget and levied 2025 property taxes after a lengthy public hearing and trustee debate over borrowing for capital projects, police station planning, and use of TID funds.
Lampasas, Lampasas County, Texas
Council authorized a 12-month contract with Sportsman Solutions to pursue facility naming-rights and sponsorships; staff said there is no upfront cost and the city retains approval of sponsors, while some councilmembers worried the arrangement could sideline local sponsors and questioned the revenue split.
Birmingham City, Oakland County, Michigan
The Birmingham City Commission appointed members to several boards, including the Board of Zoning Appeals and the Board of Review, and concurred with manager appointments to the Birmingham Shopping District; new appointees present were sworn in.
West Chester, Chester County, Pennsylvania
An applicant presented revised sketch plans for six townhome units at 615–617 South Walnut that shrink unit footprints, add one unit and propose alley parking; commissioners urged masonry screening, clarified impervious-cover calculations and requested finalized elevations before land‑development submission.
Grand Haven, Ottawa County, Michigan
Council approved relocating Grand Haven JeepFest to Harbor Island (Aug. 14–15, 2026) with a downtown kickoff, expanded WinterFest fireworks for Jan. 24, 2026, and a fee schedule amendment (airport hangar rate unification and removal of trolley rentals) effective Jan. 1, 2026.
Maricopa County, Arizona
The Maricopa County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously on Nov. 17 to set a hearing to accept a de‑annexation from the City of Avondale that would transfer a roughly one‑acre, 20‑foot strip of right‑of‑way to the county; county staff said the developer will pay for the improvements and the county only expects to expend staff time.
Gurnee, Lake County, Illinois
The Village Board approved a 90-day trial agreement with Flock Group Inc. to test an American-made drone option that integrates with the village's Flock camera system; if not canceled the trial converts to a three-year $125,000/year contract.
Kalispell, Flathead County, Montana
The City of Kalispell on Nov. 17 approved Resolution 6299, transferring 1.137 acres used as school ballfields to School District 5 with a reversionary clause. Council said the transfer formalizes long-standing school use and will not interfere with city shop operations.
Grand Haven, Ottawa County, Michigan
The council approved a Commercial Rehabilitation Act exemption certificate for a planned 45‑unit residential development at 1445 Columbus Street, adopting an 8‑year tax abatement after council amendment. The motion passed 4–1; staff estimated roughly $638,000 of taxes would be frozen during the abatement term (estimate).
Department of Public Health, Departments and Agencies, Organizations, Executive, Connecticut
A legislative advisory committee agreed to prioritize three major proposals — a scholarship pipeline, tiered tax credits and a Rhode Island'style access grant — as its top funding asks to recruit and retain primary-care clinicians in Connecticut.
Gurnee, Lake County, Illinois
After residents raised traffic, lighting and noise concerns and the Planning & Zoning Board issued an unfavorable recommendation, the Village Board remanded a Dream Clean special-use permit request for further review and potential conditions.
Tipton City, Tipton County, Indiana
A consultant told the Tipton Utility Service Board that average residential water bills could rise to about $26 per month and wastewater bills to roughly $52 (or about $59.57 if the city issues a $5 million bond). The board approved routine business and will consider formal action to forward recommendations to city council in early 2026.
Grand Haven, Ottawa County, Michigan
The Downtown Development Authority presented a proposed 2¢ per-square-foot increase to the principal shopping district (PSD) assessment to raise roughly $20,000–$34,000 annually for marketing, events and administration; the DDA said two public hearings and a six‑meeting review will precede the 2026 renewal.
Perry, Noble County, Oklahoma
City legal counsel presented a rewritten open-records ordinance to align with the Oklahoma Open Records Act, adding specificity requirements for requests, new fee schedules based on Attorney General guidance and an intake form; council members expressed concerns about intake options and fee impacts and moved to table the ordinance for further review and possible portal development.
Judge Stephanie Boyd 187th District, District Court Judges, Judicial, Texas
The 187th District Court accepted pleas and imposed sentences in several cases (including a guilty finding and sentence for Christopher Mendez and a plea and sentence in the Lorenza Rodriguez matter), set bond and GPS conditions in contested matters, and continued a probation case (Eric Cantu) on conditions with a restitution hearing set for December.
Maricopa County, Arizona
GPEC President Christine Mackey told the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors on Nov. 17 that infrastructure readiness and workforce training are top priorities to attract and retain employers; GPEC reported 54 locates in FY25 (47 in Maricopa County) and previewed a regional branding campaign.
Perry, Noble County, Oklahoma
Public works staff reported about $22,000 in outstanding repair charges for an unrepaired backhoe and presented a state-bid replacement price (~$75,506 with trade) plus $4,500 for hydraulics; council asked staff to seek additional repair vendors and alternative quotes rather than approve a purchase immediately.
Medford Public Schools, School Boards, Massachusetts
Andrews Middle School students told the Medford School Committee that spirit-week events and changes to bus loading areas made them feel more connected; the student advisory council also proposed adding railings, clearer signage and surveying riders to reduce boarding bottlenecks and explore a late bus.
Manatee County, Florida
The Manatee County Commission voted 5–2 on Nov. 18 to adopt an ordinance imposing a local curfew for minors under 16, prompting a long public debate about enforcement, equity and parental authority. Sheriff Wells said deputies will emphasize warnings and parents will be contacted before penalties.
Germantown, Washington County, Wisconsin
The Village Board approved an ordinance allowing ATVs and UTVs on village streets except where posted speed limits make it unsafe, after debate on safety, enforcement, and comparisons with neighboring communities.
Judge Stephanie Boyd 187th District, District Court Judges, Judicial, Texas
After the court read detailed self‑defense instructions in the aggravated‑assault case, prosecutors and defense counsel presented closing arguments that framed the central question for jurors: whether the defendant acted with a pretext to use deadly force or reasonably feared imminent deadly force. Jurors were sent to deliberate.
Perry, Noble County, Oklahoma
Council approved resolution 2025-20 authorizing the city manager or mayor to execute closing documents for sale of Lot 1, Block A in Perry Industrial Park to BHD Land Development LLC and asked the mayor to sign documents after the meeting.
Pottawattamie County, Iowa
The board carried multiple routine and substantive motions: consent agenda; canvass of second‑tier school election results; proclamations for National Adoption Day and GIS Day; final plat approval for Wonder Ridge (resolution 2025‑04); authorization to recruit four full‑time call takers; approval to send a UEI letter; assessor application approvals; and a roll‑call motion to enter closed session for litigation.
Germantown, Washington County, Wisconsin
After reconsideration, the Village Board approved amendments to the Blackstone Creek PDD and CSM that remove a proposed 205-unit, 20.55‑acre residential area and delete a five‑acre outlot; the vote keeps two commercial lots (including a 1.27‑acre corner parcel) moving to plan commission review while prompting expanded neighborhood engagement.
DeKalb City, DeKalb County, Illinois
The commission recommended approval of a preliminary/final plan and final plat for a 1,019,343-square-foot warehouse with a 524,417-square-foot future expansion at the northeast corner of Peace Road and Fairview Drive; staff said the plan matched a previously approved concept and neighbors raised concerns about trespass and property value.
Perry, Noble County, Oklahoma
Council approved CDBG grant actions for the CDBG-25 water system improvements project (grant award #19758) including an administration contract with Marita Woodward, adoption of a Section 3 plan and fair-housing resolutions, and authorization to expedite invoice signatures to speed CDBG draws.
Pottawattamie County, Iowa
The Housing Trust Fund reported distributing just over $400,000 in 2025 and asked the county to increase its FY2027 contribution from $15,000 to $40,000 so the fund can meet rising local match requirements and preserve Iowa Finance Authority allocations.
Lakemore Village, Summit County, Ohio
At its Nov. 18 meeting the Village of Lakemore council adopted a resolution approving Draxzilla as the department’s new police K‑9, dispensed with further readings and held a ceremonial swearing‑in. The oath names Officer Brian Euler as the handler.
Marshfield, Wood County, Wisconsin
At its Nov. 18 meeting at City Hall Chambers, the Judiciary Licensing Committee approved the October minutes and granted a temporary Class B retailer's license for the Central Wisconsin State Fair's Nov. 29, 2025 Christmas dinner show, then adjourned.
City of Destin, Okaloosa County, Florida
The Harbor CRA Advisory Committee recommended moving the next undergrounding phase to the northern Harbor CRA district; council members said the Harbor CRA board had not yet seen the recommendation and unanimously referred the item to the CRA board for review.
Perry, Noble County, Oklahoma
Main Street of Perry told the City Council it won Oklahoma Main Street's Program of the Year for 2024, detailed completed lighting and sound upgrades, described forthcoming events including a Dec. 6 Christmas celebration, and said Perry will host a mobile tour tied to the National Main Street Conference.
Pottawattamie County, Iowa
The board approved job descriptions and authorized recruitment of four full‑time call takers for the county communications center to reduce dispatcher workload; first‑year cost estimated at about $307,793 and staff were tasked to find the money during ongoing budget negotiations.
Tipp City Council, Tipp City, Miami County, Ohio
Downtown Tipp City Partnership announced national accreditation through Heritage Ohio and the Ohio Main Street program; council also learned a trash contractor missed about 25% of a route and reminded residents about the Christmas parade and tree lighting this Saturday.
McCracken County, Kentucky
The Fiscal Court appointed Jessica Houseman to the 911 appeals board, named two extension board members, authorized a peer-support counseling contract for the sheriff's office and promoted James Eric Tynes to department head.
City of Destin, Okaloosa County, Florida
Council approved standby debris‑monitoring contracts (Volkert primary, Tetra Tech backup), awarded the Maddie Kelley Outfall contract to RBM Contracting after rejecting a substitute motion to use a different contractor, and authorized advertisement for the Goyega Point Harbor dredging RFB with a 50/50 county cost share.
Pottawattamie County, Iowa
A county task force outlined a plan to migrate the county’s 9‑1‑1 and radio systems from Orion to the statewide Essex network, with Motorola pricing as high as $15.25 million and total financing needs approaching $16 million; board members asked for site‑specific cost details and an extension from Motorola before committing to contracts.
Newark City Council, Newark, Licking County, Ohio
HomeCourt presenters told the Newark City Council the six-month homelessness diversion program has 11 active participants and an 86% presenter-stated success rate; residents urged stronger ordinance enforcement against nuisance rentals and slumlords, and council said legislation is forthcoming.
Gardner City, Worcester County, Massachusetts
Staff reported that aeration and winterization work is nearly complete, bunkers are in poor condition due to reduced maintenance and cost constraints, equipment lead times are long, and "total receipts are $581,000" was reported in the budget update; a motion to adjourn was noted but no vote recorded.
DeKalb City, DeKalb County, Illinois
The Cal Planning and Zoning Commission unanimously approved a variance reducing a rear-yard setback from 20 to 13 feet for a proposed four-unit townhome at 711–717 Woodbridge Court, conditioned on no rear decks, limited 3-by-3 paved patios, and a landscaping/screening plan agreed with neighbors.
Panama City, Bay County, Florida
City commissioners and staff discussed a standardized policy for disposing of city-owned parcels, balancing quick, sealed RFP processes with neighborhood goals and protections for CRA- and housing-funded lots; staff reported about 15 unsolicited offers are on file and purchasing will centralize intake.
Birmingham City, Oakland County, Michigan
A resident accused commissioners of a prearranged mayoral selection and mayor pro tem appointment; later in closed session the commission said the Community House is a public trust and pledged to use available means to keep it public.
Bradford County, Florida
Florida Department of Transportation staff briefed the commission on the tentative five-year work program (FY27–FY31), upcoming grant solicitation windows, resurfacing projects affecting Bradford County and the Lehi Butler State Trail trailhead schedule; DOT is accepting public comments through Nov. 20, 2025.
2024 San Juan County Commission, San Juan County Commission, San Juan County Commission and Boards, San Juan County, Utah
Commissioners used their reports slot to highlight local priorities: community proposals for a roundabout memorial in Montezuma Creek, Navajo Mountain senior center funding approved by a Navajo revitalization fund, Mud Springs infrastructure planning with UDOT, cloud-seeding funding discussions and a recent mine groundbreaking.
City of Destin, Okaloosa County, Florida
After a presentation and demonstration of the FUSIS/Fusus real‑time crime center, the Destin City Council unanimously authorized the sheriff’s office to conduct outreach and agreed to connect city cameras to the system, with owners retaining control over sharing policies.
City of Waverly, Eaton County, Michigan
At its Nov. 17 meeting the City of Waverly City Council approved multiple resolutions and ordinances — including nuisance assessment confirmations, TIF obligations, FY2026 transfers, purchase of a traffic detection system, a wastewater biosolid contract amendment, adoption of an updated zoning map, and first reading of a city code ordinance — all by unanimous votes.
Newark City Council, Newark, Licking County, Ohio
The Newark City Council declined an objection to a proposed 0.9-acre annexation and instead adopted two resolutions describing city services and a buffer zone; one ordinance tied to the annexation was introduced and held for further action.
Central York SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania
At its Nov. 17 meeting the Central York board approved the agenda and minutes, accepted the treasurer's report, approved personnel and co-curricular appointments, adopted policy 8-15 on acceptable use, and approved a contingency contract with Stepping Stones for school psychologist services.
Gardner City, Worcester County, Massachusetts
Meeting participants discussed setting 2026 rates now so membership information can be circulated, noted prior membership increases reduced counts by roughly 10%, and raised concerns from a few residents about cart fees being high.
McCracken County, Kentucky
McCracken County Fiscal Court awarded multiple vehicle bids including a $74,842 Ram for litter abatement and approved purchases and invoices tied to the Paducah Sports Park and sports complex, including a $59,041 food trailer and invoices split under an interlocal agreement with Paducah.
Birmingham City, Oakland County, Michigan
The commission confirmed multiple appointments to advisory boards including the Board of Zoning Appeals, Board of Review and Birmingham Shopping District; appointees present were sworn in. Clerk's office introduced new intern Hannah Faye Nasser.
City of Destin, Okaloosa County, Florida
On second reading the Destin City Council approved an ordinance to enroll city employees in the Florida Retirement System effective Jan. 1, and unanimously directed staff to return a budget amendment by Dec. 16 not to exceed $533,130 to fund employer costs.
City of Waverly, Eaton County, Michigan
The council unanimously accepted an Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block Grant totaling $28,900 for downtown lighting and approved a separate contract not to exceed $5,000 for grant administration at its Nov. 17 meeting.
Tipp City Council, Tipp City, Miami County, Ohio
The Tipp City Council unanimously adopted the 2026 operating budget totaling $66,181,226 and companion appropriation ordinance, approved creation of the Uptown New Community Authority, and authorized a pay increase for the clerk of council. Several first‑reading code updates were introduced.
2024 San Juan County Commission, San Juan County Commission, San Juan County Commission and Boards, San Juan County, Utah
A quick list of formal actions taken Nov. 18, 2025: the commission approved the consent agenda (including a $5,000 Winter Response Grant), appointed representatives to a Utah County membership meeting, approved a forest-health resolution urging U.S. Forest Service action, tabled the data-privacy ordinance and privacy policy for revisions, and adjourned.
Graham County, Arizona
Supervisors approved a one‑year renewable food‑service agreement for the Graham County Detention Center with Summit Food Services and amended contract language so the company "may" provide catering for special events, preserving county discretion; the contract includes a CPI‑based increase capped at 5%.
Central York SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania
Board approved a contract with Stepping Stones to provide in-person school psychologist services if the district cannot fill vacancies; presenters warned Pennsylvania certification requirements limit the local candidate pool.
Bradford County, Florida
James Moore & Company presented Bradford County’s FY audit to the commissioners, reporting a qualified opinion (unchanged from the prior year), no grant noncompliance findings, and an increase in reserves driven in part by ARPA and public-library roll‑ins; the board voted to accept the audit.
McCracken County, Kentucky
McCracken County Fiscal Court approved A & K Construction change order #004C reducing the contract by $1,341,242.08 and approved a separate $2,350 change order for a park contract. Officials said the county will purchase some items directly to save sales tax.
Augusta City, Richmond County, Georgia
During a lengthy session commissioners unanimously approved several consent and capital items — including pavement assessment funding, restriping, and a GDOT lighting agreement — and then recessed the special budget session to continue deliberation next week.
Newport, Campbell County, Kentucky
Fire Chief Blusso reported a structure fire on West 13th Street earlier that day; mutual‑aid assistance helped extinguish the blaze, both residents exited unharmed, two cats died and the preliminary investigation indicates the fire appears accidental.
New Hanover County, North Carolina
A private team led by EnviroMed and MEP proposed a privately funded gasification facility to divert up to ~1,100 tons/day of municipal solid waste into synthetic fuel and energy, asking only for the county’s waste stream; the board did not accept the unsolicited proposal but directed staff to develop a formal solicitation and continue vetting alternatives.
Central York SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania
District staff told the board survey feedback showed connection and peripheral compatibility issues with the new iPads; administrators plan expanded loaner peripherals, reserved laptops for specific courses, added tech-support schedules and increased communications to families.
Residents described a community-led renovation of a Monrovia park, praised volunteers for completing the project despite challenges and urged others to join future volunteer efforts; no funding or formal city actions were mentioned.
Lawrence City, Marion County, Indiana
At a special meeting, the Lawrence City commission unanimously approved four personnel actions advancing candidates in the Williams Police Department hiring process: establishing an eligibility list, removing 12 applicants, extending a conditional offer to one applicant, and approving a probationary hire contingent on background and PERS 1977 requirements.
Bradford County, Florida
The Bradford County Commission voted to authorize a Commercial Property Assessed Clean Energy (C-PACE) program and approved a limited-purpose membership agreement with a resiliency-and-energy district. Supporters said safeguards exist to prevent the residential PACE abuses seen elsewhere.
Birmingham City, Oakland County, Michigan
The commission amended city rules to make regular meetings start at 7:00 p.m. and end at midnight, allowing extensions past midnight only by majority vote in 30-minute increments, citing staff workload and public accessibility.
Ames Comm School District, School Districts, Iowa
The Ames Community Schools board adopted a resolution to expend funds from its flexibility account and approved a slate of routine motions — appointments, gifts and course proposals — during an organizational meeting and transition from retiring to newly elected board members.
Carter County, Tennessee
Carter County commissioners engaged in a heated debate on Nov. 17 over a roughly $7 million grant and the proposed Tweetsie Trail extension; some commissioners urged using the funds for tourism and master planning while others warned about maintenance, homelessness along the trail and fiscal prudence.
City of Waverly, Eaton County, Michigan
On Nov. 17, 2025, the City of Waverly City Council unanimously adopted Ordinance 11‑73 on its third reading to rezone city‑owned Parcel ID 0903283003 (formerly Washington Irving Elementary) from R‑2 to R‑3.
2024 San Juan County Commission, San Juan County Commission, San Juan County Commission and Boards, San Juan County, Utah
The commission approved a multi-county resolution urging the U.S. Forest Service to act more quickly to restore and maintain healthy forest conditions to reduce wildfire risk; the draft includes support for rescission of the roadless rule to facilitate on-the-ground treatments.
Graham County, Arizona
Graham County reappointed Nel Karnes, Von Grant and Patrick O'Donnell to four‑year terms on the county Merit Commission, a panel that hears disciplinary appeals for classified employees; the action was approved by voice vote as routine business.
Newport, Campbell County, Kentucky
The Newport Board of Commissioners unanimously approved two EMS promotions, ratified a tree‑board appointment and confirmed the city’s OKI representative and alternate; the mayor recused himself on the alternate appointment. All items passed by roll call.
Anacortes, Skagit County, Washington
The Anacortes City Council authorized a $301,413.21 contract modification Nov. 17 to deepen signal‑pole foundations at the 12th & Commercial intersection after encountering poor soil conditions. State grants will cover $1.75 million of the project; the remainder will come from the REIT fund.
Carpinteria City, Santa Barbara County, California
City staff say the Landscape Maintenance District has not been updated since 1996; with costs rising about 500% they propose an approximately $165.76/year assessment to cover ~ $1,150,000 in identified program costs and reduce a roughly $1,000,000 deficit currently subsidized by the general fund.
New Hanover County, North Carolina
Finance staff reported FY25 revenues of $395 million (about $2 million over budget) and a general-fund expenditure gap of $37 million driven largely by planned capital spending; unassigned fund balance rose to $79.3 million (18.3%). The board asked for follow-up on unexplained timing items and the status of property-tax appeals.
Verona Area School District, School Districts, Wisconsin
District leaders presented a redesigned results monitoring report focused on literacy, reporting year‑over‑year gains across grade bands and highlighting professional learning communities, new curriculum implementation in year two, and targeted supports for multilingual learners.
252nd District Court, District Court Judges, Judicial, Texas
After receiving competency restoration reports from inpatient evaluators, the court found Cecilia Delaney not competent to stand trial and ordered inpatient commitment for restoration not to exceed one year because no outpatient restoration option exists locally.
City of Clermont, Lake County, Florida
At the Nov. 17 meeting the board approved several fine reductions, ordered a nuisance abatement with the city authorized to enter and abate, and set compliance deadlines (mostly Jan. 17, 2026) and daily penalties for multiple property owners found in violation of building‑permit or maintenance rules.
Birmingham City, Oakland County, Michigan
The commission approved a $1.7 million inclusive-playground design for Poppleton Park using Landscape Structures equipment and cooperative procurement, accepted a $50,000 Rotary donation, and authorized five inset ADA parking spaces on Oxford Street not to exceed $80,000.
Lisle, DuPage County, Illinois
After a staff presentation of four levy scenarios, trustees expressed consensus to proceed with option 2 — capture anticipated new construction — and directed staff to prepare a levy ordinance for the Dec. 15 meeting; no formal vote was taken to set the levy, and abatement choices remain for later action.
252nd District Court, District Court Judges, Judicial, Texas
After testimony from probation staff and review of medical and incident reports, the court found additional probation revocation counts true for Brandon Julius Bell and sentenced him to 12 years in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice with an affirmative deadly‑weapon finding.
United Nations, Federal
Joyce Musuya told a United Nations council that armed conflict is the primary driver of the world’s most severe food crises, citing Gaza, Sudan, Yemen and Syria, and urged member states to condition arms exports on compliance with international law, simplify humanitarian access and strengthen accountability.
Graham County, Arizona
The Graham County Board of Supervisors approved a FY25–26 "Project Together" grant with the Southeastern Arizona Health Education Center to provide up to $30,000 for school‑based mental and behavioral health work in rural communities; funding is one year now, with uncertain renewal.
City of Clermont, Lake County, Florida
The City of Clermont Code Enforcement Board dismissed a case alleging Encompass Health failed to provide required cross access under PUD/Ordinance 2020‑30, finding the hospital built in accordance with approved construction plans; a linked case against the neighboring vacant parcel was also later dismissed for insufficient evidence.
2024 San Juan County Commission, San Juan County Commission, San Juan County Commission and Boards, San Juan County, Utah
Commissioners tabled an ordinance to establish a county data-privacy program required under the Utah Government Data Privacy Act (UCA 63A-19-101), asking staff to clarify which officials and IT contacts the document will name and to separate oversight from implementation duties.
Carter County, Tennessee
At its Nov. 17 meeting the Carter County Commission approved multiple routine purchases and budget amendments, authorized a sheriff's van and other payments, and debated leasing a temporary bridge after a TDOT inspection ordered closure; commissioners also discussed FEMA and Hazard Mitigation grant applications and an RFQ for ARC-funded engineering work.
Manvel, Brazoria County, Texas
Fifteen‑year‑old Anish Senthel of the American Lung Cancer Screening Initiative asked Manvel to join a national movement, citing low screening rates and national screening impact; council agreed to present a proclamation and photo opportunity.
New Hanover County, North Carolina
New Hanover County’s sustainability manager presented a 120‑day countywide assessment identifying 150+ sustainability initiatives, five focus areas, and recommendations including a public dashboard, a capital-project sustainability checklist, and a resilience working group; commissioners urged rapid follow-up and clearer targets.
Baberton City Council, Barberton City, Summit County, Ohio
Michael Burrow, a retired educator and candidate for the 2026 state senate seat in District 27, introduced himself at the Nov. 17 council meeting and said he will attend future meetings to learn community priorities including public education, housing and property taxes.
Wallingford School District, School Districts, Connecticut
Board members reviewed school improvement plans emphasizing an aspirational 100% growth/trusted‑adult goal, described attendance‑reduction efforts (weekly attendance teams, LEAP partnerships) and clarified K–3 DIBELS versus i‑Ready screening practices; administrators said cohort tools and PSAT data will inform targeted instruction.
Anacortes, Skagit County, Washington
The Anacortes City Council voted Nov. 17 to increase the city utility tax on water customers from 7% to 9%, a measure staff estimated would generate roughly $600,000 in additional annual revenue at the 2% rate.
Carpinteria City, Santa Barbara County, California
City staff say the Winter Berm Assessment District has not been updated since the early 1990s and propose raising the equivalent-benefit-unit charge to cover a current program cost of about $98,720 and avoid a roughly $73,500 annual subsidy from the general fund.
New Hanover County, North Carolina
The board unanimously adopted a resolution opposing Fuquay Varina’s interbasin transfer certificate request and its DEIS, citing the proposed transfer size (preferred alternative ~6,170,000 gallons/day) and limited public hearing access for impacted Cape Fear Basin utilities; board asked NC EMC/DEQ for additional comment time and a hearing in New Hanover County.
Verona Area School District, School Districts, Wisconsin
Finance staff told the Verona Area School District board it projects a structural operating gap driven by inflation and lower state revenue; the board authorized a taxable tax‑and‑revenue anticipation promissory note not to exceed $7,000,000 and discussed a potential operating referendum.
Augusta City, Richmond County, Georgia
Commissioners debated several paths to balance the FY2026 budget — a 1.69‑mill increase, a narrower sheriff‑only mill plus cuts, steep across‑the‑board reductions, or an energy excise tax estimated to yield millions — and recessed to continue work next week.
Baberton City Council, Barberton City, Summit County, Ohio
After the council approved a moratorium on data centers last week, Mayor William Judge urged drafting a clearer definition and the planning commission is expected to take up development-code work in coming weeks; staff said code review may delay formal parameters until next year.
New Hanover County, North Carolina
The New Hanover County Board of Commissioners unanimously adopted a resolution opposing any expansion of Chemours’ Fayetteville Works facility that could increase PFAS emissions or discharges to the Cape Fear River Basin, citing historic contamination and urging state and federal regulators to withhold permits until remediation, compliance, and independent data are provided.
Transportation, House of Representatives, Legislative, Pennsylvania
The committee reported HB 1963 as amended to add a certified driving rehabilitation specialist to PennDOT's medical advisory board; an agreed technical amendment was adopted and staff said the measure had broad prior House support (178–23) and no known opposition.
Lisle, DuPage County, Illinois
Village staff will hold two January 2026 open houses to explain Illinois American Water (IAW) service areas and options after expanding the scope from Oakview (~400 units) to 588 IAW-served residences; trustees debated a $50,000 appraisal to inform potential condemnation but made no formal decision.
Clifton Heights, Delaware County, Pennsylvania
At the meeting residents raised concerns about speeding, noisy vehicles and construction traffic. Police said enforcement is limited (the borough cannot use radar); the borough will trial rumble strips on one street per ward and the engineer will do traffic studies after the Springford Road project and again a year after school starts.
252nd District Court, District Court Judges, Judicial, Texas
At a November docket call, the 252nd District Court resolved multiple criminal matters: several defendants pleaded guilty or admitted probation violations, the court ordered sentences ranging from deferred probation to multi‑year prison terms, reduced one bond to $25,000 with GPS/house‑arrest conditions, and ordered competency restoration and records‑gathering writs.
Grand Rapids City, Kent County, Michigan
Following two rounds of community engagement and a Park Advisory Board recommendation, the commission voted to officially name the 6880 Cesar Chavez park 'Unity Park'; the parks department noted 415 confirmed votes and 232 in favor of the winning name.
Manvel, Brazoria County, Texas
After a lengthy debate about funding and tradeoffs with staffing and pay, Manvel council voted 6‑1 to adopt Ordinance 2025‑O‑36 to add TMRS updated service credits to the city benefit package, with staff to account for the recurring fiscal impacts in next year’s budget.
Baberton City Council, Barberton City, Summit County, Ohio
During public comment, resident Tiffany Meath presented documents showing $1,339,154.72 paid to the city's towing vendor from 2012–2025 and urged council to clarify procurement and whether the contract improperly bypasses competitive bidding.
Anacortes, Skagit County, Washington
At a Nov. 17 public hearing, Anacortes staff presented a $115.4 million draft 2026 operating budget and capital facilities plan. Council debated using opioid‑settlement reserves for a School Resource Officer and the county STAR Center, setting a tentative plan to monitor cash flow and finalize allocations in spring 2026.
Verona Area School District, School Districts, Wisconsin
Bethany Schultz, the Verona Area School District’s families‑in‑transition coordinator, told the board the district identified 82 students as homeless so far this year and described how McKinney‑Vento protections (immediate enrollment, school‑of‑origin transportation) reduce barriers for those students.
Clifton Heights, Delaware County, Pennsylvania
Council approved the purchase of a refurbished ladder unit for $30,000 (plus up to $2,000 travel) for maintenance of veterans' flags and accepted engineer reports that recommended release of 90% of a $210,897 payment for pickleball court work; demolition of 32 Mill Street contract complete with award recommendation expected in December.
Grand Rapids City, Kent County, Michigan
The commission authorized an agreement with the Grand Rapids Urban League not to exceed $750,000 to serve as lead agency for the city's Cure Violence violence-reduction program; staff said the city also holds a separate contract with Cure Violence Global for training and licensing.
Limestone County, Alabama
Commissioners debated using a portion of the year‑end surplus to create a standing matching fund for state/federal grants and to allocate money to district road projects; commissioners referenced recent reserves (including $500,000 and $2,000,000 set‑asides) and noted typical DOT/FHWA match rates of 20–50%; no vote was taken and members asked to place the item on a future agenda.
Carter County, Tennessee
Gene Cassey, president and CEO of the Tri City Airport Authority, told Carter County commissioners Nov. 17 the authority is pursuing industrial development, general aviation improvements and expanded airline service — including recent additions to Dallas–Fort Worth and Breeze Airways flights to Orlando and Dulles — and said a federal grant is funding incentives for potential Chicago service.
Wallingford School District, School Districts, Connecticut
The Wallingford School District Instructional Committee voted by consensus to forward three proposed changes — deleting a Geometry & Construction elective, removing an underused Algebra 2 CCP level, and rebranding Topics in Mathematics as Senior Mathematics Seminar — to the full board for final action.
Transportation, House of Representatives, Legislative, Pennsylvania
The House Transportation Committee reported HB 710 as amended, directing PennDOT to create an Online Liability Verification (OLV) system to allow real‑time electronic verification of vehicle insurance; an amendment delayed the effective date to 18 months and made technical changes requested by PennDOT.
Cedar Rapids Comm School District, School Districts, Iowa
At its Nov. 17 annual meeting the Cedar Rapids Community School District Board approved election abstracts certified by Linn County and recognized three departing directors for decades of service; the board adjourned to prepare for an organizational meeting.
Glynn County, Georgia
IT director David West told commissioners Phase 1 fiber from the mainland to St. Simons finished rapidly after a right-of-way/fiber-strand agreement; Phase 2 will connect island sites, add redundancy to 911 trunks and bring streaming to recreation campuses, with some Phase 2 costs shifting to operating funds.
Grand Rapids City, Kent County, Michigan
After extended debate over thresholds, spouse disclosures, business partners and privacy concerns, the City Commission withdrew a motion to adopt a more proactive ethics and financial-disclosure policy and asked the fiscal committee and city attorney to refine the draft before returning.
Johnston County, North Carolina
A Selma‑area homeowner said county inspections missed builder alterations to an engineered roof and the engineer will not sign off; the board asked staff to investigate and report back to the resident.
Manvel, Brazoria County, Texas
City council approved the first of two readings for annexation (Ordinance 2025‑O‑34) and a PUD zoning document (Ordinance 2025‑O‑33) for about 47.3 acres at SH‑6 and Kirby Drive, after a lengthy presentation by the applicant and council questions about masonry, parking, hotels, and shared‑parking provisions.
Baberton City Council, Barberton City, Summit County, Ohio
Finance and personnel advanced a package of requests Nov. 17 including contracts and lease financing for heavy equipment (three Kenworth snow trucks and three dump trucks), small appropriations for police and fire, selection of an independent auditor and a three-year Main Street Barberton funding allocation.
Glynn County, Georgia
At a Nov. 18 quarterly review, Glynn County staff said SPLOST 2022 voters approved $133 million; the county has collected about $92 million so far and explained that some Tier 1 funds flow to partner agencies so the county's direct share is lower than headline percentages.
Grand Rapids City, Kent County, Michigan
After months of community engagement and study, commissioners declined to adopt a citywide sole-hauler plan now and instead asked staff to return with draft franchise agreements and other alternatives to improve service standards, reduce truck traffic and limit emissions.
Johnston County, North Carolina
The board approved $783,985 to support two conservation easement closings (approx. 108 and 94 acres) and survey and closing costs; staff said the funding leverages federal and state matches and added an easement specialist to the Soil & Water office.
Clifton Heights, Delaware County, Pennsylvania
Clifton Heights Borough Council on a voice vote approved resolution 2025-15 adopting police guidelines to permit warrantless arrests under Act 25 of 1995 for certain summary-offense situations involving threats or violence, after the solicitor and police chief said the measure formalizes existing practice.
Everett Public Schools, School Boards, Massachusetts
The committee approved submission and payment of $2,198,470.27 in bills and payroll and later voted to enter executive session to discuss a litigation item listed on the agenda; roll-call votes on routine financial items were unanimous.
Limestone County, Alabama
A public commenter and former EPA asbestos enforcement officer told the Limestone County Commission that floor tiles at the Market Street building are non‑asbestos but the adhesive contains asbestos minerals; he said EPA/OSHA thresholds mean the material poses low risk unless extensively disturbed and the county will solicit a contractor quote for removal and tenant impacts.
BELTON ISD, School Districts, Texas
Trustees heard that students identified for special education now comprise about 20% of enrollment — above state averages — and staff said the district does not yet know how new legislative funding changes will affect special‑education reimbursements.
MARSHALL PUBLIC SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Boards, Minnesota
The board approved the meeting agenda, the consent agenda, and the bills for October 2025. Movers and seconders were recorded for each motion; all motions carried with no extended debate.
Aurora City, Douglas County, Colorado
An unnamed staff presenter said the city is coordinating with the Colfax BRT construction team to provide financial analysis, bilingual outreach and a menu of services with limited funding to help businesses along the corridor qualify for lending and stay open during construction as ARPA funding phases out.
Lake Wales Charter Schools, School Districts, Florida
Board reviewed October financials showing assets of about $50.4M, liabilities ~$21.3M, student count 5,035, revenues of ~$16.7M, expenditures of ~$13.1M (YTD surplus ~$3.5M); food service returned a $460,377 surplus for October after receipts arrived.
Hollister City, San Benito County, California
Public commenters invited the council and community to the Downtown Hollister Lights On Celebration on Nov. 29 and to a weekly Food Not Bombs meal distribution at 4th and Monterey, raising concerns about local food insecurity and rising grocery prices.
Grand Rapids City, Kent County, Michigan
The City Commission approved a $110,105 purchase of additional Oracle ERP licenses and heard an update on a complex implementation that has nearly doubled original change orders; staff said payroll self-service is saving time but reporting, benefits and collections modules remain incomplete.
Howard County, Indiana
Commissioners approved payroll expense and claims totaling $1,138,269.12 (payroll) and $925,179.28 (operating claims) after motions and second; both votes carried by voice vote.
Johnston County, North Carolina
Commissioners authorized staff to issue an RFQ for a feasibility study for the Johnston County Livestock Arena, citing the facility’s age, traffic/entry constraints near the landfill and potential grant support; staff budgeted funds to pursue the study and explore options including repurposing or a new facility.
Hoffman Estates, Cook County, Illinois
At the Nov. 17 board meeting, resident Justin Colts asked whether his property in Hoffman Estates permits backyard chickens or beekeeping; a village official replied that the village has not legalized either practice and confirmed Colts’ address.
Shorewood, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin
The board recommended release of an RFP to replace the village's parking and citation management software and requested vendors include optional curb‑management and mobile/virtual‑meter capabilities; trustees clarified issuing the RFP is informational and does not itself enact paid parking.
Aurora City, Douglas County, Colorado
Aurora’s director of library and cultural services presented master plans and condition assessments that put library and cultural deferred maintenance and capital needs at roughly $34.8–$35 million across planning horizons, and recommended considering up to three new branches in growing Ward 2; timing and funding were not specified.
BELTON ISD, School Districts, Texas
District staff told trustees at a Nov. 17 workshop that a roughly $2.5 million projected deficit for 2026–27 assumes no pay increases and the loss of temporary 'disaster pennies' that helped balance 2025–26; trustees prioritized protecting a 20% fund balance while weighing capital and compensation tradeoffs.
Wooster, Wayne County, Ohio
Councilmember Knappic announced she is stepping down after 12 years, thanked colleagues, staff and residents, and encouraged the incoming council members as her final council meeting concluded with farewells from peers.
MARSHALL PUBLIC SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Boards, Minnesota
Family & Consumer Sciences teachers described expanded course offerings, a pilot child‑development associate certification pathway with field hours and stipends, and announced a $25,000 Taco Bell Foundation grant to buy kitchen equipment for middle and high school programs.
Cumberland County, Virginia
County administrator Derek Stane said staff is nearly finished revising planning and zoning job descriptions, rolled back a problematic IGS permitting module that conflated zoning and building approvals, and plans ordinance drafts and process flowcharts for future planning commission review.
City Council, SUA, and SEDA Meetings, Stillwater, Payne County, Oklahoma
The Stillwater Economic Development Authority approved a $15,000 small-business enhancement grant for Community Escrow and Title at 623 S. Lewis St. to fund exterior improvements. Owner John Bartley said the project expanded after a vehicle crash damaged landscaping; the SEDA committee recommended approval 6-0.
Johnston County, North Carolina
The county approved $129,381,316 to complete a rebuild of Clayton High School and adopted a supplemental reimbursement resolution; formal Local Government Commission approval will be required before permanent financing. Staff will return with a funding plan and timing details.
Howard County, Indiana
Tryon Barnhill, president of the Howard County Vietnam Veterans Organization, requested $5,000 for operations and upgrades (memorial garden expansion, structural work); commissioners tabled the request pending review of year-end budget availability.
Lake Wales Charter Schools, School Districts, Florida
The board approved a new attendance policy requiring 180 instructional days, standardizing excused/unexcused absence procedures and introducing a tiered intervention model including early ID, home visits and community referrals; staff and family flowcharts accompany the policy.
Everett Public Schools, School Boards, Massachusetts
Caverion School students presented SHIELD values and described a civics action project documenting local food insecurity; the School Committee praised the presentation and members suggested possible city collaboration and data-sharing next steps.
East Ramapo Central School District (Spring Valley), School Districts, New York
Following executive session on personnel and litigation, the East Ramapo board approved a settlement resolving claims with Crayco Inc. and authorized payment of $150,000 and execution of a dismissal with prejudice.
Pataskala City, Licking County, Ohio
The Pataskala City Council completed several third-reading votes, including ordinances extending a moratorium on cultivation permits and other measures, and adopted Resolution 2025-062 to authorize an economic-development agreement with Grove Lickin County Improvement Corporation.
Howard County, Indiana
The board approved an updated Purdue Extension contractual services agreement and authorized signatures; Allison shared program updates. Separately, the board approved the admission of Stephen Cruz as a private-pay resident at Howard Haven.
Hoffman Estates, Cook County, Illinois
At its Nov. 17 meeting the Hoffman Estates Village Board approved a consent agenda that included $5,836,527.75 in bills, multiple IDOT funding/engineering agreements for resurfacing projects, an ordinance changing local liquor-license counts and a plan-commission-backed setback variation.
Hollister City, San Benito County, California
The council voted to join a no-cost joint powers agreement with the California Municipal Finance Authority so property owners of three affordable-housing complexes can seek tax-exempt bond financing for rehabilitation; staff said the city bears no long-term cost.
Milton, Pierce County, Washington
On Nov. 17 Milton’s City Council approved the consent agenda, reappointed municipal Judge Sandra Allen by resolution (6-0), and approved an amendment raising the public-defender fee from $8,000 to $12,000 per month to comply with new caseload legislation.
MARSHALL PUBLIC SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Boards, Minnesota
A grading results presentation showed 130 of about 900 students had at least one failing grade; 73 of those students (56%) missed more than 10% of school days. The district reported an overall 91% passing rate across four grade levels and 91.5% for ninth grade.
Howard County, Indiana
The highway department committed to purchase a John Deere tractor with a diamond mower arm for $188,109.76 (budgeted in 2026) and the board authorized staff to pursue a diesel fuel contract with Keystone Cooperative if the bid conforms; the board took remaining bids under advisement.
Cumberland County, Virginia
County administrator Derek Stane presented a FY27 capital improvement program totaling $3,822,995, highlighting more than $653,000 in recent CIP grants, a $150,000 E-911 dispatch upgrade, a $400,000+ grant for pump-station generators and a negotiated ambulance purchase price of $362,561.
Wooster, Wayne County, Ohio
The Wooster City Council on Nov. 17 suspended the rules and adopted Resolution 2025‑66 to authorize bed‑tax economic development agreements; suspension passed 6‑1, the adoption passed by roll call with recorded 'Yes' votes from members present.
Logansport City, Cass County, Indiana
The rules committee tabled a proposed fireworks ordinance for rework, moved a trash-ordinance rewrite (streamlined cleanup timeline and QR-enabled door notices) toward council readings, adjusted next year’s holiday schedule and confirmed committee appointments including a council president nomination.
Howard County, Indiana
Information Services requested and the board authorized a one-time $47,993 fiber optic upgrade to upgrade several 1-gig links to 10-gig across west-side county buildings to support IP phones, cameras and other networked services.
Covington, St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana
The Parish planning board unanimously approved a variance (Case 25-11-24BOA) to reduce the rear setback at Lot 12, Square 13 (1320 North Buchanan Street) so an applicant can rotate a small two‑bedroom house on the lot; staff confirmed no shoreline encroaches the property.
Shorewood, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin
Engineers reported Phase 1 closeout is imminent but flagged utility locating delays, supply‑chain issues for a control cabinet, and deviations by contractor Allcon that left more splice blocks than designed; the village issued extension terms and performance‑bond notifications to force completion.
Lake Wales Charter Schools, School Districts, Florida
The Lake Wales Charter Schools Board adopted a revised enrollment policy clarifying 'in-zone' vs. 'out-of-zone' priorities, aligning charter contracts with statutory preferences and moving transportation rules to a forthcoming dedicated policy that will use both a historical map and ZIP codes to define the Greater Lake Wales area.
City Council, SUA, and SEDA Meetings, Stillwater, Payne County, Oklahoma
The City of Stillwater awarded a $120,400.66 contract to Midwest Wrecking Company to demolish accessory structures and perform asbestos abatement at the Booker T. Washington School site. Staff said the action clears hazardous materials so the community and Washington School Heritage Foundation can focus on fundraising and renovation of the main structure.
Howard County, Indiana
Treasurer Christie Branch introduced a draft ordinance to allow the treasurer’s office to assess a $20 fee to prepare and issue State Form 78 for mobile-home title transfers, citing Indiana Code 6-1.1-7-10; the board voted to take the proposal under advisement for later action.
MARSHALL PUBLIC SCHOOL DISTRICT, School Boards, Minnesota
District administrator Jeremy said the failed operating referendum will lead to nearly $2,000,000 in reductions for 2025–26, affecting about 29 staff positions and potentially increasing class sizes and reducing supports; the finance committee will review plans next week.
Everett Public Schools, School Boards, Massachusetts
The Everett School Committee voted 7–0 to adopt a competency-determination policy aligned with recent DESE regulatory changes. The policy requires students to demonstrate both mastery and satisfactory course completion, with multiple options (final exam, portfolio, capstone, or MCAS) to show mastery and accommodations for ELL and special-education students.
Roanoke City (Independent City), Virginia
Council adopted an ordinance granting tax‑exempt status for two Old Southwest Inc. lots used as pocket parks and approved a water/sewer easement to the Western Virginia Water Authority. During citizens' remarks residents and PTA leaders urged swift reallocation of city funds to address overcrowding at Roanoke high schools and timely release of financial reports.
Goldendale, Klickitat County, Washington
Police Chief Mike Smith briefed council on 'Flock' license-plate-reader cameras and recent court findings that such camera records are subject to public disclosure; council members cautioned about retention and prompt compliance with records requests.
East Ramapo Central School District (Spring Valley), School Districts, New York
An external auditor plans to issue a clean opinion on East Ramapo’s 2024–25 financial statements, reported a $74.8M year‑end fund balance and flagged the unassigned fund balance (10.9% vs. the 4% guideline) and personnel‑file documentation as findings; trustees requested reconciliations of earlier internal estimates.
Solanco SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania
At its Nov. 17 meeting the Solanco School District board approved minutes for two prior meetings, accepted October fund reports (general, capital and cafeteria), renewed an E‑Rate consultant contract, approved Sunday building use for youth baseball, and authorized disposal of bus No. 69; the board then moved to executive session on personnel.
Wooster, Wayne County, Ohio
On Nov. 17, 2025, the Wooster City Council rejected seven parcel tax-increment financing (TIF) ordinances after a lengthy mayoral explanation and concerns from council members about timing and potential impacts on the Wooster City School District. The mayor said the package would yield about $124,000 a year over 10 years.
Goldendale, Klickitat County, Washington
Council authorized a six-month extension of the airport manager’s agreement at $1,000 a month with annual review afterward and received an update from Airport Manager Rick Lundin on grant work, potential hangar construction, fuel sales and options to restore a courtesy car without exposing the city to liability.
Hollister City, San Benito County, California
Council introduced and voted to adopt a resolution and introduce an ordinance updating the city's contract language with CalPERS to reflect pension changes implemented in 2013 (PEPRA); staff said changes do not affect current employees and must return to council to meet CalPERS posting timelines.
Milton, Pierce County, Washington
The council adopted ordinance 2126-25 to increase the regular property tax levy by 1% for 2026, producing a $16,446 revenue increase; some council members argued the city could forgo the annual increase because growth from new construction offsets the change.
Solanco SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania
The district reported 2,946 total students, with special‑education students at about 21.8%, homeschool at 11.4%, Amish (K–8 reporting) at 35.1% of that subset, and free/reduced at roughly 45%. Board discussed staffing challenges and IU13 collaboration.
Roanoke City (Independent City), Virginia
After hours of testimony and detailed questioning of operators and planning staff, Roanoke City Council voted 5–2 to deny a rezoning request that would have allowed a residential substance-use-disorder treatment center at 5060 Valley View Blvd NW. Supporters cited need for high‑intensity treatment beds; opponents warned of land‑use precedent and economic perception impacts.
Goldendale, Klickitat County, Washington
City staff presented the proposed 2026 budget showing roughly $8 million in revenues and $7.5 million in expenses and a projected $583,000 net surplus; council approved Resolution 7 48 to set the regular tax levy and took the 2026 budget ordinance (15 49) up for its first reading.
Pennsauken Township, Camden County, New Jersey
After the swearing-in ceremony Pennsauken Township Committee approved a first reading of an ordinance to repeal a 2025 salary ordinance and passed a consent package that listed multiple resolutions and budget items, including $140,158.75 in National Opioid Settlement proceeds.
Shorewood, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin
Trustees adopted the 2026 budget and property tax levy (2.81% increase; roughly $78 on an average $340,000 home), approved several related resolutions, and heard public comment about beekeeping permit fees. The board also discussed proposed sewer and water rate increases tied to a Public Service Commission decision.
City Council, SUA, and SEDA Meetings, Stillwater, Payne County, Oklahoma
Homeowners from Deer Crossing told Stillwater Utilities Authority trustees they were surprised by a proposed waterline easement through private yards and asked staff to pause property-level acquisitions until engineering and property surveys are completed. Trustees approved expenditure authorization for right-of-way work, not individual easements, 4-0.
Augusta City, Richmond County, Georgia
Lonnie Wimberley took the oath of office as Augusta’s District 4 commissioner during a public ceremony that included remarks from State Senator Harold V. Jones and a prayer by Reverend Anthony Booker. Wimberley pledged responsible budgeting, public safety and transparent leadership.
Town of Zionsville, Boone County, Indiana
Commission reviewed a development plan and a materials waiver for a proposed Tom Wood Honda dealership in the I‑65 South Overlay; commissioners raised concerns about large precast concrete panels and asked for additional architectural relief or EIFS options. The item was continued to provide revised drawings.
City of Chaska, Carver County, Minnesota
The council adopted an ordinance updating development, planning application, building inspection and fire fees for 2026, using a 3.44% inflationary adjustment and consolidating some application/processing charges; rental dwelling penalty and reinstatement fees were discussed and retained.
Hollister City, San Benito County, California
The council approved an airport use agreement to allow Wisk to test a temporary vertiport and passed an amendment to expand the company's ground lease by about 2.8 acres for parking and access improvements; staff said the changes increase near-term airport revenue and remain subject to future design and improvement triggers.
Logansport City, Cass County, Indiana
The finance committee reviewed a police request to transfer $82,340.29 from patrol salaries to overtime to fund comp-time buybacks and cover staffing gaps created by vacancies and a National Guard deployment. Committee members asked for buyback details and got an update on recruits.
Buckingham County, Virginia
The board approved the agenda (with M1 deferred), minutes and claims, appointed Penny Allen to the Social Service Board, discussed personnel recommendations for holiday schedule and voted to enter a closed executive session citing the Code of Virginia (citation as read in meeting).
Solanco SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania
District staff outlined state cyber charter funding changes that could reduce Solanco SD's cyber tuition by roughly $175,000 under a revised formula; board members called the changes insufficient compared with district costs of about $2.3 million for cyber enrollments.
Greenacres, Palm Beach County, Florida
The Planning and Zoning Board approved ZTA-25-06, a city-initiated text amendment to Chapter 16 to adopt procedures for reasonable-accommodation requests consistent with a recent state statute; staff said the ordinance must be adopted by Jan. 1 and recommended approval.
Shorewood, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin
The Strategic Initiatives Committee reviewed the 2020 Barrientos/Novak facility analysis and executive summary, discussed staffing recommendations including an engineering inspector position not yet filled, and examined service choices such as day‑certain leaf collection and future electrification when planning a new DPW site.
East Ramapo Central School District (Spring Valley), School Districts, New York
District leaders presented baseline IRLA (English) and NEAL (Spanish) assessment results after expanding American Reading Company (ARC) to K–5; presenters reported high rates of students below grade level and outlined small‑group coaching, family reports, and Wilson Foundations for K‑2.
Naperville CUSD 203, School Boards, Illinois
Naperville CUSD 203 approved a Level‑2 design for a new transportation facility that adds geothermal and solar features. Trustees discussed a roughly $2M additional upfront cost versus long‑term energy savings and voted to proceed with the sustainable option.
Pennsauken Township, Camden County, New Jersey
Pennsauken Township held a special Nov. 17 meeting to swear in 15 new and promoted members of the Pennsauken Fire Department — including EMTs, newly sworn firefighters and promotions to lieutenant and captain — and closed the ceremony with group photos and thanks to families and staff.
Orland Park, Cook County, Illinois
Orland Park’s Committee of the Whole recognized the Owls Special Olympics Illinois flag football team for winning the state championship in Peoria (37–3 vs. Rockford Red Hots). Head coach Mikaela Trail and program leaders were introduced and the board congratulated athletes, coaches and volunteers.
Greenacres, Palm Beach County, Florida
The Greenacres Planning and Zoning Board unanimously recommended approval of a major site-plan amendment allowing Walmart to expand by 3,370 sq ft for expanded online-pickup operations, increase reserved pickup stalls from 12 to 33 and add eight electric-vehicle charging spaces; staff also noted an administrative parking variance (BA2403) that will be deemed approved with the site plan.
Milton, Pierce County, Washington
The Milton City Council voted 5-1 to adopt ordinance 2128-25, strengthening camping and public‑space enforcement while attaching resource handouts and documentation requirements for officers; opponents said the measure focuses on 'the stick' without sufficient housing or service commitments.
City of Chaska, Carver County, Minnesota
The council and the EDA adopted resolutions extending temporary authority to transfer pooled TIF dollars and to permit use of accrued interest, pushing the construction deadline to Dec. 31, 2026. Staff said the pooled transfer was about $2.25 million in 2022 and grew to about $2.5 million with interest by end of 2024.
San Fernando City, Los Angeles County, California
Council members debated whether to hear a closed-session real-estate item in public; a motion to continue that item to open session and require a staff report failed. The council approved the agenda with Item B deleted and then recessed to closed session.
Sylvania Schools, School Districts, Ohio
The board approved Maumee Bay Turf Center’s low bid to replace Northview High School’s turf and acknowledged a partner (Lourdes) is contractually responsible for 40% of costs; the board also held a first reading of graduation‑policy 54‑60 and discussed limits and approvals for a possible PE waiver.
Town of Zionsville, Boone County, Indiana
The commission conditionally approved a 3‑lot minor subdivision for 8.13 acres at Fayette Road while denying a request to waive perimeter path installation and a waiver of bonding; it approved a deferral for path construction and granted a waiver for fire protection flow due to lack of municipal water.
East Ramapo Central School District (Spring Valley), School Districts, New York
After a 2025–26 startup failure, a consultant told the board the district’s transportation problems are structural; the administration proposed separating nonpublic transportation into a contracted model and added contract safeguards, and the board discussed amendments and oversight measures.
Troy, Miami County, Ohio
Residents expressed concern that planting roughly 50 trees at Grama McKay Park could remove usable green space for neighborhood kids; city staff said recent plantings were intended to enhance or replace Japanese cherry trees as part of a sister‑city effort and that no additional plantings beyond those recently installed were planned.
Solanco SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania
The Solanco School District board recognized retiring directors Craig Chubb and Kirk Kreider for decades of service and presented student‑of‑the‑month awards to middle‑ and high‑school students, including Gianna Dobson and Carlos Garcia Romero.
Buckingham County, Virginia
Peter Francisco Soil & Water Conservation District told supervisors it has about $1.4 million in approved agricultural project funding shared between Buckingham and Cumberland, has reimbursed $25,484 to homeowners in the Slate River watershed and $11,693 elsewhere in Buckingham for septic work, and is installing satellite dam monitors.
Town of Zionsville, Boone County, Indiana
The Plan Commission heard a full presentation of the draft comprehensive plan and dozens of public comments focused on land‑use classifications, road and utility planning, and preservation of trees and open space; commissioners requested edits and continued the hearing to Dec. 15 for an updated draft.
Logansport City, Cass County, Indiana
The rules committee approved sending revisions to the vacant- and unsafe-property ordinances to council. Revisions include a 30-day vacancy trigger, graduated downtown registration fees ($1,500 → $3,000 → $4,500 semiannually), escalating civil penalties and insurance minimums for vacant properties.
Orland Park, Cook County, Illinois
The committee recommended adopting an ordinance amending Title 1, Chapter 14 of the Orland Park Village Code to allow administrative hearing officers to impose nonmonetary relief and require remediation, following a state law signed by Governor Pritzker that expanded municipal adjudication tools.
City of Chaska, Carver County, Minnesota
The Chaska City Council unanimously approved a preliminary site and building plan and a zoning amendment to permit a 148,000-square-foot Municipal Services Building at 4501 Creek Road. Staff said the move avoids a costly transmission-line relocation and will support up to about 118 employees.
Harlem UD 122, School Boards, Illinois
The Harlem UD 122 board voted to approve the consent agenda on Nov. 17, recording total expenditures of $8,516,493.89, accepting treasurer's report and authorizing use of remaining life-safety bond proceeds for safety and energy projects; several contracts (lighting, PD, curriculum kits, tutoring) were approved or delegated for execution.
Town of Zionsville, Boone County, Indiana
Neighbors urged the Zionsville Plan Commission to oppose or delay Pulte Homes’ request to rezone about 161 acres from R-1 to R-2 for a 269‑lot subdivision, citing notice concerns, wildlife, traffic and inadequate buffers; the commission granted a continuance to January for further negotiation and plan refinement.
Elkhart City, Elkhart County, Indiana
A longtime local landlord urged the council to suspend and amend the city's rental inspection ordinance, calling it potentially unconstitutional and impractical to implement; he raised concerns about tenant consent, inspection scope, fees and a reported 45% failure rate in inspections.
Marquette, Marquette County, Michigan
At its annual organizational meeting Nov. 17, 2025, the Marquette City Commission swore in two commissioners, formally appointed Paul Schlegel as mayor and Jeremy Otaway as mayor pro tem, approved the meeting agenda and passed the consent agenda unanimously.
Port Hueneme City, Ventura County, California
The council recognized Sergeant Ryan Bates for 25 years of service, praising his leadership of the traffic unit and the department’s new UAS (drone) team.
Naperville CUSD 203, School Boards, Illinois
Naperville CUSD 203 tabled a proposed ~20% tuition increase for summer school after board members expressed concern about equity and program effectiveness; trustees asked administration for alternatives and a menu of options to reduce costs without creating access barriers.
Township of Washington, Warren County, New Jersey
Council introduced ordinance 25‑25 (lease with Bethany Church) and passed resolution 25‑348 to publish the ordinance and schedule a public hearing on Dec. 2; both measures passed on roll calls with a majority of councilmembers voting yes.
Troy, Miami County, Ohio
Ordinance O29‑2025 (first reading) would repeal an earlier ordinance and establish new pay rates for temporary, seasonal and part‑time city employees to reflect the Ohio minimum-wage increase to $11/hour effective Jan. 1, 2026; matter was presented as first reading and carried over.
Logansport City, Cass County, Indiana
Utility staff presented updates to Logansport’s Sewer Use Ordinance, including new local limits from composite sampling, reclassification of industrial users after an IDEM audit, and enforcement tools (NOVs, surcharges). Staff asked the council for two readings and aimed to finalize in December.
Missoula, Missoula County, Montana
The volunteer-run 4 History Buffs club meets the fourth Tuesday of each month (except December) at the Missoula Public Library’s Cooper Room for free history talks; Missoula Community Access Television records the programs and posts them on YouTube. Contact and schedule details are available via MCAT and the library.
Sylvania Schools, School Districts, Ohio
Dozens of teachers, parents and district staff told the Sylvania Schools Board on Nov. 17 that a proposed high‑school physical education waiver would reduce required PE, risk staff cuts and harm students’ physical and mental health; the board said it will study options and review state guidance before a possible second reading.
Aurora City, Douglas County, Colorado
The council voted in a verbal roll call to suspend rules and extend the public-comment listening session by 14 minutes so seven remaining individuals could speak for two minutes each. The motion passed in a verbal roll call.
Orland Park, Cook County, Illinois
Orland Park’s Committee of the Whole recommended awarding RFP 25-062 for Main Pump Station pump #4 replacement to Ares Incorporated of Joliet for $680,617 plus $20,000 contingency (total not to exceed $700,617); staff said the single bid reflected the specialty and long lead time of the pump.
Marquette, Marquette County, Michigan
Room at the Inn told the Marquette City Commission it is seeing up to 46 sign-ins nightly and asked to use the Baraga Gym as temporary overflow this winter; commissioners directed city staff to draft a recommendation on facility use and logistics.
Buckingham County, Virginia
Crossroads Community Services reported monthly case management caseloads (July–Oct: 659, 720, 710, 717), an average caseload around 50 with occasional peaks to 75, and an expectation that 80% of staff meet electronic health‑record documentation; the agency asked the board for continued support.
Trinity County, California
Consultant Brian V. Mason reviewed the Chamber's tourism plan and urged measurable digital tactics and staff training; the Shasta Cascade SBDC described no-cost advising, procurement events and small-business cohorts serving Trinity County.
Hewitt, McLennan County, Texas
At the Nov. 17 meeting the council approved the Nov. 3 minutes (Stevens moved; Turner seconded) and voted to cast the city's full 75 votes for Jim Smith to the McLennan Central Appraisal District board; all recorded votes were 5-0.
Elkhart City, Elkhart County, Indiana
The City of Elkhart council adopted ordinance 25-0-38 to annex Prairie Street Cemetery and two adjacent parcels into the city after a public hearing in which the planning department said the annexation had unanimous plan commission support; the ordinance passed 7-0 on second and third readings.
Delray Beach, Palm Beach County, Florida
The commission approved a multi-year contract with Axon Enterprise to continue and expand body-worn cameras, in-car cameras and citywide CCTV storage to support a real-time crime center; staff said the 10-year cost is $15.4 million and signing now yields an estimated $4.1 million savings over waiting until 2026.
Township of Washington, Warren County, New Jersey
A resident told the Township Council that a 34‑ to 38‑minute ambulance response for an unconscious child amounted to a 'complete system failure,' prompting the mayor to agree to pursue a meeting with the volunteer ambulance corps and to seek findings from a Pascack Valley EMS study.
Naperville CUSD 203, School Boards, Illinois
Independent auditors gave Naperville CUSD 203 an unmodified opinion and the district a top ISBE financial profile, but the administration’s five‑year forecast shows a structural deficit (projected FY27 gap ~$12.5M). The board asked administration to return with options and timelines to restore balance.
Port Hueneme City, Ventura County, California
Council debated whether the Port’s proposed shift to larger economic projects should override the citizen-advisory recommended list of small Port Hueneme nonprofits. Councilmembers instructed staff and the city-port representatives to press for compromise at upcoming joint meetings and suggested prioritizing items such as wayfinding signs and grant-writing funds.
Troy, Miami County, Ohio
Personnel committee recommended legislation (effective Jan. 1, 2026) authorizing the Director of Public Service and Safety to execute a memorandum of understanding with the FOP OLC Troy Police Officers Association and affiliated units to allow more flexibility in holiday‑pay usage; committee supports emergency legislation and R64‑2025 was read for first reading.
Delray Beach, Palm Beach County, Florida
After a staff analysis and public comment about residential impacts, the commission approved the level‑4 site plan and associated waivers (including reducing required showers and leaving an existing rear wall in place) for the Kia dealership redevelopment on South Federal Highway by a 4–1 vote; Planning & Zoning had recommended approval 6–1.
Buckingham County, Virginia
The Buckingham County Board of Supervisors voted 7–0 to schedule a Dec. 8 public hearing on a special‑use permit (Case 25SUP361) that would allow a two‑site campground on a 27.33‑acre A‑1 agricultural parcel; the planning commission had recommended approval with 14 conditions.
Hewitt, McLennan County, Texas
Hewitt's fire chief described a station alerting system that isolates alerts by station, uses quieter progressive tones and low-level red lighting to reduce sudden heart-rate spikes for crews, and would be added as station furnishings rather than base construction.
Orland Park, Cook County, Illinois
Orland Park’s Committee of the Whole voted to recommend approval of the Bridlewood Residential Planned Development (case 2025-0171), a related plat of subdivision and a zoning map amendment after staff presented design changes and engineering recommended traffic measures; Trustee Katsenas recorded the lone opposing vote on each action.
Trinity County, California
Board introduced Title 17 ordinance amendments on Nov. 18 to align county zoning with the certified housing element, including updated accessory-dwelling-unit rules and an optional ADU bonus to improve the county's chance of winning pro-housing incentive funds.
Aurora City, Douglas County, Colorado
A Sterling Hills resident asked Aurora City Council for more traffic safety measures—specifically a roundabout—at the Dunkirk and Wesley intersection after multiple accidents, including the hit-and-run death of a child identified as Dimitri.
Harlem UD 122, School Boards, Illinois
The Harlem UD 122 board heard a staff recommendation (Scenario 7) to reorganize elementary schools into two East/West bands, reduce building count and early-childhood seats, and phase staffing reductions to address a projected $3.1 million deficit; three public hearings are planned in December.
Delray Beach, Palm Beach County, Florida
The commission unanimously approved Resolution 209-25 authorizing the 27th annual Delray Beach Garlic Festival (Feb. 28–Mar. 1, 2026) to be held on the Old School Square campus; the event will be fenced, ticketed, have no road closures, and is expected to draw about 4,000 people per day.
Fishers City, Hamilton County, Indiana
An applicant asked council for a first-reading rezone of two R2 lots at Brooks School Road to the Cielo Commercial Impact District to allow a 12-bedroom Story Cottage memory care residence; applicants and staff said the proposal is low-impact, will be a single structure with fenced outdoor patio and will proceed to Planning Commission Dec. 3.
Richard Smith was sworn in as mayor of Milford City at an inauguration ceremony that included remarks by Lt. Gov. Susan Bysiewicz and the swearing-in of other local officials; Smith cited a $56 billion decline in the city's grand list and urged bipartisan cooperation to address economic pressures.
Barnstable County, Massachusetts
On Nov. 17, 2025 the standing committee on government affairs and rules voted 6–1 to recommend the draft Regional Policy Plan (RPP) to the full Cape Cod Assembly of Delegates after rejecting an amendment by Delegate Lillianne Green that would have barred approval of offshore wind projects until the Cape Cod Ocean Management Plan is updated.
Commercial Point Village, Pickaway County, Ohio
The village approved moving forward with First Street expansion work linked to Sunnyside Day Care after a resident raised concerns about excavation on what he believed was his land; village staff reviewed records and determined the staked portion is village property.
Delray Beach, Palm Beach County, Florida
City Manager Moore told commissioners the city closed a $148 million revenue bond underwritten by Bank of America Securities and announced construction recommendation items will be presented Dec. 8 to finalize a groundbreaking for the new water treatment plant; staff also updated several waterfront projects and a recent backflow fix.
Troy, Miami County, Ohio
Finance recommended legislation to allow the Director of Public Service and Safety to purchase fuel on the open market for 2026–2028 and to advertise for bids for 2026 water meters and parts (meters not to exceed $1,000,000; parts listed in the record as approximately $226,100–$226,110).
Port Hueneme City, Ventura County, California
City staff reviewed 11 cannabis-related development agreements and recommended compliance or partial compliance for most; one delivery business (EcoMedz/Front Door Enterprises) was found out of compliance and staff was directed to issue notice to revoke the agreement if defaults are not cured within 30 days.
Township of Washington, Warren County, New Jersey
The Township of Washington introduced ordinance 25-25 to authorize an 18‑month lease with Bethany Church to store DPW vehicles and equipment, prompting residents to raise safety, environmental and transparency concerns and prompting a Dec. 2 evidentiary hearing.
Appropriations, House of Representatives, Legislative, Pennsylvania
The House Appropriations Committee packaged and advanced five bills addressing tenant background checks, LIFE program materials, a physician assistant compact, physician nutrition training, and unemployment-compensation averaging; the committee passed two packages and one bill by roll call.
Delray Beach, Palm Beach County, Florida
The City Commission approved moving forward with a memorial bench at Old School Square and agreed to initially name the citys railroad parking lot the "Roy M. Simon Railroad lot," following a presentation by the Rotary Club and remarks from Simons family.
Fishers City, Hamilton County, Indiana
Council adopted a fiscal plan and took first-reading action on the voluntary Linwood Hills annexation — roughly 77 acres with about 159 homes — where staff said a sewer design and construction project will follow; staff said grant funding will cover most infrastructure and property owners may owe roughly $10,000 for lateral/tap costs, payable over about 20 years.
Trinity County, California
Multiple public commenters urged the board to repeal or reduce Trinity County's cannabis cultivation tax. In response, supervisors agreed to pursue staff analytics and form a short ad hoc committee to gather industry input and report back.
Hewitt, McLennan County, Texas
Hewitt's City Council heard a detailed presentation on proposed revisions to the Hewitt Public Library's circulation, collection, technology and privacy policies, including new rules for minors, inactivity removal, fines and an AI restriction in reconsideration requests.
Commercial Point Village, Pickaway County, Ohio
Commercial Point Village trustees voted to accept a $22,447.50 quote to replace the village audio-visual system, including cameras, after agreeing to pay a 50% deposit to allow the contractor to order equipment.
Goodyear, Maricopa County, Arizona
Several residents and Jewish community leaders urged Goodyear to place the menorah beside the Christmas tree and illuminate it prominently; the city manager arranged a site visit for Wednesday at 8:30 a.m. to identify a new location and lighting options.
Troy, Miami County, Ohio
Finance committee recommended legislation authorizing the Director of Public Service and Safety to execute a first amendment to the city’s 2004 land‑lease with Cellco Partnership (Verizon) for the tower at 202 East Staunton Road; ordinance received first reading and will be carried to the next meeting due to excused members.
Aurora City, Douglas County, Colorado
Family members and community advocates demanded accountability from the Aurora Police Department, described viewing police footage and urged the new council majority to pursue justice; speakers also criticized past council members' conduct toward families.
Pacifica, San Mateo County, California
After presentations from two executive-recruitment firms, the Pacifica City Council voted unanimously Nov. 17 to hire Bob Murray & Associates, led by Gary Phillips, to conduct the city manager recruitment. The firm will draft a candidate brochure, run community and staff surveys and begin outreach immediately.
Goodyear, Maricopa County, Arizona
Council approved a letter of intent with RG Land Developers for a 600‑space public parking garage at the GSQ downtown site; Globe/Red to donate land, city to fund construction (est. $15M) and own/operate the garage; the facility will include a ~1,500‑sq‑ft public‑safety substation. Vote was unanimous (7–0).
Fishers City, Hamilton County, Indiana
Council voted to amend the stormwater code to allow residential stormwater billing to be charged monthly (rolled into the combined bill with sewer and trash starting in 2026); staff said the change is intended to smooth payments and reduce duplicate account numbers for residents.
Port Hueneme City, Ventura County, California
Council adopted the 2025 California Building Standards Code by unanimous roll call after a second reading, noting AB 130 limitations and finding the project categorically exempt from CEQA.
North Ridgeville, Lorain County, Ohio
Council approved renaming Tebow Trail to Orchard Park Drive, approved Planning Commission amendments to automobile service station rules via substitution, and referred cluster-subdivision and subdivision-design changes to the Planning Commission for further review.
Johnson County, Indiana
County highway staff secured approval to extend the Bridal 85 contract through 12/31/2026 at no extra cost, approved a Bridge 605 change order (staff said the consultant will cover contractor costs), ratified OpenGov/Stripe for online permitting, and accepted an interlocal agreement with the City of Franklin for reimbursement of roughly $24,000.
Goodyear, Maricopa County, Arizona
City staff proposed phased rate increases for water, wastewater and solid‑waste services to cover treatment, capital and regulatory costs; staff removed a proposed stormwater fee per council direction. The citizens committee was split on the recommendation; council asked staff for alternate subsidy scenarios before the Dec. 15 public hearing.
Fishers City, Hamilton County, Indiana
City officials and volunteers reported on a teacher innovation fund seeded with $500,000 and topped each year with $50,000; the program funded STEM makerspaces, VR welding training and a student-produced short that was accepted to the Indiana Heartland International Film Festival.
Cheyenne, Laramie County, Wyoming
The Finance Committee on Nov. 18 recommended that the council adopt multiple staffing, service and capital agreements and a parks grant application: LWCF grant for the Botanic Gardens path ($765,630 project cost), Safe Harbor contract ($20,000), Volunteers of America Harmony House contract ($136,875), Laramie County Senior Services contract (not to exceed $100,000), HDR Engineering compost plan ($93,580), acceptance of a $30,030 bid for surplus evidence firearms, and acceptance of a mower bid for the golf division.
Johnson County, Indiana
At their Nov. 17 meeting, the Johnson County Board of Commissioners approved Ordinance 2025-0-13 amending Title 35, reappointed Dr. Qualls as county health officer at Betsy Swearingen's request, and passed routine consent items including several annual contracts and minutes. The board also approved a contract for electronic poll books.
Central York SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania
The board agreed to send Policy 146 (student services) to first reading after adding a requirement that the written student services plan be available for public inspection on the district website and administrative offices for at least 28 days and clarifying SAP roles and licensing expectations for staff delivering services.
Flossmoor SD 161, School Boards, Illinois
Principals described school improvement plans focused on PBIS/restorative practices, targeted small‑group instruction, standards‑based grading and student agency; the district reported reduced chronic absenteeism and growth that pushed Heather Hill into the state 'exemplary' category.
Cheyenne, Laramie County, Wyoming
The committee recommended a resolution allowing Wyoming Kingold Mining Co. to purchase water from Crystal Reservoir under an outside‑user agreement; the agreement removes a prior curtailment protection, sets raw-water at 1.5× the city rate, and anticipates system‑development fees and company-built infrastructure.
Central York SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania
Board members conducted an extensive first review of a rewritten Policy 819 (suicide awareness, prevention and response), covering purpose, authority, definitions, training hours, delivery formats, coordinator vs team roles, assessment tools (CSSRS), and communication protocols; the board deferred final action and scheduled continued review.
Central York SD, School Districts, Pennsylvania
The Central York School Board voted to move Policy 100, the district comprehensive plan, to a first reading after agreeing to minor updates that align induction and student-services plan submission to three-year state requirements and to clarify delegation to the superintendent or designee.
United Nations, Federal
The UN spokesperson repeated World Food Programme warnings that 318 million people could face crisis‑level hunger next year and said WFP aims to reach 110 million people in 2026 at a $13 billion cost but expects to receive roughly half that funding.
Manitowoc, Manitowoc County, Wisconsin
The council approved multiple committee reports and ordinances unanimously: an appointment to the transit commission, consent agenda, settlement and gallery agreement, land sale to Redline Plastics, amendments to grant and code sections on animals, e-bikes and parking, and a plan commission rezone at 1005 Memorial Drive. A resident urged funding for Red Arrow Park Beach during public input.
Trinity County, California
On Nov. 18 the Trinity County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously to adopt a multi-year fee study and ordinance that moves many county charges toward full cost recovery, aiming to reduce an $858,814 general-fund subsidy to planning and other departments.
Manitowoc, Manitowoc County, Wisconsin
The Manitowoc Common Council unanimously adopted an initial resolution authorizing revenue bond financing for Emanuel Evangelical Lutheran Church and approved a scope of engagement not to exceed $4,000,000 for City of Manitowoc revenue bonds series 2025; job-impact information will be provided at a future return to council.
Roanoke City (Independent City), Virginia
Parents and PTA representatives urged Roanoke City Council for clearer disclosure of school 'true up' funds and questioned a PFM fiscal review that they said understates inflation and rising student needs; the matter was raised during public comment and council asked staff to follow up.
Port Hueneme City, Ventura County, California
After a multi-hour public hearing, the council voted to direct staff to amend the proposed short-term rental ordinance’s posting requirement and to remove a proposed spacing (separation) requirement while returning with alternatives. Council split on the change and left fees and final wording for future revision.