Below is the breakdown of what the Pensacola City Council will consider in the coming week. As always, expenditures are highlighted. Links to the full agendas are included at the bottom of the page.
Note: This meeting will take place on Monday, October 19. The meeting begins at 3:15 PM in the Hagler/Mason Conference Room, second floor, City Hall. The Finance Committee will not meet.
Continue Reading...
Here’s a brief recap of yesterday’s Pensacola City Council committee meetings:
Absences: None.
Appointments: Council reappointed C. Ray Jones and Daniel Lindemann to the Architectural Review Board, reappointed Danny Grundhoefer and Daniel Keck to the Code Enforcement Board, and appointed Ashton Hayward as the Planning Board representative on the Architectural Review…
Continue Reading...
Below is the breakdown of what the Pensacola City Council will consider in the coming week. As always, expenditures are highlighted. Links to the full agendas are included at the bottom of the page.
Note: This meeting will take place on Monday, September 24. The meeting begins at 3:15 PM in the Hagler/Mason Conference Room, second floor, City Hall.
Continue Reading...
Below is the breakdown of what the Pensacola City Council will consider in the coming week. As always, direct expenditures are highlighted. Links to the full agendas are included at the bottom of the page.
Note: This meeting will take place on Monday, July 6. The meeting begins at 9:00 AM in the Hagler/Mason Conference Room, second floor, City Hall. The Finance Committee, the Economic and Community Development Committee, and the Community Redevelopment Agency will not meet.
Continue Reading...
A few items I wanted to highlight today:
Pensacola News Journal:
“Superfund cleanup to get millions from stimulus”
City of Pensacola:
Budget workshop presentations
Megan Pratt:
“The Maritime Museum”
Rick’s Blog:
“BTW: Consolidation bill passes the House”
And more…
Continue Reading...
The PNJ ran a story today, on, I kid you not, a squabble between a quasi-governmental agency and a City department over plaques on lampposts. The squabble has (again, I kid you not) devolved to the point where one agency has filed police reports concerning the other’s actions.
In short, the Downtown Improvement Board (a [...]
Continue Reading...