Pompano Beach City Commission held the second reading of an ordinance authorizing a parking license agreement with First Baptist Church of Pompano Beach for use of parking spaces at 117 NE 1st Street. The deal carries a fiscal impact of $68,280 per year, not to exceed $341,400 over the five-year term.
Pompano Beach City Commission held the second reading of an ordinance authorizing a five-year service agreement with One Parking, Inc. for parking operations management services, with a fiscal impact of $2,854,931 over the contract term. First reading took place on April 14, 2026.
Resolution 26-324 would establish a city policy directing the City Manager and staff to reserve all remaining plots at the Pompano Beach Municipal Cemetery exclusively for sale to city residents. No fiscal impact is identified.
The City Commission held a first reading of an ordinance amending Chapter 90, Section 90.39, governing the retail sale of dogs and cats. The measure modifies and adds definitions, imposes further regulations on pet shops, and creates a retention privilege allowing existing pet shops to continue operations under a grandfather-type provision.
Ordinance 26-119 (P.H. 2025-69), a second-reading measure adding restrictions on retail sale of dogs and cats under Chapter 90, Section 90.39, has been stricken from the April 28, 2026 agenda and replaced with file ID No. 26-313. The item was previously postponed from February 10 and February 24, 2026, after its first reading on January 27, 2026.
Broward County Commission is directing staff to publish notice of a May 26, 2026 public hearing to consider two companion Comprehensive Plan amendments — one map amendment (PC 26-3) and one text amendment (PCT 26-2) — that would expand the South Activity Center in Fort Lauderdale, covering Commission Districts 4 and 8. South Activity Centers are high-intensity land use designations in the Broward County Land Use Plan that enable denser mixed-use and commercial development.
Broward County Commission is directing staff to notice a public hearing on May 12, 2026, to consider renewing Florida International Terminal, LLC's nonexclusive, unrestricted stevedore franchise at Port Everglades for a new ten-year term. The hearing will be held at 10:00 a.m. in Room 422 of Governmental Center East.
Broward County Commission is moving to schedule a public hearing for May 12, 2026, at 10:00 a.m. in Room 422 of Governmental Center East, to consider a new ordinance amending Chapter 27 of the County Code. The ordinance updates regulations covering aquatic and water resource management, wetland resource protection, hazardous material programs, and cooling tower rules under Section 34-168.
Broward County Commission is directing staff to publish notice of a May 12, 2026 public hearing to consider renewing Florida International Terminal, LLC's nonexclusive, unrestricted cargo handler franchise at Port Everglades for a new ten-year term. The hearing will be held at 10:00 a.m. in Room 422 of Governmental Center East.
The Broward County Commission is directing staff to review Port Everglades Tariff No. 12, Section 42.25 of the Broward County Administrative Code and prepare a Resolution proposing revised tariff rates and requirements for various port activities. No specific rate changes or dollar figures are included at this stage; the action is a preliminary directive to staff and the County Attorney's Office ahead of a future board vote.
The Broward County Commission is being asked to adopt a resolution directing the County Administrator to publish notice of a public hearing scheduled for June 9, 2026, at 10:00 a.m., in Room 422 of Governmental Center East. The hearing will consider awarding E Care Ambulance, Inc. both a Class 2 Advanced Life Support Transfer Certificate and a Class 3 Basic Life Support Transport Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity.
Broward County Commission is considering a resolution directing the County Administrator to publish notice of a public hearing on June 9, 2026, at 10:00 a.m. in Room 422 of Governmental Center East, to consider awarding MTS Ambulance, LLC both a Class 2 Advanced Life Support Transfer Certificate and a Class 3 Basic Life Support Transport Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity. The COPCN awards, if granted at the June hearing, would authorize MTS Ambulance to operate ALS transfer and BLS transport services in Broward County.
Broward County Commission is set to adopt a resolution directing the County Administrator to publish notice of a public hearing on June 9, 2026, at 10:00 a.m. in Room 422 of Governmental Center East. The hearing will consider awarding three Certificates of Public Convenience and Necessity — Class 2 ALS Transfer, Class 3 BLS Transport, and Class 5 ALS Specialty Transport — to Positive Mobility, LLC, d/b/a Elite Medical Response.
The Broward County Commission is set to appoint four individuals — Tony Fonseca, Shane Wilkinson, Michael Stamm, and Rob Gooljar — to the North Perry Airport Community Advisory Committee in specified categorical seats. A companion motion seeks approval of conflict-of-interest waivers under Florida Statutes §112.313(7)(a) for all four appointees, each of whom holds employment or contractual relationships with entities that receive Broward County funds.
The Broward County Commission is set to appoint Joseph Kenner, CEO of a not-for-profit housing organization, to the Broward Housing Council as an at-large member. A companion motion seeks a conflict-of-interest waiver under Florida Statutes Section 112.313(7)(a) because Kenner's employer receives Broward County funding.
The Hialeah City Council is considering an ordinance amending City Code Section 2235 that includes a conditional site plan approval. The site plan must be revised to show a 6-foot-high concrete wall along the east, west, and north property lines, per the maximum height permitted under the City of Hialeah Landscape Manual.
The Hialeah City Council is considering an ordinance granting a variance from the accessory structure size limit under Code § 98-1666 for the single-family (R-1) property at 640 East 60 Street. The variance allows an accessory building to exceed the standard percentage-of-main-building size cap otherwise required by city code.
The Lauderdale Lakes City Commission is taking up one or more ordinances on second reading at its April 28, 2026 meeting. Second reading is the final legislative step before an ordinance becomes law.
The Lauderdale Lakes City Commission is considering one or more ordinances on first reading at its April 28, 2026 meeting. No specific ordinance titles, subjects, or affected parcels are identified in this agenda item.
The Lauderdale Lakes City Commission is scheduled to consider resolutions placed on the regular agenda at its April 28, 2026 meeting. No individual resolution titles, numbers, dollar amounts, or subject matter are identified under this umbrella item.
The Wilton Manors City Commission is considering a resolution to publish Notice of Intent to enter into a Comprehensive Agreement for a qualifying project under Florida Statute §255.065 — the state's public-private partnership law — to perform sanitary sewer infrastructure work. This is a pre-vote notice step required before the city can formally solicit or negotiate a P3 agreement for the project.
The Wilton Manors City Commission is considering initiating foreclosure action on a code enforcement lien attached to real property at 2604-2647 N Andrews Avenue, Wilton Manors, FL 33311. The discussion is a preliminary commission consideration, meaning no foreclosure has been filed yet.
The Wilton Manors City Commission is hearing an appeal of a Special Magistrate's lien reduction order tied to Code Case #22-000244 at 2440 Wilton Drive, owned by Dee 2440 Property, LLC. The appeal is at the discussion stage with no vote outcome recorded.
The Wilton Manors City Commission is discussing potential distance separation requirements that would restrict where alcoholic beverage establishments can locate relative to each other or to sensitive uses such as schools or churches. This is a discussion item requested by Vice Mayor Chris Caputo, with no vote taken yet.
The Wilton Manors City Commission is hearing an appeal of a Special Magistrate's lien reduction order tied to Code Case #22-000237 at 2031 Wilton Drive, owned by Dee 2031 Property, LLC. The item involves a disputed reduction of a code enforcement lien on this Wilton Drive commercial corridor property.
Lauderhill is amending its Land Development Regulations to create a new Subsection 5.1.8 establishing standards for Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs), including where they may be located and specific use requirements. The ordinance also adds ADUs to the city's land use classifications and the allowable-use table for residential zoning districts.
Lauderhill is amending its Land Development Regulations to create a new "Food Pantry" land use classification with dedicated standards under Section 5.1.9 (Accessory Structures and Uses). The ordinance defines "Food Pantry," establishes operational standards, and adds it as a permitted or conditionally permitted use in residential zoning districts via Schedule B updates.
Lauderhill is amending its Land Development Regulations and noise ordinance to modify prohibited hours for alcohol sales, clarify zoning requirements for bars, nightclubs, and live entertainment venues, and add nightclubs to the list of uses requiring special exception approval. The ordinance also updates noise measurement standards, removes certain vendor requirements, and revises land use classifications and allowable uses for indoor and outdoor live entertainment.
Ordinance 26O-04-106 amends Lauderhill's Land Development Regulations to alter the definition of artificial turf and modify the procedures and conditions for installing artificial turf under the city's landscape and tree preservation standards. The changes affect Article III (Zoning Districts) and Schedule J (Landscape Installation, Irrigation and Maintenance Standards).
The Parkland City Council considered an update to the C-PD01 Development Agreement Security Policy but the proposed motion is to postpone the item to the May 26, 2026 Council Meeting. C-PD01 is Parkland's primary planned development district, and changes to its development agreement security requirements could affect how developers post performance guarantees and financial assurances.
Bylaw 2026-17 proposed amendments to the Parkland County and Seba Beach Intermunicipal Development Plan (originally Bylaw 2019-09), targeting commercial land use changes in section SE-12-53-6-5. The bylaw was scheduled for all three readings at the April 27 public hearing but failed to pass.
Resolution 27-26 establishes a policy governing when the City of Riviera Beach will cover attorney's fees and costs for the mayor, council members, officers, and employees. The resolution includes a severability clause and an effective date.
Parkland Council introduced Bylaw 2026-20 to amend Bylaw 2026-07, which governs council meeting procedures. The proposed motion seeks first, second, and third readings all at the same meeting, indicating an expedited adoption process.
Coconut Creek is holding the second reading and second public hearing on ORD 2026-006-2, which would rezone the Al Hendrickson Toyota dealership site at 5201 West Sample Road from B-4 (Regional Shopping District) to Planned Mainstreet Development District (PMDD). The rezoning, filed by Jay Doucette of Spring Engineering, Inc., is intended to facilitate redevelopment of the existing auto dealership property.
This second-reading ordinance amends the Land Development Code to adopt the master business list of permitted and special land uses for the Al Hendrickson Toyota Planned Mainstreet Development District at 5201 West Sample Road. The ordinance defines which commercial and other uses will be allowed within this planned district, shaping the development trajectory for the site.
The City Commission is considering a resolution to approve the first amendment (Facilities Amendment) to the interlocal agreement with Broward County and other municipalities for participation in the Solid Waste Disposal and Recyclable Materials Processing Authority. The amendment addresses facilities-related terms within the existing countywide solid waste framework.
Ordinance 2026-005-2 amends Chapter 5, Section 5-12 of the Coconut Creek Code of Ordinances to clarify that hobby breeders are not classified as pet stores under the retail sale of dogs and cats regulations. This is the second reading and public hearing, meaning a final vote is imminent.
The Village Council is reviewing a development agreement authorized under the Florida Local Government Development Agreement Act (ss. 163.3220-163.3243), which governs binding agreements between local governments and developers on land use, zoning, and development conditions. No specific parcel address, acreage, unit count, or dollar amount is discernible from the truncated agenda text.
Ordinance 2026-05 amends Chapter 19 of the Village code to regulate access to Village-owned, controlled, and leased property. This is the second reading/final adoption stage of the ordinance.
This ordinance appears to establish or amend a trespass appeal process handled by a special magistrate, requiring hearings within 40 days and findings of fact and conclusions of law. The full scope of the ordinance is unclear from the truncated text provided.
The Village Council is considering an ordinance establishing rules for issuing trespass warnings on public property and other property generally open to the public. The ordinance provides standard provisions for codification, severability, and conflicts.
The proposed ordinance establishes rules governing conduct and public access at Village-owned, controlled, and leased properties, using location-based categories. It authorizes the Village Manager to manage access to enclosed municipal facilities.
The Village Council is considering an ordinance whose economic impact statement declares no direct impact on private for-profit businesses, no new charges or fees, and no new regulatory costs. The specific substance of the ordinance is not disclosed in the available agenda text.
The Village Council will consider a resolution appointing members to various village boards and committees. No specific board names, appointees, or terms are identified in the agenda text.
The Miami City Commission is considering a $200,000 allocation from District 2's Miami For Everyone (MFE) program to ACE Theater Foundation, Inc. for the restoration and rehabilitation of the historic Ace Theater at 3664 Grand Avenue in Coconut Grove, which will serve as an events venue, cultural programming space, and workforce hub. The resolution waives competitive negotiation procedures via a required 4/5ths supermajority vote and provides funds on a reimbursement basis.
The Miami City Commission is directing the City Attorney to draft a Charter amendment that would move the next mayoral general election from November 2029 to August 2028, cutting the current mayoral term from four years to three. The proposed amendment would go before voters at a special election held concurrently with the August 18, 2026 gubernatorial primary, and if approved, would align all future mayoral elections on a four-year cycle concurrent with statewide or countywide elections.
The Miami City Commission is considering a resolution to waive competitive bidding and retroactively approve a $56,000 contract with Brouss Elevators Inc. for partial elevator modernization at the Little Haiti Soccer Park Community Building. The item requires a 4/5ths affirmative vote to ratify the City Manager's finding that the waiver is most advantageous for the city.
The Miami City Commission is considering a resolution to allocate $45,000 to Sunshine For All, Inc. for administration of the City's Senior Rental Assistance Program in FY 2025-2026, with an option for an additional $45,000 in FY 2026-2027. The funding comes from Historic Preservation fee revenues, and the item waives competitive negotiation requirements via a 4/5ths supermajority vote.
The Miami City Commission is considering a revocable license agreement with Event Entertainment Group, Inc. for the Ultra Music Festival at Bayfront Park, waiving certain code requirements under Section 38-113. The resolution authorizes the Bayfront Park Management Trust Executive Director to execute the negotiated agreement.
The Miami City Commission is considering a resolution to waive the 10-event-per-year cap at the city-owned property at 3385 Pan American Drive (Miami City Hall/Coconut Grove waterfront area) for events scheduled from April 23, 2026, through December 31, 2026. The waiver is subject to conditions specified in the resolution.
Resolution R-26-0194 seeks a four-fifths supermajority vote to waive restrictions under City Code Section 54-137 for the honorary co-designation of NW 14th Terrace between NW 32nd Avenue and NW 37th Avenue as "Angel Gonzalez Way." The item directs the City Manager to implement the co-designation and the City Clerk to transmit certified copies to designated officials.
The Village Council is considering an ordinance for which the good faith estimate indicates zero businesses will be impacted. No further details about the ordinance's subject matter are provided in the agenda text.
Miramar's Commission is considering amendments to Chapter 20, Article III of its Code of Ordinances, revising parking definitions, residential-zone parking restrictions, enforcement procedures, and enforcement orders. This is a first reading; a second reading and final vote are scheduled for May 20, 2026.
The Miami Beach Commission is taking up a first reading of a Comprehensive Plan Amendment tied to an Urban Core Residential Incentives Plan, introduced as a private application. The amendment would modify the city's land use policy framework to incentivize residential development in the urban core, though specific density, height, or FAR parameters are not enumerated in the agenda title.
The Miami Beach Commission is taking up a first reading of a Land Development Regulations amendment establishing an Urban Core Residential Incentives Plan, a privately initiated application. The ordinance requires a supermajority 6/7 vote for passage.
Miami Beach Commission is voting on second reading to expand the existing 'Stop the Pause' ordinance, which imposes a development moratorium or pause on certain construction or permitting activity. This is a final adoption vote, meaning the expansion takes effect if approved.
Miami Beach Commission is holding a second reading vote on an ordinance amending Water & Sewer Impact Fees, sponsored by the Public Works department under Director Bhatt. Second reading means this is the final legislative hurdle before the amended fee schedule takes effect.
Miami Beach Commission takes a second reading vote on an ordinance establishing administrative review requirements for temporary surface parking lots. The item is sponsored by Commissioner Fernandez and requires a 5/7 supermajority for passage.
Miami Beach Commission is taking a second and likely final reading on an amendment to expand the city's residential waste collection agreement to include multifamily properties. This action would bring multifamily buildings under the existing municipal waste contract framework rather than leaving them to private hauler arrangements.
Miami Beach Commission is taking up a first reading of an ordinance amending the city's procurement procedures, including waivers, bidding, and award criteria. No specific dollar thresholds or contract categories are detailed in the agenda title.
Miami Beach Commission is holding a second reading vote on an ordinance modifying the Appendix A fee schedule specifically for ADS (Administrative and Development Services) fees. Second reading is the final legislative step, meaning the fee changes will take effect if approved at the April 22 meeting.
The Miami Beach City Commission is considering a resolution to approve a proposed artistic graphic installation at 1651 Washington Ave., submitted by a private applicant. The item is scheduled as a 2:30 p.m. public hearing at the April 22, 2026 commission meeting.
Miami Beach Commission is considering on first reading an ordinance to clarify the duties and responsibilities of property owners or city departments pertaining to swale areas. Swales are the landscaped right-of-way strips between sidewalks and roadways that affect drainage and maintenance obligations on adjacent parcels.
The Miami Beach City Commission is scheduled to vote on second and final reading of an ordinance restricting plastic decorations, sponsored by Commissioner Fernandez. Second reading is the final legislative step; passage would enact the restriction as binding city code.
This ordinance, on second reading before the Miami Beach Commission, reduces the measurement distance used to establish a prima facie noise violation and codifies that standard as evidence of a noise code violation. Second reading is the final legislative step before the ordinance becomes law.
Miami Beach Commission is taking a second and final reading vote on an ordinance that establishes additional criteria governing the co-naming of city streets, with the 'Pride St.' designation cited as the specific context. Second reading is the last legislative step before the ordinance takes effect.
The City Commission approved a consent motion (26-0289) granting an outdoor event agreement, amplified music exemption, and road closure for the OUTshine Block Party on May 3, 2026, at Savor Cinema, 503 SE 6th Street. The event is organized by Miami Gay and Lesbian Film Festival, Inc. in Commission District 4.
The City Commission approved an outdoor event agreement and amplified music exemption with Fort Taco LTD. for a Cinco De Mayo 2026 event on May 5, 2026, at Rocco's Tacos & Tequila Bar, 1313 E Las Olas Boulevard. The item passed on the consent agenda.
The Delray Beach City Commission held a discussion on clarifying internal processes for state legislative funding and appropriations requests. No specific projects, dollar amounts, or policy changes were identified in the agenda text.
Rhonda Giger of the Palm Beach County Commission on Ethics delivered a presentation to the Delray Beach City Commission. The specific content of the presentation is not detailed in the agenda text.
The Delray Beach City Commission scheduled a presentation on Florida's Sunshine Law (Government in the Sunshine Act) at its April 21, 2026 meeting. No ordinance number, resolution number, or specific policy change is associated with this agenda item.
The Delray Beach City Commission discussed the operation and administration of claims review practices and processes. No specific dollar amounts, properties, or policy changes were identified in the agenda text.
Resolution No. 76-26 appoints the Palm Beach County Canvassing Board to canvass absentee ballots, canvass the municipal election, and conduct logic and accuracy testing for election machinery. It also authorizes the City Clerk to take all necessary steps to conduct the nonpartisan election, establishing the time, manner, and means of the vote.
The South Miami City Commission is considering an ordinance amending Section 7 of the city's Land Development Code. This is a second reading with a public hearing, originating from the City Manager's Development Services Department.
The Aventura City Commission is considering approval of the minutes from the Charter Revision Commission meeting held March 12, 2026. The Charter Revision Commission is a body empaneled to review and potentially recommend amendments to the Aventura City Charter.
Minutes from a prior Aventura Commission meeting reflect that members were directed to review the City Charter before the next meeting and to individually solicit input from commissioners and residents on suggested Charter amendments. Commissioners Pegues and Meyers were identified as contacts for the review process.
The Sunny Isles Beach City Commission is considering an ordinance that creates Article VII in Chapter 256 to regulate personal delivery devices and mobile carriers operating within the city. The item is on first reading and has not yet been voted on.
Dryeco Garment Care, LLC is requesting a Sign Ordinance Variance for its property at 18660 Collins Avenue in Sunny Isles Beach (Hearing #PZ2026-04). The item is before the Commission at first reading, with the Planning and Zoning Director's report accompanying the application.
The City Commission is considering an ordinance amending the FY2025-26 operating and capital improvement budget via Budget Amendment No. BA2526-02, modifying previously adopted Ordinance No. 2025-635. The amendment authorizes the City Manager to implement all actions necessary to carry out the revised budget terms.
The Sunny Isles Beach City Commission is considering an ordinance on first reading that references amendments to the Miami-Dade County Code of Ordinances, with standard repealer, severability, codification, and effective date provisions. The City Manager recommends adoption on first reading, with a second and final reading to be scheduled.
The City Commission is considering a new ordinance to establish regulations for personal delivery devices and mobile carriers operating within Sunny Isles Beach. The ordinance would create a new chapter (Chapter 50) in the city's code governing the safe operation of these autonomous delivery robots on public rights-of-way.
The City Commission will discuss and potentially act on the status of prior referendum ballot questions as described in a City Attorney's Office memo (CAO Memo No. 2026-039, dated March 24, 2026). The specific content of the referenced ballot questions is not detailed in the agenda item.
Ordinance 2026-02 passed first reading and would place a charter amendment on the November 2026 ballot to move Pembroke Pines municipal elections from their current schedule to November of even-numbered years. Current terms for the mayor and commissioners in Districts 2 and 3 would extend to November 2028, and Districts 1 and 4 to November 2030.
The City Commission approved renewals for three service contracts (food service, school nursing, and adult day care) and received notification that nine other contracts—primarily for residential home inspection, cost estimating, and environmental specialists—are expiring without renewal. Notable among the non-renewals is Hazen and Sawyer's continuing professional services contract.
Margate is amending its Land Development Code to add a definition for "Certified Recovery Residence" and establish formal review and reasonable accommodation procedures for siting these facilities in compliance with state law. This is a first reading, meaning a second reading and final vote are still required.
This second-reading ordinance amends Margate's Land Development Code to add a new subsection (K) to the nonconforming use regulations, creating a one-time expansion exception specifically for an existing pawnshop. The change would allow an existing pawnshop that is currently nonconforming to expand despite standard restrictions that typically freeze or phase out nonconforming uses.
This second-reading ordinance amends Margate's exclusive franchise agreement with Republic Services (d/b/a All Service Refuse) for solid waste and recycling collection. The amendment clarifies how scholarship program funds provided under the franchise agreement may be used.
This second-reading ordinance amends Margate's B-1 (Neighborhood Business), Corridor (C), and Gateway (G) zoning districts to establish specific limitations and requirements for pet daycare uses. The changes define where and under what conditions pet daycare facilities may operate within these commercial and mixed-use districts.
The Margate City Commission is voting on a resolution formally objecting to the Broward County School Board's decision to discontinue School Resource Officer services at public schools within Margate for the 2026-2027 school year. The resolution is a policy statement and does not involve zoning, land use, or capital spending.
Ordinance 503 addresses architectural elements within the R-1 zoning district in the Colony area of Atlantis. This is the second reading, positioning the measure for final adoption by the City Council.
Ordinance 504 modifies architectural element requirements within the R-1 zoning district in the Woodland area of Atlantis. This is the second and final reading, meaning adoption is imminent.
Resolution 26-13 amends the city's police interlocal agreement for the fifth time. No specific dollar amounts, contract terms, or partner agency details are provided in the agenda text.
The Atlantis City Council is scheduled to receive a presentation from the Commission on Ethics at its April 15, 2026 regular meeting. No specific ordinance, resolution, or policy action is identified in connection with this agenda item.
The Lake Park Commission took up Ordinance 03-2026 at its April 15 regular meeting. The subject matter of the ordinance is not described beyond its number.
Ordinance 02-2026 amends the Town of Lake Park Comprehensive Plan with a required 5-year update to the town's 10-Year Water Supply Facilities Work Plan. This is the second and final reading, meaning the comp plan amendment is set for final adoption.
Lake Park Commission considered Resolution 29-04-26, a first amendment renewing a beverage services agreement with Bonner Mobile Bar for Sunset Celebration events at various locations. The resolution covers the ongoing provision of mobile bar services for municipal events.
The Davie Town Council is considering an ordinance authorizing the second amendment to the Fiscal Year 2026 budget. No specific dollar amounts or line-item changes are disclosed in the agenda title.
The Town of Davie is authorizing officials to certify and file a right-of-way maintenance map for a constructed portion of SW 82 Avenue under Florida Statute §95.361(3), establishing the map as prima facie evidence of the town's ownership of that right-of-way. This action legally formalizes the town's claim to the roadway corridor, which can affect adjacent parcel boundaries, access rights, and development potential along SW 82 Avenue.
The Town of Davie is authorizing officials to certify and file a right-of-way maintenance map for a constructed portion of SW 58 Avenue under Florida Statute §95.361(3), establishing the map as prima facie evidence of public ownership of that roadway segment. This action formally documents the Town's ownership claim over the right-of-way, which can affect adjacent property boundaries and access rights.
Broward County Commission will consider a motion to file the annual report detailing interest payments made under the county's Prompt Payment Policy (Code Section 1-51.6). This is a routine administrative filing documenting interest owed to vendors for late payments.
The Broward County Commission is directing the County Administrator to publish notice for an April 28, 2026 public hearing on amendments to the Administrative Code governing grant awards and sponsorship agreements (Sections 29.15–29.17). The resolution also repeals Part IV of Chapter 33 of the Administrative Code.
The Broward County Commission unanimously (9-0) appointed Linda Parker to the Homeless Continuum of Care Board representing Domestic Violence Services Organizations and separately approved a waiver of the conflict-of-interest prohibition under Section 112.313(7)(a), Florida Statutes, because Parker holds employment or a contractual relationship with a Broward County–funded entity. Both motions passed on consent at the April 14, 2026 meeting.
The Hialeah City Council is considering an ordinance requiring a site plan revision to include a 6-foot-high concrete wall along the east, west, and north property lines, consistent with the City of Hialeah Landscape Manual maximum height. The city planner recommends approval with conditions.
The Hialeah City Council is considering an ordinance granting a variance to allow an accessory structure exceeding the permitted percentage of the main building size under § 98-1666 at 640 East 60th Street, zoned R-1 (Single-Family). The property is in a single-family residential district.
The Village of Pinecrest is amending Section 36-4 of its code to formalize authorization for speed detection systems in school zones, along with updated traffic enforcement and hearing procedures for violations. This is a codification and clarification of existing school zone speed camera practices rather than a new regulatory framework.
The Broward County Commission is scheduling a public hearing for April 28, 2026, to consider an ordinance amending Chapter 27 of the County Code, updating regulations on aquatic and water resource management, wetland resource protection, hazardous materials, and cooling towers. The item also includes general housekeeping amendments to Section 34-168 regarding cooling towers.
Resolution R2026-19 rescinds a zoning-in-progress moratorium that had been placed on Section 6.8.8 (Equestrian Development) within Wellington's Equestrian Overlay Zoning District. Lifting this freeze reopens the ability to process development applications under the equestrian development provisions of that overlay district.
Wellington Council is considering Ordinance No. 2025-26, which amends site-specific conditions on the Future Land Use Map for 14833 50th Street South (formerly Littlewood Equestrian Center), a 59.3-acre parcel at the northeast corner of 50th Street South and Ousley Farms Road. The amendment deletes site-specific conditions originally adopted under Ordinance No. 2005-019 and updates the property's legal description.
Ordinance 2025-27 rezones approximately 49.273 acres at 14833 50th Street South (formerly Littlewood Equestrian Center) from Equestrian Residential to Equestrian Commercial Recreation. The property sits at the northeast corner of 50th Street South and Ousley Farms Road in Wellington's equestrian district.
Resolution R2026-18 would compromise (reduce) code compliance liens tied to four separate enforcement actions at 15555 De Havilland Court in Wellington, pursuant to the village's lien compromise ordinance (Section 2-199). The specific dollar amounts of the original liens and the proposed reduction were not stated in the agenda text.
Ordinance No. 2026-005 amends the Unified Land Development Regulations, specifically Section 010-030 (defined terms) and Section 020-70 (Residential District SCH classification). This is the second reading before the City Commission on April 14, 2026, making final adoption imminent.
This item references Rule 6.06(a)3 governing the agenda format for Surfside Regular Town Commission Meetings, including the good and welfare session set for 8:15 p.m. It also includes standard lobbying disclosure language requiring persons who received compensation or expenses for conducting lobbying to register.
The Sweetwater City Commission is considering an ordinance amending Section 05.00 (Special Exceptions and Unusual Uses) of the Land Development Code to establish updated variance review procedures and standards for the Mayor and City Commission. The item went through the required public hearing process, though specific changes to the standards are not detailed in the available text.
The Sweetwater City Commission is considering a resolution related to a project or entity called "Aguadulce," requiring that all construction work and hours of operation comply with Chapter 34 Article III of the City Code. The resolution was drafted by the Zoning Official and edited by the City Attorney, but no further details on the project's scope, location, or specifics are provided in the agenda text.
The Sweetwater City Commission has a resolution on its agenda that includes only boilerplate adoption and effective-date language. No subject matter, dollar amounts, or project details are specified in the available text.
The City Commission passed a resolution reconsidering and amending its earlier Resolution No. 2026-10, placing a charter amendment question on the April 21, 2026 special election ballot. The ballot question asks voters whether the City Charter should mandate a minimum general fund reserve level and require special approval before amending the reserve policy or spending down those reserves.
The City Commission approved a $160,109 sole-source service agreement with Communications International, Inc. for police department communications services. The award was made under Section 2-689 of the city's procurement code governing sole-source purchases.
The Broward County Commission directed the County Attorney to draft an ordinance amending Article IX½ of Chapter 39, which governs the Landlord Registration, Minimum Standards, and Residential Rental Property Inspections Program. The key change would eliminate the requirement for an annual renewal fee paid by landlords of residential rental properties.
The County Commission is directing the County Administrator to publish notice of a February 3, 2026 public hearing on Faraldo Fuel Transport Inc.'s application for a new non-exclusive, unrestricted one-year vessel bunkering service franchise at Port Everglades. This is the procedural step to schedule the hearing, not the franchise approval itself.
Broward County Commission unanimously approved (9-0) a first amendment to Agreement No. 24-CP-HCS-0375-01 with Henderson Behavioral Health, Inc. for Crisis Stabilization Unit services, revising outcome and reporting exhibits. In a companion motion, also approved 9-0, the Commission granted a conflict-of-interest waiver under Section 112.313(7)(a), Florida Statutes, for advisory board member Steven Ronik, who holds an employment or contractual relationship with the entity receiving funds under this agreement.
The Broward County Commission unanimously (9-0) appointed five members to the Broward Regional EMS Council and separately approved conflict-of-interest waivers under Section 112.313(7)(a), Florida Statutes, for two appointees — Jordan Shaver and Dr. Paula Thaqi — who hold employment or contractual relationships with entities that receive Broward County funds or are regulated by the County. Both motions passed on consent at 10:50 AM on January 22, 2026.
The Aventura City Commission is set to vote on a resolution approving a Mobility Plan for Uptown Aventura, a major mixed-use development district in the city. The plan would establish transportation and connectivity frameworks for the area, directly shaping how the district develops and functions.
The City of Aventura is considering an ordinance to repeal Division 5 of Chapter 2, Article III of the City Code, which established the Arts & Cultural Center Advisory Board. This is an administrative restructuring that eliminates one of the city's advisory boards.
The Aventura City Commission is considering a resolution to amend the City Manager's employment agreement, changing the process for granting compensation increases and providing a salary adjustment. The resolution modifies terms governing how future raises are approved.
The City Commission is considering a resolution to extend the existing gas franchise agreement with Peoples Gas System for four months (January 4, 2026 through May 4, 2026) under the same terms and conditions. A new long-term franchise agreement will be brought back to the Commission for approval during this interim period.
The City of Atlantis is considering Ordinance 501 on first reading, which addresses architectural element standards for the R-1 (single-family residential) zoning district. Specific details on design requirements or modifications to existing code provisions are not provided in the agenda text.
The City Commission passed a resolution accepting the 2025 SHIP Program Affordable Housing Incentive Strategies Report, prepared by the Affordable Housing Advisory Committee, and authorized its submission to the Florida Housing Finance Corporation. The report covers incentive strategies across all four commission districts and is required for the city to maintain eligibility for state SHIP funding.
The Fort Lauderdale City Commission approved a consent motion authorizing an outdoor event agreement with Spotlight Sports, LLC for the "Battle 7 South Florida" event on January 17-18, 2026, at Mills Pond Park in Commission District 3. The motion passed.
The City Commission passed ORD 2025-052-2 on second reading, amending Section 13-41 of the Land Development Code to update procedures for handling requests for accommodation in compliance with recent changes to state law. The ordinance modifies how the city processes requests for deviations from land development regulations.
The City Commission passed on second reading an ordinance authorizing the fifth amendment to a lease agreement with T-Mobile South, LLC for continued use of city land at Winston Park for a communications tower, including a modification of equipment on the tower. No dollar amounts, acreage, or other financial terms were specified in the agenda text.
The City Commission approved a $154,190 contract with CROM LLC to repair the East Holly Lake remote water storage tank. The purchase was authorized under the city's code provisions for specialized procurement.
The Doral City Council is set to adopt the current Miami-Dade County Local Mitigation Strategy as amended, aligning the city with National Flood Insurance Program Community Rating System (CRS) requirements. Adoption of this strategy helps maintain or improve the city's CRS classification, which directly affects flood insurance premium discounts for property owners throughout Doral.
The Hollywood City Commission approved blanket purchase agreements with four vendors—Nord Atlantic, Night Vision Devices, Strohman Enterprise, and Bereli—for police equipment totaling up to $500,000 over two years. The procurement piggybacks on a federal Multiple Award Schedule contract.
The Coral Gables City Commission passed a resolution appointing Javier Font as a Special Master for quasi-judicial public hearings before the Board of Architects, pursuant to Sections 14-103.3 and 14-103.2 of the Zoning Code. The Special Master presides over contested architectural review proceedings that can affect project approvals and design compliance.
An ordinance requests variances at 4148 East 8th Avenue in Hialeah to allow 24 parking spaces where 29 are required and 1 loading space where 3 are required, along with what appears to be a setback reduction (partial text references required feet). The variances contrast with Hialeah Code §98-1074(a), §98-1069(a), §98-2189(22), and §98-2202(1).
Ordinance 1618 proffers that a parking lot will be used exclusively for Hialeah Hospital, with site plan requirements including 2 ADA-compliant parking spaces and a 6-foot CBS wall on the east property boundary to buffer dissimilar uses. The conditions reflect standard zoning proffers tied to a land use or rezoning approval for the hospital-adjacent parcel.
The Hialeah City Council is considering an ordinance granting variances at 40 West 15th Street to allow lot coverage of 38% (8% above the 30% maximum) and a west side interior setback of 9.45 feet instead of the required 10 feet, in order to legalize an existing addition. The variances contrast with Hialeah Code §98-2056(b)(2) and §98-590.
This ordinance requests multiple variances for a property near West 30th Street in Hialeah: allowing 96% pervious area versus the 30% minimum required, reducing required parking from 24 spaces to 10, and permitting all parking spaces fronting West 30th Street to back out into the right-of-way — a configuration normally restricted to low-density residential properties. The variances are being sought in contravention of standard zoning requirements.
A special event permit request from Reverend Salvador Diaz Guerra on behalf of a San Lazaro-affiliated organization seeks authorization for an event operating between morning and 8:00 p.m., subject to compliance with Hialeah Police, Fire, and Risk Management requirements. The item is processed through the Office of the City Clerk.
The Broward County Commission is set to adopt a resolution approving the Fiscal Year 2026 Public Transportation Agency Safety Plan (PTASP). This is a federally required annual safety plan governing transit operations and safety protocols.
Broward County Transit is certifying compliance with state House Bill 1301 (2024), disclosing budgeted and administrative costs, executive compensation, ridership metrics, and gift disclosures. BCT's administrative-to-operating cost ratio of 17.33% falls below the Tier 1 state average of 22.56% based on FY 2024 National Transit Database data.
The County Commission considered a consent motion to approve appointments of individuals to various boards, including those identified in supplemental materials distributed alongside the original agenda. No specific boards or appointees are named in the agenda text.
Bylaw 2025-30 rescinds Bylaw 2022-08, which had amended the Subdivision and Development Appeal Board Bylaw 2018-26. The bylaw passed all three readings at this single meeting, making it final.
The Parkland City Council presented on the appointment of a third-party administrator under Whistleblower Policy C-HR30, with references to ATIA Section 20 (disclosure harmful to personal privacy) and ATIA Section 29 (advice from officials). The item passed at the December 9, 2025 final meeting.
The Pompano Beach City Commission passed on first reading an ordinance that comprehensively revises Chapter 76 of the city code governing parking meters, zones, fees, permits, delivery/loading zones, Pier Garage rules, and hurricane parking procedures. The changes are projected to generate approximately $600,000 in additional annual parking revenue (a net 10% increase after accounting for expanded resident discounts), while eliminating certain resident parking decal permits.
The City Commission approved a revocable license agreement allowing BREF Andrew's LLC to install a 4-inch force main within the city's right-of-way. The resolution passed on consent with no fiscal impact to the city.
Ordinance No. 2025-30 amends Wellington's land development code to create a new Section 5.3.11 specifically governing building height applications and modifies the development approvals table and existing provisions for structures exceeding 35 feet. The zoning text amendment restructures how developers apply for and receive approval for taller buildings in the village.
Wellington's Council is set to approve Resolution R2025-75, the 2025 Affordable Housing Advisory Committee (AHAC) Housing Incentives Report, required under the State Housing Initiatives Partnership (SHIP) Act, Section 420.9076, Florida Statutes. This annual report outlines the village's affordable housing incentive strategies and is a prerequisite for continued receipt of SHIP program funding.
Ordinance No. 2025-20 amends Article 6, Section 10 of Wellington's zoning code to modify regulations governing recreational vehicles (RVs) within the Rustic Ranches Overlay Zoning District (RROZD). The change adjusts how RVs are permitted or restricted on properties within this rural-character overlay area.
Ordinance No. 2025-31 amends Article 6, Section 6.4.3 of Wellington's land development code governing architectural review and design standards for non-residential structures, multi-family buildings, and structures erected by the Village itself. The zoning text amendment modifies the Architectural Review Board (ARB) approval process for these building types.
Ordinance No. 2025-05 amends Wellington's code (Chapter 5, Article I, Section 5-2, Subsection 113) to clarify the procedures for appealing a Building Official's decision to the Construction Board of Adjustment and Appeals. The item is categorized as a presentation on the December 9, 2025, Village Council agenda.
The Delray Beach City Commission received a presentation providing clarity on utility billing payment administration procedures. No specific policy changes, dollar amounts, or fee adjustments were identified in the agenda item.
The Margate City Commission passed a resolution designating an administrative authority to receive, review, and process plat and replat submittals as required by Florida Statutes Section 177.071. This formalizes the city's internal process for handling subdivision and land division applications.
The Margate City Commission is considering a resolution to approve an agreement for the placement of purchased license plate reader (LPR) cameras at selected locations throughout the city. The specific locations, vendor, and dollar amounts are not detailed in the agenda title.
The Margate City Commission approved adding one full-time Deputy Fire Chief and three full-time Assistant Fire Chiefs to the Fire Department as an alternative to the Division Fire Chief assignment. Funding for the new positions will be addressed through a future budget amendment process.
The Lauderhill City Commission is considering a resolution to expand the Lauderhill Housing Authority Board from five to seven members and to approve the mayor's appointments to fill those seats. The action amends a 2002 resolution and is authorized under Florida Statutes Chapter 421.
Resolution 25R-11-217 would formally expand the City Clerk's office duties to include serving as a member of the Police Officers Retirement Plan Board of Trustees. The measure has not yet been voted on as of the November 24, 2025 revised agenda.
The Doral City Council is finalizing and adopting its full FY 2025-26 budget (October 1, 2025 – September 30, 2026) across 15+ funds including the General Fund, Transportation Fund, Park Impact Fee Fund, Police Impact Fee Fund, Capital Improvement Fund, Stormwater Fund, and Park GO Bond Series 2021 Capital Project Fund. The resolution also establishes a new Capital Improvement Projects Division and renames the Office of Charter Enforcement to the Office of the Inspector General, following amendments triggered by a Florida Department of Revenue notification.
Doral's City Council is considering Ordinance #2025-51, which repeals the previously adopted budget Ordinance #2025-36 and ratifies a replacement budget resolution (No. 25-281) for fiscal year 2025-26. The item signals a substantive revision to the city's annual spending plan, though specific dollar figures and line-item changes are not detailed in the agenda text.
The Hollywood City Commission approved a $232,220 contract with DIALOG Architecture and Engineering PC to develop new urban design guidelines for the city. DIALOG was the highest-ranked firm responding to the solicitation.
The City Commission passed a resolution allowing free parking in Downtown Hollywood during the city's Centennial Celebration event. No specific dates, duration, or revenue impact figures were included in the agenda text.
Resolution R-2025-432 amends the city's approved list of charities and fundraising events. The resolution passed at the November 19, 2025 regular City Commission meeting.
The Atlantis City Council will receive the Office of Inspector General Audit Report at its November 19, 2025 meeting. No specific findings, dollar amounts, or subject matter details are provided in the agenda text.
Resolution 25-33 formally states the City of Atlantis's opposition to a Palm Beach County Fire Rescue Municipal Service Taxing Unit (MSTU). The resolution signals the city's stance against a county-level special assessment that would fund fire rescue services.
The Coral Gables City Commission passed a resolution approving an interlocal agreement with Miami-Dade County governing how development applications within the Coral Gables / University Subzone of the Rapid Transit Zone (RTZ) will be reviewed, pursuant to Miami-Dade County Ordinance No. 25-90. This agreement establishes the framework for local vs. county authority over development approvals in the transit-oriented subzone.
The City Commission approved an outdoor event agreement with Exclusive Sports Marketing for the 2026 Fort Lauderdale A1A Marathon, Half Marathon, and 5K on February 14-15, 2026, including road closures beyond 10:00 a.m. on the Barrier Island. Events span 450 East Las Olas Boulevard, Esplanade Park, and Fort Lauderdale Beach Park across Commission Districts 1, 2, and 4.
The Fort Lauderdale City Commission approved an outdoor event agreement with Fishtales Bar & Grill for the NOBE Sunday Block Party, closing the north side of NE 33rd Street from State Road A1A to NE 33rd Avenue every Sunday from December 14, 2025, through March 1, 2026. The motion passed on the consent agenda.
The Commission approved an outdoor event agreement with The Humane Society of Broward County for the VCA Walk for the Animals on February 21, 2026, at Las Olas Intracoastal Promenade Park. The motion also authorizes road closures beyond 10:00 a.m. on the Barrier Island in Commission District 2.
Resolution 208-25 authorizes the 64th Annual Delray Affair event on April 10-12, 2026, including closures of Atlantic Avenue and Swinton Avenue. The City Manager is authorized to take all necessary actions to implement the event logistics.
The City of Miramar is approving a second one-year renewal of its building permitting and inspection services agreement with C.A.P. Government, Inc., extending the contract from February 21, 2026, through February 20, 2027. The resolution is presented by the Building, Planning, and Zoning Assistant Director and the Procurement Director.
Resolution R8531 adopts the 2025 Local Housing Incentive Strategies recommended by Miramar's Affordable Housing Advisory Committee and authorizes submission of the report to the Florida Housing Finance Corporation. These strategies typically address density bonuses, expedited permitting, fee reductions, and other incentives designed to encourage affordable housing development.
The City Commission passed on second reading an ordinance authorizing a fourth amendment to the lease agreement with T-Mobile South, LLC for a communications tower at Lakeside Park. The amendment allows continued leasing of city land, tower equipment modifications, an expansion of the ground lease area, and replacement of ground-level equipment.
The City Commission passed on first reading an ordinance authorizing the fifth amendment to a lease agreement with T-Mobile South, LLC for continued use of city land at Winston Park for a communications tower, including a modification of equipment on the tower. No dollar amounts, acreage, or specific lease terms were disclosed in the agenda text.
The Pompano Beach City Commission approved on second reading a lease agreement with Colt South Florida Owner LP for a fire logistics facility, at a cost of $306,375 over an 18-month term covering base rent and operating expenses. Despite the header labeling this a second reading/public hearing, the item text notes the first reading date as November 13, 2025, the same meeting date, suggesting both readings may have been conducted at one session.
The City Commission passed on second reading an ordinance amending the Zoning Code (Chapter 155) to refine definitions and standards for institutional healthcare uses, including new separation requirements from residential uses, overnight treatment standards, and a new use category for hospital-based off-campus emergency departments. The consolidated use table in Appendix A is updated to reflect existing and new healthcare uses.
Palm Beach County Fire Rescue Administrator Patrick J. Kennedy presented to the Wellington Village Council on the Municipal Service Taxing Unit (MSTU) local bill. The presentation covers the structure of fire rescue funding through the MSTU mechanism in Palm Beach County.
Commissioner Seagren raised the possibility of a special assessment on oceanfront homes that received dune sand replenishment. She also discussed creating a completion bond or rolling over permits for 204 Shelter, a property that has been under construction for an extended period.
The Jupiter Inlet Colony Town Commission is considering an ordinance on first reading, with public comments invited. No details regarding the subject matter of the ordinance are provided in the agenda text.
Ordinance 2025-01 would amend Section 15-2 of the town code regarding temporary non-commercial signs related to elections. The measure is sponsored by the Town Manager and Town Attorney.
The City of Aventura is considering an ordinance to repeal Division 5 of its advisory boards chapter, eliminating the Arts & Cultural Center Advisory Board. The change is purely administrative, removing the board from the city code.
The Pompano Beach CRA approved a first amendment to the Master Development Agreement with RP Pompano, LLC for the Downtown project, adding community benefit elements including workforce housing requirements, affordable housing programs (down payment/rental assistance, potential tiny-home program), cultural features, an education resource center, streetscapes, and street lighting. The developer commits $6.5 million over ten years to a Community Benefits Trust, and the civic facilities budget increases by $9 million (financed over 30 years) for a vocational tech/college resource center and local business participation incentives.
The Pompano Beach Community Redevelopment Agency passed a resolution approving an affordable housing amendment to the Northwest CRA Plan and requesting City Commission approval of the amendment. No fiscal impact was listed.
The City Commission approved a first amendment to the master public-private redevelopment agreement with RP Pompano, LLC, adding community-benefit elements to the downtown project including workforce housing requirements, affordable-housing programs (down-payment/rental assistance, potential tiny-home program), a vocational/college resource center, streetscape and lighting upgrades, and local business enterprise participation. The developer commits $6.5 million over ten years to a Community Benefits Trust, while the city increases the civic facilities budget by $9 million (financed over 30 years) to cover the resource center and local business incentives.
The Hialeah City Council is considering an ordinance affecting the property at 76 West 14th Street, zoned R-3 (Multiple-Family District), referencing city code sections 98-2189(19)(b) and 98-2203(a). The ordinance would repeal conflicting prior ordinances related to this parcel.
This ordinance requests multiple variances for a development in Hialeah, including reducing minimum unit size to 500 square feet for up to 25% of residential units (where 700 SF is required), eliminating the interior south side and rear setbacks from 15 feet to 0 feet, and modifying parking requirements. The project also seeks relief from standard dimensional requirements, signaling a high-density urban infill proposal.
This ordinance requests multiple variances for a property near West 30th Street in Hialeah: allowing 96% pervious area where 30% is the minimum, reducing required parking from 24 spaces to 10, and permitting all parking spaces fronting West 30th Street to back out into the right-of-way — a configuration normally restricted to low-density residential properties. The variances would deviate substantially from current code requirements.
The Lauderhill City Commission passed Ordinance 25O-09-142, approving the third amendment to the real estate development agreement and addendum between the City and Le Parc at Lauderhill, LLC. The amendment was requested by City Manager Kennie Hobbs, Jr., and was adopted by the commission at its October 27, 2025 meeting.
The Lauderhill City Commission passed Ordinance 25O-10-143, lowering the mandatory building safety inspection threshold from 40 years to 30 years and updating related provisions in Chapter 6 of the Code of Ordinances. This aligns Lauderhill with the statewide post-Surfside trend of accelerating structural safety inspections for aging buildings.
The Lauderhill City Commission is considering an interlocal agreement with Broward County to provide staff services for hearings before the Broward County Unsafe Structures Board. The agreement formalizes local support for the county's enforcement process targeting buildings deemed structurally unsafe.
The Lauderhill City Commission passed Ordinance 25O-10-144, amending Chapter 12 of the Code of Ordinances to clarify prohibitions on unauthorized and illegal businesses, update certificate of use and local business tax receipt requirements, and strengthen property owner responsibilities. The ordinance revises enforcement language and the purpose statement for the city's business regulations.
The Lauderhill City Commission voted to deny a special exception use development order that would have extended operating hours from 6AM–11PM to 6AM–2AM for U Save Food Store, an existing convenience store on a 0.27-acre site at 4039 NW 19th Street in the General Commercial (CG) zoning district. The applicant was NTT R E Investments, LLC, on behalf of Ryan Mart, Inc.
The Lauderhill City Commission passed Ordinance 25O-09-141 amending the municipal code to update the fee schedule for recyclable waste collection, effective October 1, 2025. The ordinance was requested by City Manager Kennie Hobbs and covers fees under Chapter 10, Article II of the code.
The City Commission passed on first reading an ordinance authorizing the fourth amendment to a lease agreement with T-Mobile South, LLC for a communications tower on city land. The amendment covers continued leasing, tower equipment modifications, ground lease expansion, and equipment replacement.
The City Commission passed on second reading an ordinance updating the fee schedule for hiring off-duty police officers and police service aides for unofficial functions. No specific dollar amounts for the updated fees were provided in the agenda text.
The Fort Lauderdale City Commission approved an outdoor event agreement with Twinsplace LLC for Friday Dining in the Streets on the south side of NE 33rd Street from State Road A1A to NE 33rd Avenue every Friday from November 7, 2025, through January 30, 2026. The agreement includes recurring road closures for the event series in Commission District 1.
The City Commission approved an outdoor event agreement and related road closure with Trustbridge Foundation, Inc. for the 2025 Uptown 5K on the Runway, scheduled for November 15, 2025, at the Fort Lauderdale Executive Airport in District 1. The item passed on the consent agenda.
The Fort Lauderdale City Commission approved an outdoor event agreement and amplified music exemption for the Broward Center for the Performing Arts to host the International Superyacht Society Award Gala on October 29, 2025, in Commission District 2. The item passed on consent.
The Fort Lauderdale City Commission approved an outdoor event agreement and road closure on Breakers Avenue beyond 10:00 a.m. on the Barrier Island for the North Beach Village Relay Race on November 8, 2025, hosted by NBV Property Management LLC. The item passed on consent in Commission District 2.
The Sustainable Development Director is presenting a comprehensive rewrite of the city's Land Development Code to the City Commission. This is a presentation item, not a vote, signaling that formal legislative action on the new code is still ahead.
The resolution designates who has authority to approve plat and replat applications in Hallandale Beach, responding to Florida Senate Bill 784, which reformed the state's platting process. The item also provides for administrative approval of certain plat applications, potentially streamlining the development approval timeline.
The City Commission passed an ordinance amending Article 3 of the Zoning and Land Development Regulations to update standards governing the painting and color of building and structure exteriors, as well as art in public places. The ordinance carries reference number 24-T-70.
The City Commission ratified an application and authorized acceptance of a $63,000 grant from the Broward County Marine Advisory Committee's 2026/2027 Boating Improvement Program to fund derelict vessel removal. The resolution also amends the FY 2026 operating budget to incorporate the grant funds.
Resolution R-2025-371 authorizes a change order to the city's agreement with South Broward Hospital District (d/b/a Memorial Healthcare System) to add a Business Associate Agreement and supplemental terms for the Employee Health Center. The change order enables the sharing of protected health information (PHI) with the City of Hollywood for pre-employment and hazmat physicals.
Broward County Commission unanimously approved (9-0) agreements with Taskforce for Ending Homelessness, Inc. and Care Resource Community Health Centers to provide laptop computers supporting the County-funded Homeless Family Street Outreach program, effective through September 30, 2026. The Commission also approved conflict-of-interest waivers under Section 112.313(7)(a), Florida Statutes, for advisory board members Mikal Cartier and Rafael F. Jimenez, who hold employment or contractual relationships with entities receiving funds under this item.
The Commission Auditor presented the draft 2026 Risk Assessment and Audit Plan along with completed audits of the Waste Pro sanitation collection and disposal contract and three lobbyist contracts (Ericks Consultants, Lawrence J. Smith P.A., and Smith, Bryan & Myers, Inc.). The item was a report presentation that passed at the October 15, 2025 meeting.
The City Commission will conduct a closed-door session under Section 281.301, F.S., regarding school safety for Pembroke Pines Charter Schools. The linked consent item seeks approval of the 2025-2026 FSSAT assessment, FSU/FSUS district best practices, updated K-12 threat management policy, updated K-12 emergency preparedness plan, and authorization to apply for and receive the 2025-2026 School Hardening Grant.
The Village Council is considering a resolution authorizing the Village Manager to contract with SCS Engineers to conduct a transportation fee study. The study will evaluate transportation-related impact fees or assessments within Pinecrest.
The Village Council is considering a resolution authorizing the Village Manager to negotiate a professional services agreement with Checkmark Collections for collection agency services. No dollar amounts or specific scope details are provided in the agenda text.
Vice Mayor Greenberg brought forward a discussion item regarding gravel placement in swales within the Village of Pinecrest. No specific regulatory changes, ordinance language, or enforcement details are provided in the agenda text.
The City of Aventura is considering an ordinance amending the Town Center Office Park Mixed Use (TC4) District within Chapter 31 of the Land Development Regulations, modifying the district's purpose statement, permitted uses, and development standards. The changes affect Section 31-145(E) of the city code.
This ordinance amends the conditional use provisions for limited service hotels by adding the Town Center 1 zoning district to the list of districts to which such hotels can be adjacent. The change broadens the geographic eligibility for limited service hotel development in Aventura.
The Doral City Council is considering a resolution to approve a revised recreation fee schedule for the city's Parks and Recreation department. No specific dollar amounts or fee details are provided in the agenda text.
The Doral City Council is considering a resolution to allow Leon Sport Corp to obtain special event permits through an administrative approval process rather than requiring full council approval, subject to specified limitations and conditions. The resolution includes a defined term for this authorization.
The City Commission is set to approve a resolution amending and setting fees and charges across city services, applications, licenses, and permits for Fiscal Year 2025-2026. The fee booklet covers the full spectrum of municipal fees including development-related permits, zoning applications, and business licenses.
The Lauderhill City Commission passed Ordinance 25O-09-128 re-imposing non-ad valorem special assessments within the Habitat Safe Neighborhood Improvement District for FY 2026, collected via the annual tax bill. The assessment is capped at $125 per parcel per year plus 1 mill, covering actual costs and expenses of the improvement district.
The Lauderhill City Commission passed Ordinance 25O-09-129, re-imposing non-ad valorem special assessments within the Manors of Inverrary Safe Neighborhood Improvement District for FY 2026. The assessment is $400 per parcel for Condo I and Condo XI association categories, $100 for Condo XII, and $0 for the Master Association category, with a 0.0 mill tax levy across all categories.
The Lauderhill City Commission passed Ordinance 25O-09-130, re-imposing the uniform method for collecting non-ad valorem special assessments within the Isles of Inverrary Safe Neighborhood Improvement District for fiscal year 2026. The assessment is capped at $500 per parcel per year plus an ad valorem levy of 2 mills per parcel, covering actual costs and expenses of the improvement district.
The Lauderhill City Commission passed Ordinance 25O-09-131 re-imposing a non-ad valorem special assessment for the Windermere/Tree Gardens Safe Neighborhood Improvement District for fiscal year 2026. The assessment is capped at $500 and 2 mills per individual parcel per year, collected via the annual tax bill to cover improvement district costs.
The Lauderhill City Commission passed Ordinance 25O-09-132, re-imposing non-ad valorem special assessments for stormwater services in four designated areas: St. George, West Ken Lark, Broward Estates, and the Swap Shop. The assessment covers FY2026 costs and allows future increases tied to actual service provider charges, collected via the annual tax bill.
The Lauderhill City Commission passed Ordinance 25O-09-133, re-imposing non-ad valorem special assessments for garbage, refuse, and recycling services in four designated areas: St. George, West Ken Lark, Broward Estates, and the Swap Shop. The assessment covers FY 2025-26 and allows future increases tied to actual service provider costs, collected via the annual tax bill.
The Lauderhill City Commission passed Ordinance No. 25O-09-134, re-imposing the uniform method of collecting non-ad valorem special assessments on annual tax bills for nuisance abatement violations under City Code Chapter 10 (garbage, trash, unsanitary/unsightly conditions) where violators fail to pay by September 30. The ordinance declares nuisance abatement assessment costs for FY 2026 and allows future increases tied to actual service-provider costs.
The Lauderhill City Commission passed Ordinance 25O-09-135, reimposing fire rescue assessments on all assessed property within the city for the fiscal year beginning October 1, 2025. The ordinance confirms the preliminary rate resolution, approves the assessment roll, and directs how assessment proceeds will be applied to fire rescue services, facilities, and programs.
Lauderhill's City Commission passed Ordinance 25O-09-136 setting the 2025-2026 operating millage rate at 7.4998 per $1,000 of taxable value and the voted debt service millage at 1.1212 per $1,000, for a combined rate of 8.621 mills. This is the final adoption of the property tax levy for the upcoming fiscal year.
The Lauderhill City Commission passed a special exception development order allowing U Save Food Store at 4039 NW 19th Street to extend its hours of operation from 6:00 AM–11:00 PM to 6:00 AM–2:00 AM. The site is a 0.27± acre parcel in the General Commercial (CG) zoning district, operated by NTT R E Investments, LLC for Ryan Mart, Inc.
The Coconut Creek City Commission approved two sign deviations for the Lincoln of Coconut Creek auto dealership at 5501 West Sample Road: allowing a 10-square-foot service entrance sign where 8 square feet is the maximum, and permitting an internally illuminated sign where such illumination is normally prohibited. The resolution passed at a final hearing as a quasi-judicial action.
Coconut Creek approved a sign deviation for the Lincoln of Coconut Creek auto dealership at 5501 West Sample Road, allowing a wall identification logo sign at 5'-1" in height instead of the code-maximum 3'. The resolution passed at a final quasi-judicial public hearing.
Resolution No. 2025-074 adopts a Public Art Master Plan and program guidelines for the City of Wilton Manors. No specific dollar amounts, parcels, or development requirements are detailed in the agenda text.
The Village Council will hold a public hearing and second reading to adopt the final ad valorem tax millage rate and the approved fiscal year 2025-2026 village budget via Ordinances 2025-14 and 2025-15. This is the final adoption stage for both the millage rate and the operating budget.
The Village Council is considering a resolution to approve and ratify Memorandums of Understanding with the Palm Beach County Police Benevolent Association and Professional Firefighters/Paramedics Local 2928 to extend the Deferred Option Retirement Plan (DROP) from five to eight years. This change affects retirement plan terms for police and fire personnel.
A proposed ordinance seeks a parking variance at 2315 West 4th Avenue, Hialeah, zoned M-3 (Industrial District), to allow fewer than the 18 parking spaces required under Hialeah Code §98-2189(6). The property owner is requesting relief from standard industrial parking requirements.
A variance request would reduce the parking requirement below the 101 spaces mandated for an existing CrossFit and MMA gym and allow 8.4% pervious area instead of the 10% minimum, deviating from Hialeah Code §98-2189(7) and the Hialeah Landscape Manual. The item is presented as an ordinance before the Hialeah City Council.
This ordinance addresses variances to multiple Hialeah code sections—including tree and lawn requirements under the Landscape Manual (updated July 2025)—for the property at 125 East 8th Street, zoned R-3-D (Multifamily District). The request involves Sections 641(g), 98-2189(19)(c), 98-2203(a), 78-108(c)(1), and the Landscape Manual's tree and lawn requirements by zoning classification.
A proposed ordinance requests variances at 76 West 14th Street in Hialeah's R-3 (Multi-Family Residential) zoning district to allow 80% lot coverage where 30% is the maximum permitted, and to reduce parking to 6 spaces where 7 are required. The request deviates from multiple sections of the Hialeah Code of Ordinances governing lot coverage, setbacks, and parking standards.
The Hialeah City Council is considering a resolution to piggyback off the State of Florida NASPO Software contract, alongside requirements from the city's Risk Management, Fire, and Police departments. No dollar amounts, addresses, or development-related specifics are included in the agenda text.
An ordinance has been filed involving a property on East 52nd Street in Hialeah (33013), with multiple Rodriguez family members listed as parties with addresses in Miami and Miami Beach. The specific action — whether rezoning, variance, or another land use change — is not detailed in the agenda title.
Doral City Council is finalizing its FY 2025-26 budget (October 1, 2025–September 30, 2026) covering the General Fund, Transportation Fund, People's Transportation Plan Fund, Park Impact Fee Fund, Police Impact Fee Fund, Stormwater Fund, Capital Improvements Fund, Parks GO Bond Series 2021 Capital Project Fund, and several other funds. The ordinance also establishes a new Capital Improvement Projects Division and renames the Office of Charter Enforcement to the Office of the Inspector General.
Margate's City Commission passed a resolution authorizing the city to join a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of Florida Senate Bill 180, which imposes a statewide prohibition on the exercise of home rule authority over land use and zoning regulations. The city retained Weiss Serota Helfman Cole + Bierman, PL to prosecute the case.
The Margate City Commission is considering a development agreement for the Cocogate development. Specific details such as acreage, unit counts, square footage, and dollar amounts are not included in the agenda title.
The Margate City Commission is considering a second-reading ordinance that amends Chapter 1 of the City Code to clarify enforcement authority, procedures, and penalties. The changes strengthen the city's ability to enforce its code and adjust the penalty structure for violations.
The Margate City Commission is considering a resolution approving a Memorandum of Understanding with the Federation of Public Employees (FPE) to provide competitive wages under the collective bargaining agreement covering October 1, 2023 through September 30, 2026. The item is on the consent agenda as a resolution at a regular commission meeting.
The Margate City Commission is considering a resolution to approve amended procedures for the Special Magistrate, covering definitions, hearing protocols, and a fee schedule aligned with city ordinance. No specific dollar amounts or fee changes are detailed in the agenda text.
Resolution R8484 adopts the City of Miramar's Fiscal Year 2026 schedule of proposed fee changes across programs, facilities, and services. The measure approves new fees as well as amendments to existing rates and charges citywide.
Resolution R8516 amends Section B of the City Commission's procedures on decorum at meetings, adding prohibitions against personal, impertinent, or slanderous remarks and against boisterous, rowdy, or disruptive behavior while addressing the Commission. The item is sponsored by Commissioner Avril Cherasard and has not yet been voted on as of the September 17, 2025 meeting.
The Pembroke Pines City Commission adopted Ordinance No. 2025-12 on second and final reading, setting the FY 2025-2026 operating millage rate at 5.6690 per $1,000 of taxable assessed value, which is 6.34% above the rolled-back rate of 5.3312. A separate debt service millage rate of 0.2862 was also established for voter-approved general obligation bonds.
The Pembroke Pines City Commission passed Ordinance No. 2025-13 on second and final reading, adopting the municipal budget for fiscal year 2025-2026 and the five-year Capital Improvement Program (CIP) per §5.08 of the City Charter. Specific dollar figures for the budget and CIP were not detailed in the agenda text.
The Pembroke Pines City Commission approved a public use encroachment agreement with Boyd Panciera Funeral Home. The agreement governs use of public right-of-way or easement space by the adjacent private property.
The Atlantis City Council will review a status update on ordinances currently in development. No specific ordinance topics, addresses, or dollar amounts are identified in the agenda text.
Pinecrest's Village Council is voting on a resolution to join a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of Florida Senate Bill 180, which imposes a blanket statewide prohibition on local home rule authority over land use and zoning regulations. The village would retain Weiss Serota Helfman Cole + Bierman, PL to prosecute the case seeking to declare SB 180 unconstitutional and obtain an injunction.
The Pinecrest Village Council is voting on a resolution setting the final millage rate for FY2026 (October 1, 2025–September 30, 2026) under Florida's TRIM process, alongside a second reading of the ordinance adopting the operating and capital outlay budget and updating the capital improvement schedule. Specific millage and dollar figures are not listed in the agenda text.
This ordinance comprehensively amends Pinecrest's code governing rights-of-way communication facilities and public right-of-way regulations, requiring utility undergrounding for new construction and reconstruction, mandating removal of redundant utility poles, and aligning local rules with Florida law. The item has been deferred three times (from May, June, and July 2025) and is now on the agenda for this final meeting.
The Village Council is voting to ratify the appointment of special magistrates and hearing officers under Section 2-141 of the village code. These officials preside over code enforcement and quasi-judicial proceedings.
The County Commission is directing the County Attorney to amend Chapter 34, Article VI of the Broward County Code to align local regulations with updated Florida Administrative Code Chapter 62-625 and federal streamlining rules at 40 CFR. These changes address wastewater/pretreatment program compliance rather than land use or development standards.
The Broward County Commission unanimously approved $12,433,591 in new funding and $7,886,372 in renewed agreements (plus a $95,000 contract with Care Resource) for homeless services including shelter, permanent supportive housing, rapid rehousing, street outreach, and transitional housing for FY 2025-2026. All three motions and a conflict-of-interest waiver passed 9-0.
The Fort Lauderdale City Commission approved an outdoor event agreement with WLF Ventures LLLP for the Water Lantern Festival at Mills Pond Park on November 22, 2025. The event is located in Commission District 3.
Resolution 25-0957, walked on and passed, authorizes Fort Lauderdale Fire Rescue's participation in the Intergovernmental Transfer (IGT) Program for Medicaid Managed Care patients through AHCA. It also authorizes the City Manager to execute and deliver a Public Emergency Medical Transportation Letter of Agreement annually, including retroactively to Fiscal Year 2016.
The Fort Lauderdale City Commission approved an outdoor event agreement with Coconuts Bahama Grill, LLC for Oyster Fest, scheduled for October 3, 2025, at Coconuts and G&B Oyster Bar in Commission District 2. The item passed on the consent agenda.
The Fort Lauderdale City Commission approved an outdoor event agreement and related road closure with the Museum of Discovery and Science for its 29th Annual Wine, Spirits and Culinary Celebration on October 17, 2025. The event is located at the Museum of Discovery and Science in Commission District 2.
The City Commission approved a temporary beach license and outdoor event agreement with Rainbow Sidekick Inc. for the Lauderdale Tropical Bear Beach Party on November 1, 2025, on Fort Lauderdale Beach across from Hugh Taylor Birch State Park. The motion (Item 25-0755) passed on the consent agenda.
The Fort Lauderdale City Commission approved an outdoor event agreement with South Florida Afro Pride Federation Inc. for South Florida Black Pride on October 11, 2025, at Esplanade Park in Commission District 2. The motion passed on the consent agenda.
The City of Aventura is considering an ordinance amending Chapter 31 (Land Development Regulations) for the Town Center Office Park Mixed Use (TC4) District, modifying the district's purpose, permitted uses, and additional development standards. The TC4 district governs mixed-use development in Aventura's Town Center area, one of the city's premier commercial corridors.
This ordinance amends the city's conditional use regulations to add the Town Center 1 (TC-1) zoning district to the list of districts where limited service hotels can be located adjacent. The change broadens the geographic eligibility for limited service hotel development in Aventura.
The Aventura City Commission will consider a resolution authorizing the City Manager to execute an agreement with C.A.P. Government, Inc. for building inspection and plan review professional consultant services. The resolution delegates authority for the contract but specific dollar amounts and term details are not included in the agenda text.
The Aventura City Commission has scheduled an ordinance for second reading and public hearing at its September 2, 2025 meeting. No subject matter, specific ordinance number, or substantive details are provided in the agenda text.