The Pompano Beach City Commission is rescinding Resolution No. 2026-18 and replacing it with a new resolution authorizing the city to apply for the Florida DEP Revolving Loan Program for drinking water facilities, execute the loan agreement, and pledge revenues to secure the debt. The fiscal impact is listed as N/A.
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.
Lauderdale Lakes is advancing Resolution 2026-037, which formally states the city's support for an application to the Governor of Florida to redesignate census tracts 12011050301 and 12011050308 as Opportunity Zone 2.0 areas. The resolution positions the city to pursue renewed federal tax-incentive status for these two tracts under the next generation of the Opportunity Zone program.
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 a resolution to amend the FY2025 budget by adding new appropriations beyond those set in Resolution No. 2025-068. The resolution adjusts the current fiscal year spending authority, though the specific line items and dollar amounts will be detailed in the resolution exhibit.
The Parkland City Council reviewed the 2027 Budget Philosophy, Five-Year Financial Plan, and a tax increase target as an informational item. The proposed motion calls for the plan to be received as information rather than adopted as binding policy at this stage.
Parkland Council considered the 2026 Off-Site Levy Annual Report and a request to extend levy rates, but the proposed motion calls for postponement to a regular Council meeting no later than June 23, 2026. Off-site levies are fees charged to developers for infrastructure improvements necessitated by new development outside a project's immediate footprint.
The Miami City Commission is considering a resolution authorizing the City Manager to obtain a standby letter of credit (SBLC) of up to $10,000,000 from Wells Fargo in favor of the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, with an annual fee not to exceed $104,500. The SBLC is required under an interagency agreement for the partial release of deed restrictions held by the Board of Trustees of the Internal Improvement Trust Fund on city-owned land.
The Miami City Commission is considering a resolution to amend appropriations in the FY 2025-2026 adopted operating budget, five-year financial plan, strategic plan, and multi-year capital plan. The resolution also authorizes the City Manager to adjust, allocate, and appropriate budget resources across city services, grants, and funding sources, including project close-outs and accounting updates.
The Miami City Commission is considering a $175,000 settlement with Arndre Fisher to resolve all claims related to an alleged accident, under Florida's workers' compensation statute (Chapter 440). Funds would be drawn from two city accounts: $174,900 from one and $100 for a separate general release.
The Miami City Commission is considering a resolution directing the City Manager to immediately stop paying attorney fees and costs on behalf of former Commissioner Joe Carollo in a federal lawsuit, with the directive covering proceedings in the Southern District of Florida, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, and the U.S. Supreme Court. The resolution also instructs the City Attorney to cease authorizing such payments and to notify all affected parties.
The Miramar City Commission is considering a resolution to accept and adopt the Annual Comprehensive Financial Report for the fiscal year ended September 30, 2025, based on an audit conducted by independent auditor Anthony Brunson, PA. The item is presented by Financial Services Director Kevin E. Adderley and auditor Anthony Brunson.
The City Commission held an executive session to discuss the Professional Fire Fighters Local 1549 union contract. No specific dollar amounts or contract terms were disclosed in the agenda item.
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 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 Delray Beach City Commission received a presentation on the Florida Recovery Obligation Calculation (F-ROC), a state framework that assesses a municipality's financial obligations and capacity related to disaster recovery. The presentation likely covers how the city's recovery funding requirements are calculated under state guidelines.
The Delray Beach City Commission received a financial review covering the fiscal year ended September 30, 2025, and the first quarter of FY2026 ended December 31, 2025. The presentation covers the city's overall financial health, revenue trends, and expenditure patterns across both reporting periods.
The City Manager's report for the April 21, 2026 commission meeting covers multiple topics including a draft FY 2027 budget schedule and a memo related to Higgins Football. No specific dollar amounts, zoning actions, or development items are identified in the agenda text.
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 Finance Director presented an update on the city's stormwater rate study and assessment methodology. The presentation likely addresses how stormwater fees are calculated and any proposed adjustments to the rate structure for property owners.
The Finance Director presented the city's 2025 Annual Comprehensive Financial Report (ACFR) to the Commission. The ACFR covers the city's full financial position, including revenues, expenditures, debt, and fund balances.
The Hallandale Beach City Commission discussed the December monthly budget report, presented by the Budget & Monitoring Director. No specific dollar amounts, capital projects, or budget amendments were detailed in the agenda text.
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.
The Margate City Commission is discussing and may take action on placing a ballot question before voters related to the City Center development. Specific details on what the ballot question would authorize — such as land disposition, financing, density, or development agreement terms — are not provided in the agenda text.
The Margate City Commission is considering a request to sell a publicly owned parcel on N State Road 7, identified as Folio ID# 4841 24 01 2280, located in the North Margate 50-4 B subdivision (portion of Parcel A). The item is listed for discussion and possible action at this final meeting.
The Margate City Commission is considering a resolution to approve a $722,605 surtax funding agreement with Broward County for municipal rehabilitation, maintenance, and on-demand transportation projects. The agreement establishes a formula-based funding model for eligible R&M and transportation projects within the city.
The Margate City Commission is set to accept the Annual Comprehensive Financial Report (ACFR) for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2025. This is a standard annual action required for municipal financial transparency and compliance.
The Atlantis City Council will consider Resolution 26-14, a budget amendment for the current fiscal year. No specific dollar amounts, fund transfers, or project details are provided in the agenda text.
The Atlantis City Council will consider Resolution 26-15 concerning ad valorem records. No further details on scope, dollar amounts, or specific parcels are provided in the agenda text.
Lake Park Commission received a presentation updating the Five Year Capital Improvement Plan for Fiscal Year 2026. The CIP outlines the town's planned infrastructure and capital spending priorities over the next five years.
The Davie Town Council is voting on a resolution authorizing the town to apply to FloridaCommerce for Opportunity Zone 2.0 designations under the state of Florida's updated program. If approved, the resolution directs town staff to submit the formal application, which could bring new federal and state tax-incentive overlays to targeted Davie parcels.
The Davie Town Council is voting on a resolution approving the third amendment to its 10-year Capital Improvements Program covering fiscal years 2026 through 2035. CIP amendments of this type typically add, remove, or reprioritize capital projects — including roads, utilities, parks, and stormwater infrastructure — that directly affect surrounding land values and development feasibility.
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.
Broward County commissioners unanimously approved a $10,000,000 budget transfer from the Beach Hotspot Project to the Port Everglades IMP Implementation Project to cover rising construction costs, along with a $31,712,322 fixed contract award to Continental Heavy Civil Corp for the Port Everglades Sand Bypass Project North Jetty Improvements. Both items passed 9-0 on April 14, 2026, after being pulled from the consent agenda for discussion and amended per Additional Material 16-A.
The Broward County Commission unanimously approved the filing of FY2025 (ending September 30, 2025) annual financial statements and audit reports for 13 entities, including the general fund, Aviation Department, Port Everglades, Water and Wastewater Fund, Housing Finance Authority, Transportation Surtax Program, and several constitutional officers. All items were approved as amended with minor scrivener's error corrections.
The Broward County Commission unanimously approved four budget resolutions transferring a combined $1,551,200 within the Law Enforcement Trust Fund for the Broward Sheriff's Office. The allocations cover a public safety exchange program ($247,900), a camera analytics and investigative intelligence project ($983,000), a community outreach program ($62,900), and an airport active threat response vehicle ($257,400).
Wellington Village Council discussed outside legal fees and costs paid to Johnson Anselmo Murdock Burke Piper & Hochman, P.A. No specific dollar amounts, case details, or subject matter were identified in the agenda text.
The City Commission is considering Resolution No. 2026-018, which authorizes city officials to execute a surtax funding agreement with Broward County for the FY 2026 formula-based funding allocation. This funding typically derives from the Broward County transportation or infrastructure surtax and supports local capital projects.
The City Commission is considering awarding a $218,700 agreement to Civic Solutions Partnership, LLC of Austin, Texas (RFP 26-A-003) for consulting services to update Coral Springs' Economic Development Strategic Plan. The Purchasing Manager would also receive authorization to approve related procurement actions.
The City Commission is being asked to accept the Annual Comprehensive Financial Report for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2025. This is a standard annual reporting item with no direct funding implications.
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 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 Broward County Commission considered a budget resolution transferring $746,940 within the General Fund from the BSO Department of Detention reserve to its operating budget. The funds cover invoices for inmate inpatient care costs.
The Aventura City Commission is considering an ordinance to revise the FY 2024/2025 operating and capital budget, amending original Ordinance No. 2024-18. Specific dollar figures and line-item changes are outlined in an attached Exhibit A not included in the agenda text.
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 Lauderhill City Commission approved a $200,000 contract to Garth Solutions, Inc. for public information and community engagement services related to the city's General Obligation Bond program (RFP 2026-004). The resolution passed and authorizes the City Manager to execute the agreement.
The Lauderhill City Commission approved a $120,000 contract with Pompano Beach Community Development to serve as the community outreach data analyst for the city's upcoming General Obligation Bond referendum. The vendor was selected through RFI No. 2026-005 as recommended by the City Manager.
The Hallandale Beach City Commission will discuss the September monthly budget report, presented by the Budget & Program Monitoring Director. No specific dollar amounts, capital projects, or line items are detailed in the agenda text.
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 Commission approved a $6.8M budget transfer in FY 2025 to record subscription-based IT arrangement (SBITA) entries for the Officer Safety Program, complying with GASB Statement No. 96. The transfer moves funds from the General Fund balance reserve to a capital subscription account with an offsetting revenue entry from prior year surplus.
The resolution authorizes the City Manager to execute purchases for various utilities, municipal services, and professional memberships for the 2025-2026 fiscal year using budgeted funds. No specific dollar amounts, vendors, or service categories are detailed in the agenda text.
Resolution 25-6447 authorizes $500 each in municipal sponsorships to Amor y Fuerza Honduras, Friends United, Toys for Kids Miami, and Association of Ocoeños Residing in Florida Inc., totaling $2,000. The sponsorships are made pursuant to Section 2-79 of the City's Code of Ordinances.
Resolution 25-6446 authorizes municipal sponsorships totaling $2,950 to three organizations: EAG Foundation ($750), Latin American Foundation Inc. ($1,000), and the Mexican Cultural and Tourism Institute of Houston ($1,200), pursuant to Section 2-79 of the City's Code of Ordinances. The item has not yet been voted on at the December 10, 2025 meeting.
The City Commission approved a first amendment to the construction contract with The Stout Group, LLC, adding up to $211,093.84 and a 120-day time extension for additional speed table installations in District 5 as part of a General Obligation Bond-funded traffic calming improvements project. The resolution passed at the December 10 meeting.
The City Commission approved spending up to $125,000 from state law enforcement forfeiture funds for police training, investigations (including overtime and confidential informant fees), and equipment acquisition. The resolution amends the FY2026 adopted operating budget.
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 Parkland Council approved the 2026 Operating Program Budget with $107,780,800 in expenditures and a $78,351,200 municipal tax requirement, plus a $48,077,200 Capital Budget with $4,015,000 in municipal tax requirement. The council also approved multi-year capital projects and directed administration to present the 2026 Tax Rate Bylaw in April 2026.
The City Commission passed a resolution certifying that the Pompano Beach Housing Authority's Blanche Ely Estates project — 36 single-family homes on 19.7 acres of vacant land along NW 6th Avenue between NW 17th Street and NW 16th Street — is consistent with local plans and regulations. This certification enables participation in Florida's Community Contribution Tax Credit Program under Section 220.183, Florida Statutes, which provides corporate tax credits to businesses that contribute to affordable housing projects.
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.
Resolution No. 2025-088 amends the previously adopted FY 2025-26 budget (Resolution No. 2025-068) to add additional appropriations. Specific dollar amounts and line items for the supplemental funding are not detailed in the agenda title.
Wellington's Council is set to approve two resolutions authorizing Amendment 1 to its State Revolving Fund loan and appropriating an additional $1,714,910 to the Utility Meter Replacement Project, bringing total project funding to $11,485,206 plus $229,704 in loan service fees. The budget amendment covers the difference between the full loan amount and previously budgeted funds.
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.
Resolution No. 264-25 authorizes $3,425,336 in purchase orders to 11 vendors for new city vehicles and equipment, utilizing Florida Sheriff's Association and Sourcewell piggyback contracts. The purchases span trucks, cars, and construction equipment from dealers including Peterbilt, Freightliner, Ford, and Chevrolet outlets.
The Parkland City Council received a presentation on the proposed 2026 budget. No specific dollar amounts, millage rates, or fee changes were detailed in the agenda text.
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 Margate City Commission is considering a resolution to approve a collective bargaining agreement with the International Association of Firefighters, Local #3080, covering the period from October 1, 2025, through September 30, 2028. The agreement governs wages, benefits, and working conditions for the city's firefighters.
A presentation by Maureen Pentland of EBS Advisors, Inc. covers the city's 2026 insurance renewal options, followed by a motion to approve the selected renewal package. No specific dollar amounts or coverage details are provided in the agenda text.
Resolution 2025-085 amends the city's FY 2024-25 budget (originally set by Resolution 2024-112) to add additional appropriations. Specific dollar amounts for the additional appropriations are not detailed in the agenda text.
Resolution No. 2025-086 amends the previously adopted FY 2025-26 budget (Resolution No. 2025-068) to appropriate additional funding, though specific dollar amounts and line items are not detailed in the agenda text. This is a budget amendment action by the Wilton Manors City Commission.
The Lauderhill City Commission passed Resolution 25R-11-219 approving a $2,000,000 intra-department capital budget adjustment for Fiscal Year 2026, reallocating funds across various expenditure accounts. The adjustment does not represent new spending but shifts existing capital dollars between line items within the same department.
The Lauderhill City Commission approved Ordinance 25O-11-145, a supplemental appropriation of $18,427,163 for Fiscal Year 2026 with adjustments to various revenue and expenditure accounts. The measure was requested by City Manager Kennie Hobbs, Jr. and passed.
The Doral City Council is adopting a final general fund millage rate of 1.6912 mills for fiscal year 2025-2026, which is 6.53% higher than the rolled-back rate of 1.5875 mills. A separate debt service millage of 0.4810 mills funds the Series 2019 and Series 2021 General Obligation Bonds for park and recreation projects.
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 City Commission is holding a second reading on an ordinance amending the adopted FY 2024-25 budget, including adjustments to the Three Islands Safe Neighborhood District budget, to reflect updated revenues, expenditures, and appropriations. Specific dollar amounts for the adjustments are not detailed in the agenda text.
The Hollywood City Commission passed a resolution authorizing year-end budgetary transfers and adjustments for Fiscal Year 2025, amending the previously adopted budget. No specific dollar amounts or fund details were identified 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 Fort Lauderdale City Commission passed a resolution approving the final consolidated budget amendment for Fiscal Year 2025, affecting all four commission districts. The amendment adjusts appropriations across the city's consolidated budget as the fiscal year closes out.
The Pompano Beach City Commission approved a $32,876,690 design-build contract with Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. for the Oceanside Parking Garage project (RFP25-001), with $3,037,041 for design and pre-construction and $29,839,649 in financed construction costs. The resolution was postponed from November 13, 2025, and subsequently passed.
The Pompano Beach City Commission approved a lease-purchase agreement with JPMorgan Chase Bank for equipment acquisition totaling $6,030,094 over a 5-year term, with annual payments capped at $1,225,685 (principal and interest). The resolution authorizes execution and delivery of all related documents.
The Pompano Beach City Commission approved a $790,000 budget adjustment to align the Emergency Medical Services Fund budget and eliminate a negative variance in Fiscal Year 2025. This is a housekeeping fiscal correction rather than a new spending initiative.
The City Commission approved on second reading a service contract with PFM Asset Management, LLC, to provide investment advisory and management services for the city's investment portfolio. The contract cost is capped at $140,000 or 3.5 basis points of the city's portfolio size.
Wellington Village Council is considering Resolution R2025-72, which amends the FY 2025-2026 utility budget to allocate PFAS public water system settlement payments toward membrane plant upgrade projects. The resolution directs settlement funds to infrastructure improvements addressing water contamination concerns.
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.
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 Aventura City Commission is considering an ordinance amending the FY 2024/2025 budget (originally adopted as Ordinance No. 2024-18) to revise both operating and capital expenditure allocations as detailed in an attached Exhibit A. Specific dollar amounts and line-item changes are referenced in the exhibit but not included in the agenda text.
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 sought to issue up to $75 million in tax increment revenue bonds for redevelopment projects in the Northwest District Area, supplementing a 2022 master bond resolution. The bonds would have carried annual debt service of approximately $6.7 million through 2049, but the resolution failed to pass at this final vote.
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.
Pompano Beach City Commission voted down on first reading a master lease-purchase program authorizing up to $137 million in certificates of participation (COPs) to finance civic facility projects over 30 years, with anticipated maximum annual debt service of $9.6 million. The program would have enabled the city to issue multiple series of tax-exempt and/or taxable COPs backed by ground leases on city-owned properties used for civic facilities.
The City Commission approved a supplemental resolution authorizing the Pompano Beach Community Redevelopment Agency to issue Tax Increment Revenue Bonds for the Northwest District Area, in one or more series of tax-exempt and/or taxable bonds. The bonds will finance redevelopment projects in the Northwest District through a negotiated sale, supplementing the CRA's existing master bond resolution.
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 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 approved an agreement with Redevelopment Management Associates, LLC to prepare a comprehensive set of economic development and redevelopment strategies along with a long-term financial analysis, pursuant to RFP No. 06-18-25-11. The resolution passed at the October 23, 2025 meeting.
The Hallandale Beach City Commission is reviewing the July monthly budget report presented by the Budget & Program Monitoring Director. No specific dollar amounts, capital projects, or line items are identified in the agenda text.
The Hollywood City Commission passed a resolution amending the FY2026 operating budgets across various funds (originally adopted as R-2025-335) and the FY2026 Capital Improvement Plan (originally adopted as R-2025-336). The resolution also authorizes city officials to accept grants and execute related grant documents.
The Hollywood City Commission passed a resolution authorizing loan applications totaling $12,050,000 (including capitalized interest and loan service fees) through the State Revolving Fund program to fund a Four-Log Treatment of Groundwater project. The resolution establishes pledged revenues to secure the loan and designates authorized representatives to execute the agreement.
The Hollywood City Commission approved a Memorandum of Understanding with the City of Hollywood Employees' Retirement Fund (COHERF) authorizing reimbursement of up to $185,000 for work related to establishing new defined contribution and hybrid retirement options. The resolution passed at the October 22, 2025 meeting.
The Hollywood City Commission ratified an application and authorized acceptance of a $25,813.56 grant from the Florida Department of Transportation for the Pedestrian and Bicycle Safety High Visibility Enforcement Program. The resolution also amends the FY 2026 operating budget to incorporate the grant funds.
Broward County Commission will consider a budget resolution transferring $1,296,186 within the Law Enforcement Trust Fund to fund operations of the Broward Sheriff's Office Forfeiture Unit. This is an internal fund transfer, not new spending or a tax increase.
The Pembroke Pines City Commission approved $4,152,788 in funding for Year One roadway and infrastructure improvement projects as part of a broader three-year strategic plan. The motion passed at the October 15, 2025 final meeting.
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 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 Aventura City Commission, acting as the governing board for the Aventura City of Excellence School (ACES), is moving to accept for filing the special purpose financial report for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2025. The motion covers acceptance of the school's annual financial audit documentation.
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.
Resolution 25-6367 authorizes municipal sponsorships of $1,000 to Lend A Hand USA Foundation Inc. and $750 to Interamerican Scout Foundation, pursuant to Section 2-79 of Doral's Code of Ordinances. The total outlay is $1,750.
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 City Commission is set to approve the annual interlocal agreement between the City of Hallandale Beach and the Hallandale Beach Community Redevelopment Agency (HBCRA) for FY 2025-2026, governing the city's provision of indirect services (such as administrative, IT, and finance support) to the CRA. This is a standard annual arrangement that dictates how CRA funds flow back to the city for overhead costs.
The City Commission is considering a resolution to adopt the FY 2024 Full Cost Allocation Plan (FCAP), which determines how central administrative costs are distributed across city departments and funds. No specific dollar amounts are included in the agenda text.
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 Ordinance 25O-09-137, formally adopting the operating budget (revenues and expenditures) and capital budget for Fiscal Year 2026. No specific dollar amounts are stated in the agenda text.
The Hollywood City Commission passed a resolution making appropriations for Fiscal Year 2026, covering both operating and capital budgets across all city funds based on the City Manager's submitted revenue and expenditure estimates. This is the final adoption of the city's annual budget, which governs infrastructure spending, staffing, and capital improvement projects for the upcoming fiscal year.
The Hollywood City Commission passed a resolution approving the city's Five-Year Capital Improvement Plan covering fiscal years 2026 through 2030, and appropriating the FY2026 portion (October 1, 2025 – September 30, 2026). This plan governs infrastructure spending on roads, utilities, parks, stormwater, and other public capital projects across the city.
The Hollywood City Commission adopted a motion to concur with the Community Redevelopment Agency's separately adopted budgets, as required by Florida statute governing special districts. This formal concurrence finalizes the CRA budgets for the upcoming fiscal year.
The Hollywood City Commission passed a resolution setting the property tax millage rate and total levy for the fiscal year beginning October 1, 2025. This final action establishes the tax burden on all real and personal property within city limits for the 2025–2026 fiscal year.
The Hollywood City Commission passed a resolution establishing the number and type of authorized positions for each city department and office for Fiscal Year 2026. This is an annual administrative staffing authorization that sets the city's workforce structure for the upcoming fiscal year.
Resolution No. 2025-069 authorizes the City of Wilton Manors to issue utility system revenue bonds to finance or refinance capital projects, with repayment pledged against net revenues of the city's utility system. The specific bond amount and project details are not stated in the agenda title.
Resolution No. 2025-071 authorizes city officials to execute an agreement with the Broward County Tax Collector for uniform collection of non-ad valorem special assessments. This standard mechanism allows the city to place special assessments on the annual property tax bill for streamlined collection.
The Village Council is considering a resolution to approve a contract for the purchase of two parcels at 9525 Old Dixie Highway for a total cost of $530,000, along with a budget amendment to fund the acquisition. The item is structured as a resolution, indicating a single vote rather than a multi-reading ordinance process.
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.
Wellington Village Council holds its second and final public hearing to adopt the FY 2025-2026 millage rate (Resolution R2025-64) and annual budget (Resolution R2025-65) for the fiscal year beginning October 1, 2025. This is the last required hearing before final adoption, covering the tax levy that will apply to all real property in Wellington.
Wellington Council is considering Resolution R2025-59, which amends the FY2024-2025 utility budget to allocate PFAS public water system settlement payments toward membrane plant upgrade projects. The resolution channels settlement proceeds into infrastructure improvements for the village's water treatment system.
The Doral City Council is adopting a final general fund millage rate of 1.7166 mills for FY 2025-2026, which is 8.13% above the rolled-back rate of 1.5875 mills. A separate debt service millage of 0.4810 mills continues for the General Obligation Bonds funding park and recreation projects (Series 2019 and Series 2021).
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.
The Doral City Council is set to approve job descriptions, salary scales, and performance metrics for positions in the FY 2025-2026 budget. The resolution also updates the citywide pay plan to reflect new positions, headcount changes, and budgeted salary adjustments.
The Margate City Commission approved a Memorandum of Understanding with the Margate Community Redevelopment Agency (MCRA) establishing the annual compensation rate the City will receive for administrative and operational services it provides on behalf of the MCRA for fiscal year 2025-26. This formalizes the cost-sharing arrangement between the City and its CRA under their existing interlocal agreement.
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.
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.
Pembroke Pines held its second public hearing to adopt the FY 2025-26 tentative budget and proposed millage rates: an operating millage of 5.6690 (6.34% above the rolled-back rate of 5.3312) and a debt service millage of 0.2862. The hearing also covers amendments and adoption of the tentative budget for the General Fund, Utility Fund, and all other city funds.
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 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.
The Village of Pinecrest is considering an ordinance to amend its 2024-2025 operating and capital outlay budget at the third quarter. Specific dollar amounts and line-item changes are not detailed in the agenda text.
Resolution VOP2085 would waive fees for Miggy's Gift Skin Cancer Awareness Event at Evelyn Greer Park on November 9, 2025. The resolution is before the Village Council at its September 16, 2025 meeting.
The Delray Beach City Commission will consider Resolution No. 189-25 to renew the city's property insurance policy through the Preferred Governmental Insurance Trust (PGIT). No specific premium amounts or coverage details are provided in the agenda text.
The Aventura City Commission will consider a resolution declaring certain city-owned property as surplus and authorizing the City Manager to dispose of it. Specific parcel addresses, acreage, and disposition method are not detailed in the agenda title.
The Aventura City Commission, acting as the governing board for the Aventura City of Excellence School (ACES), is considering an ordinance to amend the school's budget originally adopted under Ordinance No. 2024-09. Specific dollar amounts for the budget amendment are not provided in the agenda text.
The Aventura City Commission is considering an ordinance to revise the 2024/2025 fiscal year budget as outlined in an attached Exhibit A. Specific dollar amounts and line-item changes are contained in the exhibit, which is not included in the agenda text.