More money is going toward fixing several city streets in the area.
Posted: May 17, 2021 8:35 AM
Posted By: Hannah Follman
TERRE HAUTE, IND. (WTHI) More money is going toward fixing several city streets in Terre Haute. During Thursday s City Council meeting, council members voted to accept three different appropriations. They include over $1 million dollars total. This is money from both the state and city to help resurface and rebuild many streets in the area.
The work will be done through several major projects. They include paving and resurfacing projects for a number of Terre Haute streets. Here is how it all breaks down.
UP looks to create transitional housing for former foster youth, seeks support from the City of College Station
and last updated 2021-05-14 23:01:50-04
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS â Those in the Brazos Valley aging out of the foster care system have a unique resource at their fingertips with Unlimited Potential. UP is an organization serving former foster youth.
Unlimited Potential is looking to the city to help those who have aged out of the foster care system, the program is helping participants become more independent by the time they leave UP s services, with proposed transitional housing.
During Thursday night s College Station City Council meeting, the program presented a huge item in order to better serve this group.
Keene is moving forward with reassessing its mask mandate after a city councilor suggested cutting the part about outdoor mask-wearing.During Thursday’s City Council meeting, Mayor George Hansel brought an amended version of the ordinance to the.
Placerville City Council affirms Old Hangtown nickname after removing noose from logo
Sacramento Bee 5 hrs ago Vincent Moleski, The Sacramento Bee
May 2 Placerville City Council members last week unanimously voted to approve a resolution affirming the Gold Rush-era nickname Old Hangtown, a little over two weeks after they agreed to remove a noose from the city s logo.
The city has been facing heightened scrutiny for the past year over its historical connection to vigilante executions during the mid-19th century, with critics arguing that the city s branding is racially insensitive.
Criticism intensified last summer, when a series of large-scale protests against racism and police brutality swept the nation following the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis. In July, Placerville City Council members deferred action regarding the city s logo until this year. Earlier this month, the council again took up that same discussion, voting to remove the sym
April 2, 2021 By Mike Kruzman / news@whmi.com
Pending pandemic rules, the City of Brighton is ready to bring residents back downtown for a year full of new and returning events.
During Thursdayâs City Council meeting, officials approved civic applications for nearly 20 events that will remind people more of what downtown life was like in 2019 and earlier, as opposed to last year. All events are subject to federal, state, and local guidelines.
First on the list is the return of the Farmerâs Market, Saturdays from May 2nd through Halloween. If orders and logistics allow, there could be up to four parades downtown- one each for Memorial Day, the 4th of July, Veterans Day, and the high schoolâs homecoming. Several popular 5K runs and walks were also approved. Patty Thomas is the Cityâs Assistant to the DPS Director. She highlighted a pair of events, with one being the new Bark in Park, held by Bountiful Harvest. That event, like se