City partners with Renew Birmingham to support single mothers
City commits to help Renew Birmingham provide community support, mentoring, and life guidance to single mothers in the area.
City commits to help Renew Birmingham provide community support, mentoring, and life guidance to single mothers in the area.
City spends $1,800 with Children's Village, Inc. for services; contract awarded without competitive bidding.
Birmingham Aids Outreach will receive public funding to provide vital HIV/AIDS support services, resources, and care to residents living with HIV and at-risk communities in the city.
Vulcan Park and Museum receives public funding to deliver community-based educational programs. The sole-source agreement bypasses competitive bidding.
City partners with Boys & Girls Club to expand after-school and youth programs. Details of funding, scope, and duration not fully disclosed in agenda.
City contracts with Kid One Transport System to provide medical and dental transportation services for residents. Agreement not to exceed $1,000.
City approves agreement with nonprofit to provide educational materials and community services. Details on program scope, duration, and budget not available in agenda item.
City spending $9,500 for farmer's market programming through a sole-source agreement with P.E.E.R., Inc.
City commits $5,000 to Freedom Rain, Inc. (The Lovelady Center) to deliver skills training services.
Girls Incorporated of Central Alabama will use the funds to provide goods and services to low-income residents in the community.
City buys routine office supplies through competitive bidding. HiTouch wins the contract at unit prices negotiated with the Purchasing Office.
City commits general-fund dollars to provide unspecified goods or services to the school board. The description is incomplete, so the specific impact on residents or schools cannot be determined from this item.
Woodlawn United will provide home repair assistance to Birmingham residents. Specific dollar amount and scope details were not provided in the agenda item.
The city is raising how much it pays The Friends of Rickwood Field to manage the historic ballpark. The fee increase affects the city's annual spending on the facility.
City spends nearly $480K to patch potholes and repair roads across Birmingham in 2025. Lowest competitive bid wins the work.
City locks in competitive pricing for essential fire equipment replacements and maintenance under a blanket purchase agreement.
Formalizes how Birmingham and Jefferson County work together on shared services or operations over the next two years. Details of the cooperation (services, costs, responsibilities) will determine its impact on city services and taxpayers.
Fire department gets competitive bids for equipment upgrades. Ensures firefighter safety gear is purchased at negotiated unit prices.
City purchases lawn mowers and related outdoor equipment through competitive bidding. Contract prices are on file with the purchasing office for routine equipment needs.
Public land at 1200 Tuscaloosa Avenue will pass to the Offender Alumni Association under a redevelopment agreement. The outcome depends on what OAA plans to do with the property and whether it serves residents.