City partners with Breakthrough Birmingham on BOLD student mentorship
The city commits funding to a mentorship program serving underrepresented students through the BOLD initiative, helping expand educational opportunity in the community.
The city commits funding to a mentorship program serving underrepresented students through the BOLD initiative, helping expand educational opportunity in the community.
City directs funds to the Birmingham Board of Education under a subaward agreement. Specific funding amount and purpose are not detailed in the available text.
City directs funds to the Board of Education under a subaward agreement. Dollar amount and specific program focus are not disclosed in the agenda item text.
City commits funding to help underrepresented workers overcome barriers to employment and career advancement through the BOLD workforce program.
City commits $50,000 to Growing Kings, Inc. for services. Full details of the services and scope are not provided in the item description.
City residents will receive essential resources and transportation assistance through a new BOLD Program partnership. The program aims to help community members access services by eliminating transportation barriers.
Expands community health capacity by training pharmacy-based health workers to serve residents. Strengthens access to preventive care and health education in neighborhoods.
The City is backing out of a lease-purchase agreement with a private owner. The property details and reason for rescission are unclear from this notice.
This agreement defines how Birmingham police and ICE will cooperate on immigration enforcement. Terms determine whether city resources support federal deportations and what access ICE gets to local jails or data.
Children entering kindergarten and pre-K will get free early education through a partnership with Better Basics, Inc., expanding access to school readiness support.
City spends $167,245 on professional services from Greenlining Realty USA Birmingham, LLC. Specific scope of work not detailed in this summary.
City commits $100,000 to Central Alabama Redevelopment Alliance for unspecified services on a sole-source contract.
Wylam Park (District 9) receives $37,012 in American Rescue Plan funds for park supplies and equipment. Funded entirely by federal COVID relief money.
City is planning major development or redevelopment of 11 blocks. Master plan will guide zoning, building, and public space decisions in this area for years to come.
The city commits $50,000 to support One Place Metro's family justice services, which typically include domestic violence support, counseling, and legal advocacy for vulnerable households.
Environmental Products Group wins a nearly $900K city contract through competitive cooperative purchasing. The contract details and service scope are not specified in the item.
The city is spending $250,000 on an agreement with Jones Valley Urban Farm. Details on the specific services or programs funded are not provided in the available description.
City buys recreation supplies for Wylam Park in District 9 using federal pandemic relief funds (ARPA).
City commits $1.75 million to Professional Ambulance Sales and Service (PASS) for ambulance services, affecting emergency response capability and budget allocation.