City buys 2 fire pumper trucks from Emergency Equipment Professional for $2.06M
Fire department replaces aging equipment to ensure faster emergency response and reliable service. Purchase adds capacity for MFRD operations.
Fire department replaces aging equipment to ensure faster emergency response and reliable service. Purchase adds capacity for MFRD operations.
Building declared a public nuisance will be torn down, clearing a hazard from the neighborhood.
Blighted building removal improves neighborhood safety and property values on Bishop Avenue. No estimated cost is listed.
City will demolish a blighted structure in Mobile, clearing a vacant or unsafe building from the neighborhood.
City will hold a public hearing to decide whether to demolish the structure at 310 Rylands Street, which has been declared a public nuisance. Residents and property owners can voice concerns before the demolition order is finalized.
Blighted property removal may improve neighborhood safety and appearance. Cost details help citizens track public spending on blight abatement.
Property declared a public nuisance will be torn down. Demolition should improve neighborhood safety and property values in District 1.
A blighted structure in District 2 will be torn down after a public hearing declares it a hazard. Demolition removes an unsafe building from the neighborhood.
A blighted building on Bishop Avenue will be removed, clearing the site for redevelopment or stabilization of the neighborhood.
The proposal addresses shelter capacity, animal welfare standards, and staff resources—directly affecting outcomes for stray and surrendered animals in the city.
Building declared a public nuisance will be torn down, removing a safety and code-enforcement hazard from the neighborhood. Demolition funded through general budget.
City orders demolition of dangerous structure in District 1. Removes hazard from neighborhood.
City declares the structure a public nuisance and will tear it down, removing a blighted property from the neighborhood and reducing code enforcement costs.
City expands surveillance infrastructure through a competitive procurement process. Public investment in camera systems affects policing, public safety monitoring, and data collection citywide.
Council will decide whether to grant Gwendolyn and Darrin Clark a license to operate a medical transport service in the city. The decision affects what ambulance and transport providers can legally serve residents.
A new medical transport service could expand local ambulance options for residents needing non-emergency transfers. The Clark application requires public input before approval.
City Council will hold a public hearing to declare the structure at 607 Belsaw Avenue a public nuisance and order its demolition. District 2 residents can voice support or objections at the hearing.
Fire department replaces aging equipment to maintain emergency response capacity. No-bid purchase bypasses competitive bidding.