Filtering by
- All Subjects: Arizona
- All Subjects: Finance, Public
- All Subjects: Child welfare
- Creators: Morrison Institute for Public Policy
- Creators: Welch, Nancy
- Creators: Yuma (Ariz.)
- Creators: Gilbert (Ariz.)
A plan to redevelop the 4th Avenue and 16th Street corridors as defined in the City of Yuma's 2012 general plan.
A plan to revitalize the 215 acre Yuma High Neighborhood, to improve substandard housing conditions, encourage small business development and job creation, and improve community facilities.
A plan for the development and maintenance of the city of Yuma's roadway system, consistent with the city's 2002 general plan, and coordinated with the city's bicycle plan and the Yuma Metropolitan Planning Organization's regional transportation plan.
Provides a plan for the development of park and recreation facilities in Yuma, Arizona to serve its residents and others in the surrounding area.
A policy document and guide for the growth and development of the city of Yuma in the next 10-20 years.
A policy document and guide for the growth and development of the city of Yuma in the next 10-20 years.
Outlines Gilbert's community goals for its physical, economic, and social development and provides a decision-making guide for the future.
The plan identifies and prioritizes any and all known and future capital needs of the community which are to be constructed with public funds.
The budget includes a profile of Gilbert and its government, a financial overview, details of operating and non-operating funds, capital improvement, and the town's debt.
Arizona’s vulnerable populations are struggling on a daily basis but usually do so in silence, undetected by traditional radar and rankings, often unaware themselves of their high risk for being pushed or pulled into full crisis. Ineligible for financial assistance under strict eligibility guidelines, they don’t qualify as poor because vulnerable populations are not yet in full crisis. To be clear, this report is not about the “poor,” at least not in the limited sense of the word. It is about our underemployed wage earners, our single-parent households, our deployed or returning military members, our under-educated and unskilled workforce, our debt-ridden neighbors, our uninsured friends, our family members with no savings for an emergency, much less retirement.