Federal Register/Vol. 65, No. 104/Tuesday, May 30, 2000/Notices
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Annual Report Fy 2019
COUNTY OF MAUI DEPARTMENT OF WATER SUPPLY ANNUAL REPORT FY 2019 Jeffrey T. Pearson, P.E., Director Helene Kau, Deputy Director Iao Water Treatment Plant, Wailuku, Maui Initially Submitted September 18, 2019 Finalized January 31, 2020 DEPARTMENT OF WATER SUPPLY - FY 2019 ANNUAL REPORT TABLE OF CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 3 ORGANIZATIONAL CHART 5 DEPARTMENTAL BUDGET 20 DIVISION REPORTS 21 ENGINEERING DIVISION 21 FIELD OPERATIONS DIVISION 25 PLANT OPERATIONS DIVISION 33 WATER TREATMENT PLANT DIVISION 39 WATER RESOURCES & PLANNING DIVISION 44 FISCAL/CUSTOMER SERVICES DIVISION 50 ADMINISTRATION DIVISION 52 GOALS AND OBJECTIVES FOR FISCAL YEAR 2019 55 APPENDIX BOARD OF WATER SUPPLY 57 CHANGES IN ADMINISTRATIVE RULES AND ORDINANCES 59 10TH ANNUAL WATER CONSERVATION POSTER CONTEST/ 6th ANNUAL SOURCE WATER PROTECTION VIDEO CONTEST 60 AUDITOR'S REPORT & FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 63 SCHEDULES, STATISTICS & FIVE-YEAR SUMMARY 119 2 DEPARTMENT OF WATER SUPPLY - FY 2019 ANNUAL REPORT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The Department of Water Supply (DWS) is proud to present its Fiscal Year 2019 Annual Report which provides an overview of the department, its goals and objectives, and highlights of activities performed throughout the fiscal year. HIGHLIGHTS It was big year for our Water Treatment Plants Division, with completion of the new state-of-the-art Iao Water Treatment Plant in April 2019. Conversion was completed at all six water treatment plants from chlorine gas to on-site generation of liquid chlorine solution using salt and electricity. Our first Jeffrey T. Pearson application at Lahaina made KITV news in Honolulu. These Director retrofits were a major project, saving the county money in the long run and making the plants safer for the operators and the surrounding communities. -
Minutes File and Are Available for Public Viewing at the Maui County Department of Planning, One Main Plaza, 2200 Main Street, Suite 315, Wailuku, Maui, Hawai`I
(APPROVED: 03/02/17) CULTURAL RESOURCES COMMISSION REGULAR MEETING NOVEMBER 3, 2016 ** All documents, including written testimony, that was submitted for or at this meeting are filed in the minutes file and are available for public viewing at the Maui County Department of Planning, One Main Plaza, 2200 Main Street, Suite 315, Wailuku, Maui, Hawai`i. ** A. CALL TO ORDER The regular meeting of the Cultural Resources Commission (Commission) was called to order by Chairperson Janet Six, at approximately 10:05 a.m., Thursday, November 5, 2016, in the Planning Department Conference Room, first floor, Kalana Pakui Building, 250 South High Street, Wailuku, Island of Maui. A quorum of the Commission was present (see Record of Attendance). B. PUBLIC TESTIMONY ‐ At the discretion of the Chair, public testimony may also be taken when each agenda item is discussed, except for contested cases under Chapter 91, HRS. Individuals who cannot be present when the agenda item is discussed may testify at the beginning of the meeting instead and will not be allowed to testify again when the agenda item is discussed unless new or additional information will be offered. Maximum time limits of at least three minutes may be established on individual testimony by the Commission. More information on oral and written testimony can be found below. C. INTRODUCTION OF NEW COMMISSION MEMBER - MICHAEL “KALEO” ROPA D. APPROVAL OF MINUTES OF THE JULY 7, 2016 AND AUGUST 4, 2016 MEETINGS Chair Janet Six: Call to order. Do we have any public testimony at this time? So introduction of the new Commission member, who is not here yet, right, so can we put that down on the agenda? Okay. -
Department of Accounting and General Services 0
Department of Accounting and General Services May 2001 Hawaii State Archives lolani Palace Grounds Honolulu, Hawaii 96813 C) Department of Accounting and General Services 0 Table of Contents Page Administrative History 1 Office of the Comptroller History 3 Comptroller's Files {Series 450) 4 Records Container List C-1 to C-3 Public Works Division History 5 Correspondence (Series 461) 6 Records Container List C-4 to C-6 Project Files {Series 463) 7 Records Container List C-8 to C-9 Post-War Planning [Division) 8 Correspondence (Series 462) 9 0 Records Container List C-7 Land Survey Division History 10-11 Project Files (Series 464) 12 Records Container List C-10 Audit Division History 13-14 Correspondence (Series 466) 15 Records Container List C-11 to C-13 Audit Reports (Series 467) 16 Records Container List C-14 to C-24 Journals and Ledgers (Series 468) 17 Records Container List C-25 0 Department of Accounting and General Services ADMINISTRATIVE HISTORY Established: In 1959 under the Reorganization Act of 1959, Act 1, Second Special Session. Predecessor Agencies: Bureau of Public Works, Department of Interior, 1845 -1900. Office of the Comptroller, 1898 -1959. Territorial Department of Public Works, 1900 -1959 (non-highway functions). Board of Commissioners of Public Archives, 1905 -1959. Board of Disposal, 1933 -1959. Bureau of Purchases and Supplies, 1941-1959. Disposal Committee, 1945 -1959. Functions: The Department, headed by the Comptroller, audits financial accounts of all state departments to determine the legality of expenditures -
National Register of Historic Places Weekly Lists for 2000
National Register of Historic Places 2000 Weekly Lists WEEKLY LIST OF ACTIONS TAKEN ON PROPERTIES: 12/27/99 THROUGH 12/31/99 .................................... 4 WEEKLY LIST OF ACTIONS TAKEN ON PROPERTIES: 1/03/00 THROUGH 1/07/00 ........................................ 6 WEEKLY LIST OF ACTIONS TAKEN ON PROPERTIES: 1/10/00 THROUGH 1/14/00 ........................................ 9 WEEKLY LIST OF ACTIONS TAKEN ON PROPERTIES: 1/17/00 THROUGH 1/21/00 ...................................... 11 WEEKLY LIST OF ACTIONS TAKEN ON PROPERTIES: 1/24/00 THROUGH 1/28/00 ...................................... 14 WEEKLY LIST OF ACTIONS TAKEN ON PROPERTIES: 2/07/00 THROUGH 2/11/00 ...................................... 23 WEEKLY LIST OF ACTIONS TAKEN ON PROPERTIES: 2/14/00 THROUGH 2/18/00 ...................................... 26 WEEKLY LIST OF ACTIONS TAKEN ON PROPERTIES: 2/21/00 THROUGH 2/24/00 ...................................... 29 WEEKLY LIST OF ACTIONS TAKEN ON PROPERTIES: 2/28/00 THROUGH 3/03/00 ...................................... 33 WEEKLY LIST OF ACTIONS TAKEN ON PROPERTIES: 3/06/00 THROUGH 3/10/00 ...................................... 36 WEEKLY LIST OF ACTIONS TAKEN ON PROPERTIES: 3/13/00 THROUGH 3/17/00 ...................................... 39 WEEKLY LIST OF ACTIONS TAKEN ON PROPERTIES: 3/20/00 THROUGH 3/24/00 ...................................... 43 WEEKLY LIST OF ACTIONS TAKEN ON PROPERTIES: 3/27/00 THROUGH 3/31/00 ...................................... 47 WEEKLY LIST OF ACTIONS TAKEN ON PROPERTIES: 4/03/00 THROUGH 4/07/00 ...................................... 51 WEEKLY LIST OF ACTIONS TAKEN ON PROPERTIES: 4/10/00 THROUGH 4/14/00 ...................................... 55 WEEKLY LIST OF ACTIONS TAKEN ON PROPERTIES: 4/17/00 THROUGH 4/21/00 ...................................... 58 WEEKLY LIST OF ACTIONS TAKEN ON PROPERTIES: 4/24/00 THROUGH 4/28/00 ..................................... -
Brochure on the Architecture of Joseph Royer
DEPARTMENT OF COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT SERVICES Planning Division m e m o r a n d u m TO: Laurel Lunt Prussing, Mayor FROM: Elizabeth H. Tyler, AICP, Community Development Director / City Planner DATE: September 6, 2007 SUBJECT: Joseph W. Royer Architectural District Brochure Introduction & Background At the Historic Preservation Commission meeting on August 1, 2007, Ilona Matkovszki and Councilmember Dennis Roberts presented a brochure entitled “The Joseph W. Royer Architectural District, In the Heart of Old Urbana” (copy attached). The brochure consists essentially of a walking tour, with a list and description of 14 buildings and sites in and near downtown Urbana designed by prominent Urbana architect Joseph Royer and a map which locates each of the properties. Ms. Ilona Matkovszki did the research and wrote the text; Councilmember Roberts created the design. At the Historic Preservation Commission meeting, Councilmember Roberts proposed that the Commission and City Council: 1. Support the designation and creation of the “Joseph W. Royer Architectural District;” 2. Approve the creation of a brochure explaining the proposed district, and that it be published and distributed freely in the community; and 3. Approve future funding for marking historic buildings or building sites in the district, the Royer office site, and for marking the perimeter of the district at logical approach avenues. The Historic Preservation Commission was impressed with and supportive of the concept of the brochure, although some commissioners took issue with some of the language in the brochure. At the end of the discussion, the Historic Preservation Commission passed a motion to endorse the concept of the brochure, to recommend that the district have signage, and that the Commission have the ability to review the wording of the brochure and any other promotional materials. -
Philo Area Centennial, 1875-1975 S .1
177.366 PHILO AREA CENTENNIAL 1875-1975 ILLINOIS HISTORICAL SURVEY \^ Dedication We dedicate this book to the pioneers whose yearning for something better led them from their safe homes to this unknown territory which made possible our good life here today. Their motto might have been the same as the famous words of William Allen White. "I am not afraid of tomorrow, for I have seen yesterday and ' I love today '. — William Allen White The Pioneer I do not even know his name I only know he bravely came And with him all he had he brought And with his lowly tools he wrought To build a cabin low and plain, A shelter from the wind and rain; And round his cabin rough and rude A bit of virgin land subdued. I only know he gave his toil To rocks and trees that claimed the soil, Til on that precious bit of loam He founded what to him was home, A home his own he viewed with pride Til in the after years he died, No trumpet blare to sound his fame; No marble shaft to bear his name. And where he wrought with toiling hands Are fertile fields and yielding lands, And modern homes where children play, And church and school to light the way, And railroads through the country side, And bridges o'er the rivers wide, And modern highways far and near, All monuments to the pioneer. written by E. Erb c r& 7 TO THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILO AREA: The idea of having a Centennial was born among the trustees of the Village Board. -
National Register of Historic Places Single Property Listings Illinois
National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES SINGLE PROPERTY LISTINGS ILLINOIS FINDING AID One LaSalle Street Building (One North LaSalle), Cook County, Illinois, 99001378 Photo by Susan Baldwin, Baldwin Historic Properties Prepared by National Park Service Intermountain Region Museum Services Program Tucson, Arizona May 2015 National Register of Historic Places – Single Property Listings - Illinois 2 National Register of Historic Places – Single Property Listings - Illinois Scope and Content Note: The National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) is the official list of the Nation's historic places worthy of preservation. Authorized by the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966, the National Park Service's National Register of Historic Places is part of a national program to coordinate and support public and private efforts to identify, evaluate, and protect America's historic and archeological resources. - From the National Register of Historic Places site: http://www.nps.gov/nr/about.htm The Single Property listing records from Illinois are comprised of nomination forms (signed, legal documents verifying the status of the properties as listed in the National Register) photographs, maps, correspondence, memorandums, and ephemera which document the efforts to recognize individual properties that are historically significant to their community and/or state. Arrangement: The Single Property listing records are arranged by county and therein alphabetically by property name. Within the physical files, researchers will find the records arranged in the following way: Nomination Form, Photographs, Maps, Correspondence, and then Other documentation. Extent: The NRHP Single Property Listings for Illinois totals 43 Linear Feet. Processing: The NRHP Single Property listing records for Illinois were processed and cataloged at the Intermountain Region Museum Services Center by Leslie Matthaei, Jessica Peters, Ryan Murray, Caitlin Godlewski, and Jennifer Newby. -
THE GOLDEN YEARS HAWAII I M I , NISEI and SANSEI
THE GOLDEN YEARS HAWAII i m i , NISEI AND SANSEI BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD OF JAPANESE ANCESTRY ie Golden Years o ’ ssei, Nisei and Sansei State of Hawaii Table O f Contents Introduction ......................................................................................................... 7 Period of Contract Im m igration ....................................................................8 Period of World War II ................................................................................. 17 Post War Period ..............................................................................................19 O ahu ....................................................................................................................29 H a w a ii............................................................................................................ 1 27 M a u i................................................................................................................. 145 K a u a i............................................................................................................... 172 Business Directory .................................................................................... 184 This valuable publication may be purchased at leading bookstores or write to us at P.O. Box 8848, Honolulu, Hawaii 96815. Who would have dreamed on that June day in 1868 much more than a toleration of diversity; it is an active when the first 149 Japanese contract laborers arrived cultivation of differences for their own intrinsic sakes. in -
Final Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement for the Non-Contiguous United States
Nationwide Public Safety Broadband Network Final Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement for the Non-Contiguous United States Alaska Hawaii American Samoa Guam Fiirstrst Responder NetwNetworrkk AAuuthoritthorityy Northern Mariana Islands Puerto Rico Volume 2 - Chapter 4 U.S. Virgin Islands Alaska Guam Puerto Rico Hawaii Northern Mariana American Samoa U.S. Virgin Islands Islands May 2017 -Page Intentionally Left Blank- First Responder Network Authority Nationwide Public Safety Broadband Network Final Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement for the Non-Contiguous United States Volume 2 Amanda Goebel Pereira, AICP NEPA Coordinator First Responder Network Authority U.S. Department of Commerce 12201 Sunrise Valley Dr. M/S 243 Reston, VA 20192 Cooperating Agencies Federal Communications Commission General Services Administration U.S. Department of Agriculture—Natural Resource Conservation Service U.S. Department of Agriculture—Rural Utilities Service U.S. Department of Agriculture—U.S. Forest Service U.S. Department of Commerce—National Telecommunications and Information Administration U.S. Department of Defense—Department of the Air Force U.S. Department of Energy U.S. Department of Homeland Security May 2017 Cover Art Sources: DVM (Digital Vector Maps). 2007. Blank Puerto Rico Outline. Digital Map. Accessed: April 2017. Retrieved from: http://digital-vector- maps.com/state-maps-detail/2194/Blank-Puerto-Rico-Outline-Adobe-Illustrator.htm Environmental Resources Management, Inc. 2017. Map artwork: contiguous United States and states of Alaska and Hawaii. Getty Images. Undated. Maps of Guam, U.S. Virgin Islands, and American Samoa. Accessed: April 2017. Retrieved from: http://www.gettyimages.com/ Marine Mammal Commission. Undated. Polar bear (Ursus maritimus). Uncredited Marine Mammal Commission Photograph. Accessed: February 2017. -
Champaign County Regional Environmental Framework
Champaign County Regional Environmental Framework November 2020 This report was prepared with funding from the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) by staff from the Champaign County Regional Planning Commission (CCRPC). CHAMPAIGN COUNTY Champaign County REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL Regional Environmental Framework FRAMEWORK November 2020 PLAN FUNDED BY & PREPARED FOR Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) PLAN PREPARED BY The Champaign-Urbana Urbanized Area Transportation Study (CUUATS), a program of: Champaign County Regional Planning Commission 1776 East Washington Street Urbana, Illinois 61802 Tel: (217) 328-3313 Fax: (217) 328-2426 Website: http://www.ccrpc.org All photos belong to CCRPC unless otherwise credited. Cover Page: Stand of walnut trees at Meadowbrook Park in Urbana, IL (From Left to Right) 1. Lincoln the Lawyer, by Lorado Taft (Urbana Park District) 2. American robin at the Japanese Gardens (Kazmee, Hasan) 3. Historic Clark R. Griggs House 4. Boneyard Creek Crossing 5. Weaver Park shared-use path 6. Bridge at Meadowbrook Park CHAMPAIGN COUNTY REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL FRAMEWORK Steering Committee Brandon Curry, Head of Quaternary and Engineering Geology Section, Illinois State Geological Survey Janel Veile, Air Quality and Noise Specialist, Illinois Department of Transportation Bart Sherer, IDOT District 5 Environmental Specialist, Illinois Department of Transportation Michael Vanderhoof, Planning Services Section Chief , Illinois Department of Transportation John Sherrill, Social Economics Specialist, Illinois Department -
Staff Report for the Case
DEPARTMENT OF COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT SERVICES Planning Division m e m o r a n d u m TO: The Urbana Historic Preservation Commission FROM: Marcus Ricci, AICP, Planner II DATE: February 28, 2020 SUBJECT: HP-2020-EH-01: A request by Andrew Fell for a Certificate of Economic Hardship at 2 Buena Vista Court to replace original windows with new windows, rather than restore the originals, due to the additional expense and time required for restoration. Introduction Andrew Fell has submitted an application for a Certificate of Economic Hardship (COE) to be allowed to replace all of the original windows at #2 Buena Vista Court, a contributing property in the Buena Vista Court Historic District (Exhibit A). Mr. Fell initially submitted a Certificate of Appropriateness (COA) to repair and restore the house.1 The proposed work included replacing all windows, repairing and replacing the roof, repairing the exterior walls, repairing and modifying the front porch, replacing exterior doors, and adding a front deck and a rear door overhang (Exhibit B). On January 8, 2020, the Historic Preservation Commission (“the Commission”) approved the COA with modifications, which included allowing the replacement of some windows if necessary to meet Building Code requirements for egress windows. Mr. Fell has submitted a request for a Certificate of Economic Hardship, stating that the costs of restoring the original windows and the additional time required to restore them constitutes an economic hardship (Exhibit C). In addition, Mr. Fell contends that the recommendation by the Commission to seek a less-expensive restoration company than the one he received a quote from would result in a less-than-ideal finished product.