City Council · 9:00 AM · Council Chambers, City Hall
Analysis
Charts & Data
119 items(98 procedural hidden)
(e.g., Approved, Denied, Held)
(e.g., Hearing Closed, Corrected, Referred)
AI-generated summaries. Click to expand for original text.
#2The city authorizes a Public Emergency Services Agreement with FWC2026 US, Inc (FIFA26) for Dallas Fire-Rescue to provide onsite emergency medical services during the 2026 FIFA World Cup, generating an estimated $465,000 in revenue to the FIFA World Cup Fund.
#3Authorization of a four-year service agreement with the State Fair of Texas for Dallas Fire-Rescue to provide emergency medical services at Fair Park during the annual fall fair, July Events, and additional special events from 2026 through 2030, generating an estimated $1,392,333 in revenue for the General Fund.
#4The city authorizes an agreement with TX Tenison 2023, LTD. for the company to contribute up to $21,570 toward the relocation of an emergency siren from the median near Merrifield Avenue and IH-30 to Dolphin Road, with the funds deposited into the General Fund.
Library
#5Authorizes acceptance of approximately $2,825,000 from an anonymous donor (in the form of cash, securities, and mineral rights proceeds) to support Dallas Public Library programming and services, along with establishment of appropriations and fund transfers to the Library Family Donation Fund.
#6Resolution declaring July as Disability Pride Month and directing the city manager to fly the Disability Pride Flag at City Hall Plaza from July 15–31, 2026, and annually each July thereafter, at no cost to the city.
#7Authorization to accept a $20,000 grant from TenYour Inc. to fund the TenYour Financial Empowerment program, supporting community financial stability surveys from April 2026 through March 2027.
#8Authorizes acceptance of a $2.5 million HUD Community Project Funding Grant (FY2024) to support enhancements and facility improvements at the Martin Luther King, Jr. Community Center, with funds appropriated through August 2032.
#9Authorization to accept a $1,000,000 HUD Community Project Funding grant (Grant No. B-24-CP-TX-2170) for facility enhancements at the West Dallas Multipurpose Center, with appropriations established through August 2032.
#10Authorizes a second amendment to a contract with the Texas Department of State Health Services for the Texas Lactation Support After-Hours Hotline Program, increasing the contract by $360,000 to a new total of $1,160,000 and extending the term through August 31, 2027, with corresponding FY2027 grant appropriations.
#11City Council authorizes its role as elected representative under federal tax code to allow the Dallas Housing Finance Corporation to issue up to $30 million in tax-exempt multifamily residential mortgage revenue bonds to finance construction of Huntington Place Senior Living Dallas, an affordable senior housing complex at 1431 West Camp Wisdom Road.
#12Authorization for the City Council to act as elected representative for issuance of up to $75,000,000 in tax-exempt multifamily residential mortgage revenue bonds by the Dallas Housing Finance Corporation to finance the Hall Street Apartments, a new affordable multifamily development at 1823 North Hall Street.
#13Authorization for the Dallas Public Facility Corporation to acquire, develop, and own Apperson, a mixed-income multifamily development across four parcels, and to enter into a 75-year lease with Slate Properties LLC, with an estimated General Fund revenue foregone of approximately $5.6 million over 60 years.
#14Authorizes the Dallas Public Facility Corporation to acquire and develop Thirty21, an 86-unit mixed-income multifamily development at 3021 Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, and enter a 75-year lease with Phoenician Development Group, LLC, with estimated general fund revenue foregone of $533,246.70 over 60 years.
#15Amendment to a prior resolution authorizing a second amended and restated conditional loan agreement with Innercity Community Development Corporation for the Spring Avenue Redevelopment Project to construct eight single-family townhomes for families earning up to 140% of Area Median Income, at no cost to the City.
#16Authorizes a one-year sole-source service agreement with Pacify Health, Inc (dba Pacify) to provide city residents 24-hour on-demand lactation support through the Office of Housing and Community Empowerment, funded by the FY27 Texas Lactation Support After-Hours Hotline Fund.
#17Amendment to the Interlocal Agreement between the City and Richardson Independent School District to add Dallas County as a third party, assign City responsibilities to Dallas County after one year, and contribute up to $400,000 for outdoor improvements at the former Dobie Pre-Kindergarten School campus in exchange for a public access easement to the outdoor recreational area.
#18Authorization for a public hearing on August 12, 2026, pursuant to Chapter 26 of the Texas Parks and Wildlife Code, to receive comments on the proposed use of approximately 2.45 acres of parkland at Joey Georgusis Park for six easements (sidewalk, water/wastewater, detention area, drainage, and water) required for the park's plat. No cost to the City.
#19Authorizes the Park & Recreation Department to apply for a $3,000,000 Local Parks Urban Outdoor Recreation Grant from the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department to fund the Fair Oaks Park Improvement Project at 7621 Fair Oaks Avenue, with no direct cost to the city.
#20Amendment to a previously approved resolution updating the grant agreement with HUD for the $750,000 Dallas Love Field Entrance Roadway Intersection Project (Alternate Entry) to add language acknowledging updated terms and conditions, without changing the project scope, grant period, or grant amount.
#21Authorization to establish a District 3 Exterior Improvement Grant Program providing up to $100,000 per eligible small business for facade and exterior retail property improvements, backed by $1,200,000 in General Obligation Bond and ARPA funds.
#22Establishes a new District 5 Exterior Improvement Grant Program offering commercial property owners grants of up to $100,000 for facade and exterior capital improvements, funded by reallocating $950,000 from the rescinded NEZ No. 10 Pilot Economic Development Program.
#23Authorization for the Dallas Development Fund to participate in a New Markets Tax Credit transaction, allocating up to $8 million of its $55 million NMTC allocation to support the Forest Theater Redevelopment Project at 1918 Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard, in partnership with Forest Forward and U.S. Bancorp Community Development Corporation, at no direct cost to the City.
#24Authorization for the Dallas Development Fund to enter a New Markets Tax Credit transaction, allocating up to $15 million in NMTC credits with Pecan Deluxe and Dudley Ventures/Valley Bank to support the Pecan Deluxe Manufacturing Expansion Project at 2575 Lone Star Drive, with no direct cost to the City.
#25Authorizes a New Markets Tax Credit (NMTC) transaction involving the Dallas Development Fund, The Salvation Army of North Texas, and Capital One, allocating up to $8 million of DDF's $55 million NMTC allocation to support construction or renovation at the Salvation Army Campus Project on North Stemmons Freeway.
#26Authorization of a one-year cooperative purchasing agreement, estimated at $555,540, for spay and neuter services for Dallas Animal Services through interlocal agreements with the cities of Lewisville, Mesquite, and San Antonio.
#27Resolution to convey approximately 19,947 square feet of improved land to Dallas Independent School District near the intersection of Dennison Street and North Hampton Road, generating revenue to the General Capital Reserve Fund and General Fund.
#28The City authorizes conveyance of a 752 square foot easement and right-of-way on city-owned land near Toland Street and North Jim Miller Road to Oncor Electric Delivery Company for construction and maintenance of power line and transformer infrastructure at no cost to the City.
#29The city authorizes conveyance of a 6,512 square foot easement and right-of-way to Oncor Electric Delivery Company for construction of power lines, poles, and transformer facilities on City-owned land near Stone Mesa Drive and Rock Querry Road. There is no cost to the City.
#30The City abandons approximately 2,758 square feet of utility easement near Azalea Lane and Jamestown Road to the abutting property owners, the Spigner-Masory Revocable Trust, generating $11,150 in General Fund revenue plus a $20 ordinance publication fee.
#31The city authorizes the deposit of a Special Commissioners' condemnation award and settlement with Delart Investments, Inc. to acquire a ~23,058 sq ft wastewater easement near Preston and Arapaho Roads for the McKamy and Osage Branch Wastewater Interceptor Project, increasing the total authorization from $400,000 to $756,688 split across two wastewater funds.
#32The city seeks to acquire approximately 5,489 square feet of land (including a single-family dwelling) from Carmen Jimenez near McGowan and Nolen Streets for the Cadillac Heights Phase II Project, for a total not to exceed $222,669 including closing costs, funded by the 2006 General Obligation Bond Fund.
#33Authorizes an increase of $15,326.34 in the purchase price for approximately 5,632 square feet of land near Gloyd and Nolen Streets—raising the total from $177,273.00 to $192,599.34—acquired from two named sellers as part of the Cadillac Heights Phase II Project, funded by the 2006 General Obligation Bond Fund.
#34Authorizes an interlocal agreement with the Town of Highland Park for the city to install water and wastewater mains in connection with Highland Park's Wycliffe Avenue Project, at a cost not to exceed $3,875,000 funded across multiple capital improvement and construction funds.
#35Authorizes a professional services contract with Civitas Engineering Group, Inc. for engineering services associated with the Lake Ray Hubbard Master Plan Update, funded through the Water Construction Fund.
#36Authorizes a professional services engineering contract with Kimley-Horn and Associates, Inc. to assess and preliminarily design improvements for the Sorcey Pump Station and major maintenance upgrades at Dallas Water Utilities water distribution facilities, not to exceed $3,290,060.
#37Authorizes use of an existing asbestos abatement and demolition services contract to demolish city-owned commercial structures at 3023 and 3049 Morrell Avenue as part of the Dallas Floodway Extension Project, with no direct cost to the city.
#38Authorizes a construction services contract with CLW Water Group, LLC—the lowest of three bidders—to build liquid ammonium sulfate facilities and clearwell mixing improvements at the Bachman Water Treatment Plant, for up to $8,244,000 from the Water Capital Improvement G Fund.
#39Authorizes an increase to the construction services contract with Talley-Riggins Construction Group, LLC for additional work at the Dallas Water Utilities Service Center at 12000 Greenville Avenue, raising the contract ceiling from $23.5M to approximately $23.9M.
#40Authorizes an increase to the construction services contract with TREG Erosion Control Specialists for additional erosion control work at three locations, raising the contract ceiling by $245,846 to a new total of $4,543,616, funded through Certificate of Obligations Series 2024A Stormwater Drainage Management Fund.
#41Authorizes Supplemental Agreement No. 5 to an existing professional services contract with Carollo Engineers, Inc. for additional engineering services supporting water quality improvements at the Bachman Water Treatment Plant, increasing the contract by $490,629 to a new total of $11,218,054.
#42Authorizes acceptance of a $9.24 million USDOT Safe Streets and Roads for All grant to fund planning, design, and construction of Pedestrian Safety Zones on five High Injury Network corridors, along with appropriations, matching funds, and a partnership agreement with DART for project elements.
#43Amends a 2022 resolution for an Advance Funding Agreement with TxDOT under a Transportation Alternatives Set-Aside Program Grant for shared-use path improvements along Elam Road, correcting the authorized appropriation and disbursement amounts downward from $1,962,980 to $1,784,528.
#44Amendment to a construction contract with HQS Construction, LLC for the Elam Road Safe Routes to School pedestrian and bicycle improvements project, correcting the funding split by reducing the SRTS Improvements Fund disbursement from $1,962,980 to $1,784,528 and adding $178,452 from the General Fund, while keeping the total at $1,962,980.
#45Professional engineering services contract with Gresham Smith to develop a master plan and engineering designs for bicycle and pedestrian connections between Halperin Park (formerly Southern Gateway Park), the Dallas Zoo, and Oak Cliff neighborhoods, funded primarily through a federal FY24 Equity RAISE Grant.
#46Authorizes a professional engineering services contract with Westwood Professional Services, Inc. to conduct a traffic corridor study on North Beckley Avenue, Second Avenue, and Gaston Avenue, in alignment with the Vision Zero Plan.
#47Authorizes a professional services contract with Simon Engineering & Consulting, Inc. to design six local streets under Street Reconstruction Group 24-2001, funded by the 2024 General Obligation Bond Fund, Water, and Wastewater capital funds.
#48Ratification of a $438,930 payment to CMC Network Solutions for electrical and mechanical services required to maintain the operation and safety of city-designated tunnel systems.
#49Three-year cooperative purchasing agreement with CMC Network Solutions for electrical and mechanical maintenance, repair, monitoring, and support services for the Woodall Rodgers Tunnel and Southern Gateway Tunnel systems, procured through the Interlocal Purchasing System Program, with two optional one-year renewals.
#50Authorizes Supplemental Agreement No. 3 with Bridgefarmer & Associates, Inc. for additional engineering services on South Ewing Avenue and East Clarendon Drive, increasing the contract by $282,660 to a new total of $1,743,221.20.
#51Authorizes Supplemental Agreement No. 4 to the engineering services contract with Criado & Associates, LLC to provide additional design services for Phase II of the Ross Avenue Project, increasing the contract by $61,898 to a total of $2,332,662.36.
#52Authorize a professional services contract with Brown Reynolds Watford Architects, Inc. for architectural, engineering, and construction administration services for the replacement of Fire Station No. 43, not to exceed $1,002,500, funded through the 2024 General Obligation Bond Fund.
#53Authorize Supplemental Agreement No. 1 to expand a design-build construction contract with Phoenix I Restoration and Construction, LLC for roof replacement and water infiltration mitigation at the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center, increasing the contract from $390,260 to $3,479,060.
Budget and Management Services
#54Amends the FY 2025-26 budget ordinance (No. 33230) to authorize transfers and appropriation adjustments across all city funds totaling $5.83 billion, and delegates implementation authority to the City Manager.
#55Authorize final adoption of the FY 2026-27 HUD Consolidated Plan Budget allocating approximately $30.5 million in federal grant funds across five programs: CDBG, HOME, Emergency Solutions Grant, Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS, and estimated program income.
#56Authorizes maintaining the existing $175,000 homestead property tax exemption for residents who are disabled or 65 and older, as recommended by the Committee on Finance, with no new cost to the City.
#57Authorizes a one-year sole-source master subscription and service agreement with Govolution, LLC for internet-based electronic payment services, totaling an estimated $824,749 funded across the General Fund and Sanitation Operation Fund.
#58Authorizes rejection of all proposals received for an eviction advocacy program for the Office of Housing and Community Empowerment and directs re-advertisement of a new solicitation, at no cost to the City.
#59Authorizes the rejection of all proposals received for food truck incubator programs in City Council Districts 1 and 3, administered by the Office of Economic Development, with no cost to the city.
#60Authorizes four concession contracts with Impact Activities for tennis center pro/manager operational management at Fretz, Samuell Grand, L.B. Houston, and Kiest Tennis Centers, generating a total estimated net revenue of $1,032,000 across five-year terms and one three-year renewal option each.
#61Authorizes two three-year master agreements for citywide emergency and non-emergency medical supplies: one with three vendors through the BuyBoard cooperative and one with Medline Industries through Omnia Partners, totaling an estimated $11,064,678.81 across multiple funding sources.
#62Authorizes a one-year service contract with three one-year renewal options, not to exceed $628,000 total, with Callan Holdings Inc. dba Callan LLC for investment monitoring and advisory services related to the City's pensions for the City Controller's Office.
#63Authorizes a three-year master agreement for aluminum sign blanks for the Department of Transportation and Public Works, split between two vendors for a combined estimated total of $2,581,246.60, in alignment with the Vision Zero Plan.
#64Authorizes a three-year master agreement with PuddinCake LLC dba Test Gauge - Texas for the purchase of fire hydrant backflow preventers and parts for the Dallas Water Utilities Department, at an estimated $509,000.
#65Authorizes four three-year service contracts (with two optional one-year renewals each) for employee benefits administration, covering basic and grandfathered life insurance, voluntary benefits, financial wellness and pet insurance, and legal services, awarded to Standard Insurance Company and two MetLife entities at a combined not-to-exceed of $2,925,466.
#66Authorizes a five-year service contract, with two two-year renewal options, with Southwest Credit Systems, LP for collection of delinquent utility and miscellaneous accounts for Dallas Water Utilities, generating an estimated annual net revenue of $621,679.39.
#67Authorizes a three-year agreement with HERDEZ TRUCKING INC, the lowest of two bidders, for removal and disposal of excavated materials for the Dallas Water Utilities Department, estimated at $1,840,976 funded by the Dallas Water Utilities Fund.
#68Authorizes a three-year citywide painting services agreement with two vendors — JNA Painting & Contracting Company and Omega Industries — selected as the lowest responsible bidders out of seventeen, for a total estimated amount of $1,124,800.
#69Authorizes a five-year agreement with North American Consultants, Inc. to provide comprehensive medical review and personal injury analysis services supporting the City Attorney's Office and the Office of Risk Management, for an estimated $1,598,040 from the Liability Reserve Fund.
#70The City authorizes a five-year janitorial services price agreement with Ambassador Services LLC for citywide use, totaling an estimated $45,780,678.43 including two optional one-year renewals, funded through the General Fund subject to annual appropriations.
#71Extension of the service price agreement with Communicon Inc. dba Communication Concepts for citywide alarm system purchase, installation, monitoring, maintenance, and annual fire alarm inspections from July 11, 2026 through January 10, 2027. The extension carries no cost to the City.
#72The City extends its service price agreement with Earthtek, Inc. for citywide sand trap, grease trap, interceptor, and septic tank cleaning services by five months through December 12, 2026, with no additional cost to the City.
#73The city authorizes settlement of a bodily injury claim (Claim No. AL-24-50851) filed by Nelda Humphrey for an amount not to exceed $150,000, financed from the Liability Reserve Fund.
#74Authorizes settlement of the lawsuit Becka Anton v. City of Dallas (Cause No. DC-25-00960) for an amount not to exceed $90,000, financed from the Liability Reserve Fund.
#75The City authorizes settlement of two related lawsuits brought by Katrina Ahrens against the Dallas Police Association and the City, for a combined total not to exceed $2,800,000, funded from the Liability Reserve Fund.
#76Authorize a five-year cooperative purchasing agreement with Iron Mountain Information Management, LLC through the OMNIA Partners cooperative for commercial records storage, retrieval, and reference services for the City Secretary's Office at an estimated cost of $2,269,444.48.
#77The City authorizes the Office of the City Auditor's budget estimate for Fiscal Year 2026-27 at $3,351,953, subject to vacancy savings of $55,120 and final citywide funding adjustments.
#78Consideration of nominations and appointments to city boards and commissions, including evaluation and duties of board and commission members.
#79Authorization for condemnation by eminent domain to acquire access and wastewater easements near Stag Road and Haas Drive from Flowerdale, LLC for the FM01 Five Mile Creek Interceptor Project, funded from the Wastewater Construction Fund at a total not to exceed $97,747.
#80Authorization for the second step of eminent domain acquisition of a wastewater easement (~20,987 sq ft) near River Oaks Drive and South Central Expressway from AMZA Julius Schepps, LLC for the FM01 Five Mile Creek Interceptor Project, at a total cost not to exceed $37,058.
#81Authorization for the second step of eminent domain acquisition of a wastewater easement (~6,186 sq ft) near Arden Road and South Lancaster Road from Blayne Rush for the FM01 Five Mile Creek Interceptor Project, at a total cost not to exceed $14,662.
#82Authorization for condemnation by eminent domain to acquire a wastewater easement near South Lancaster Road and Arden Road from Joseph Jones et al. for the FM01 Five Mile Creek Interceptor Project, funded from the Wastewater Construction Fund at a total not to exceed $9,109.
#83A resolution amending the City Plan Commission's Rules of Procedure to require diverse representation on standing committees, rename the Comprehensive Land Use Committee to the Plans Advisory Committee, and update the membership requirements and responsibilities of the Zoning Ordinance Advisory Committee.
#84Authorizes a professional services contract with Huitt-Zollars, Inc. for architectural, engineering, and construction administration services for a new vehicle maintenance facility at Southeast Service Center, funded through the 2006 General Obligation Bond Fund.
Attorney Briefings (Sec. 551.071 T.O.M.A.)
#85Closed session to discuss litigation in the case of Matthew Rankin v. City of Dallas and Chief of Police Daniel C. Comeaux in his official capacity.
#86Closed session item convened under Texas Government Code Chapter 411, Subchapter H, requested by the City Attorney's Office.
Real Estate (Sec. 551.072 T.O.M.A.) and Attorney Briefings (Sec. 551.071 T.O.M.A.).
#87Closed session to deliberate on the purchase, exchange, lease, or valuation of real property at the Bullington Truck Terminal and Thanks-Giving Foundation site (1627 Pacific Avenue), where open deliberation would harm the City's negotiating position, and to seek advice from the City Attorney.
#88The City proposes designating two Neighborhood Empowerment Zones and entering an economic development incentive agreement with Morgan Stanley Services Group Inc. to support the firm's establishment of temporary and permanent regional offices in Dallas, including business personal property tax abatements and a Chapter 380 grant of up to $18.5 million for job relocation, real property tax relief, and fee reimbursement.
#89The City is asked to accept or reject an offer from TEOF Hotel LP to pay $5,707,000 (plus accrued interest and legal fees) upon the sale of the Lorenzo Hotel at 1011 South Akard Street in exchange for a release of the City's lien on the property, with no net cost to the City.
#90Authorizes implementing a Transportation and Infrastructure Committee recommendation to restore the Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center Dallas to its original height to accommodate Jefferson and Houston Viaduct clearance, carrying an estimated $271.3 million in foregone revenue over five years and $597 million in additional construction costs.
#91Authorizes a scope-change amendment (Supplemental Agreement No. 2) with Gensler for architectural and engineering services related to the Convention Center Secondary Facility, while simultaneously decreasing Supplemental Agreement No. 1 to eliminate further design services, resulting in a net contract reduction of $720,508.40.
#92Ordinance authorizing the issuance and sale of City of Dallas Waterworks and Sewer System Revenue Refunding Bonds, Series 2026A, in a principal amount not to exceed $205 million, along with related sale agreements at a cost not to exceed $660,000, financed through the Dallas Water Utilities Fund.
#93Authorizes the City Manager to prepare materials for a November 2026 bond election covering public safety general obligation bonds and pension obligation bonds for the Dallas Police and Fire Pension System, to be formally presented at the August 12, 2026 City Council meeting. No direct cost to the City.
#Z1Public hearing on an application for a new Specific Use Permit for vehicle display, sales, and service within Planned Development District No. 535 (C.F. Hawn Special Purpose District No. 3); staff recommends a five-year approval with automatic renewal eligibility, while the CPC recommends a two-year period.
#Z2Public hearing on a City Plan Commission-authorized rezoning of approximately 39.70 acres from R-7.5(A) Single Family District to Stevens Park Village Conservation District No. 22, bounded by Remond Drive, Hampton Road, and West Colorado Boulevard. Both staff and CPC recommend approval subject to a conceptual plan and conditions.
#Z3Public hearing on an application for a new Specific Use Permit to allow a private school on R-16(A) Single Family District property on the north line of Forest Lane, west of Hillcrest Road. Both staff and CPC recommend approval subject to a site plan, traffic management plan, and conditions.
#Z4Public hearing on an application for a new Specific Use Permit to allow an open-enrollment charter school on R-7.5(A) Single Family District property on the west line of Cheyenne Road, south of Rockingham Street. Staff recommends approval; CPC recommends approval for a three-year period, both subject to a site plan, traffic management plan, and conditions.
#Z5Public hearing on an application to rezone property on the west line of Ferguson Road (between Larry Drive and Province Lane) from R-7.5(A) Residential District with an existing private school/daycare SUP to TH-3(A) Townhouse District, with applicant-volunteered deed restrictions. Both staff and CPC recommend approval.
#Z6Public hearing and ordinance for a new Planned Development District allowing WR-3 Walkable Urban Residential uses on property currently zoned R-5(A) Single Family on the north line of East Overton Road, north of East Illinois Avenue. Both staff and CPC recommend approval subject to conditions (Case Z-26-000002).
#Z7Public hearing and ordinance for a new Planned Development District allowing MH(A) Manufactured Home and CR Community Retail uses on property currently zoned R-10(A) Single Family and A(A) Agricultural along Haymarket Road and Hazelcrest Drive. Both staff and CPC recommend approval subject to a development plan and conditions (Case Z-26-000015).
#Z8Public hearing and ordinance to create a new O-2 Office subdistrict within Planned Development District No. 193 (Oaklawn Special Purpose District) on property bounded by Allen Street, Cole Avenue, and Sneed Street, along with a resolution accepting the termination of Deed Restrictions [Z79-189]. Both staff and CPC recommend approval subject to a development plan and conditions (Case Z-26-000024).
#Z9Public hearing and ordinance to amend and expand Specific Use Permit No. 275 for an electric substation on property zoned R-10(A) and R-7.5(A) Single Family Districts near South Hampton Road and South Franklin Street, north of Gibbs Williams Road. Both staff and CPC recommend approval subject to an amended site plan and conditions (Case Z-26-000047).
#Z10Public hearing and ordinance for a new Specific Use Permit allowing a temporary concrete batching plant on MU-2 zoned property on East Wheatland Road west of South Lancaster Road. Both staff and CPC recommend approval with an expiration of January 1, 2028, or project completion, whichever is earlier.
#Z11Public hearing and ordinance to amend Specific Use Permit No. 2439 for commercial motor vehicle parking on CS-zoned property at the intersection of Telephone Road and Bonnie View Road. Staff recommends a five-year renewal with automatic renewals; CPC recommends a two-year period.
#Z12Public hearing and ordinance to amend Specific Use Permit No. 2184 for a mini warehouse on CR-zoned property at Lake June Road and North St. Augustine Drive. Staff recommends approval with conditions; CPC recommends approval for a ten-year period.
#Z13Public hearing and ordinance to amend Specific Use Permit No. 2494 for the sale of alcoholic beverages on WMU-3 zoned property with a D-1 Liquor Control Overlay at South Hampton Road and Burlington Boulevard. Staff recommends approval with conditions; CPC recommends approval for a five-year period.
#Z14Public hearing on an application to amend the development plan for Subarea B within Planned Development District No. 811, located on the south line of IH-30 between West Colorado Boulevard and North Cockrell Hill Road. Both staff and the City Plan Commission recommend approval subject to amended development and landscape plans.
#Z15Public hearing on an application to create a new subdistrict for IR Industrial Research uses within Planned Development District No. 307, on the west line of Ford Road south of Christian Parkway. Both staff and the City Plan Commission recommend approval subject to a development plan, landscape plan, and conditions.
#Z16Public hearing on an application to rezone property within Planned Development District No. 595 (South Dallas/Fair Park Special Purpose District) at the corner of Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and Colonial Avenue from FWMU-3 to MU-3/FWMU-5 Form subdistrict; staff recommends consideration of FWMU-5 but the City Plan Commission recommends denial. This item was deferred by City Council twice and is being reconsidered.
#Z17Public hearing on an ordinance to amend and expand Specific Use Permit No. 129 for electrical substation uses on residentially zoned property along Calumet Avenue between Meredith and Garfield Avenues in Planned Development District No. 631; both staff and the City Plan Commission recommend approval.
#Z18Public hearing on an application for a Specific Use Permit for an open enrollment charter school on IR Industrial Research District property along Harry Hines Boulevard near Wadley Lane. Originally denied in April 2026 and reconsidered by City Council in May 2026; the City Plan Commission recommends approval for a ten-year period subject to a site plan, traffic management plan, and conditions.
#Z19A public hearing on an application for a new Specific Use Permit for a monopole cellular tower on property zoned CR Community Retail District at the northeast corner of Pastor Bailey Drive and West Camp Wisdom Road, with staff recommending approval for ten-year auto-renewable periods and CPC recommending approval for a single ten-year period.
#PH1Public hearing and ordinance to rename Woodbine Avenue between Morrell Avenue and Renner Road to 'Dr. David Henderson Jr. Avenue,' with new street blades to be prepared and paid for by the city.
#PH2Public hearing and ordinance to rename East and West Davenport Road between Preston Road and North and South Davenport Road to 'Brentfield Drive,' with new street blades to be prepared and paid for by the city.
#PH3Public hearing on Fairfield Affordable Housing Fund's application to TDHCA for 4% Non-Competitive Low Income Housing Tax Credits for Hall Street Apartments, a 354-unit affordable development at 1823 North Hall Street; also covers bonds to be issued by the City of Dallas Housing Finance Corporation and authorization of a Resolution of No Objection acknowledging proximity to a prior tax credit development.
#PH4Public hearing and ordinance amending the Dallas Development Code and Construction Codes to enable denial or revocation of certificates of occupancy for uses operating without required licenses, permits, or registrations, with a maximum penalty of $2,000.
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