Fort Worth Search
Search meetings, agenda items, press releases, entities, and insights.
80 results for “infrastructure” in past year
Flood Infrastructure Fund
Infrastructure and Growth Committee
General and utilities contractor based in Fort Worth, specializing in utility infrastructure and water main construction projects. Serves municipal and commercial clients in the region
Authorizes application for and acceptance of a federal Bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act airport grant of up to $675,000 for runway rehabilitation, taxiway construction, and instrument landing system
Authorization to apply for and accept a federal airport infrastructure grant up to $675,000 for runway reconstruction, taxiway rehabilitation, and lighting at Fort Worth Spinks Airport, with
Authorizes application for and acceptance of a federal Bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act airport grant of up to $1,553,305 for pavement improvements, shoulder preservation, a pavement management
grant funding and $71.25 million in zero-interest financing through the state’s Flood Infrastructure Fund (FIF). Why this matters The Lebow Channel area, located in Council District
Global Ratings — up from AA+ — reflecting strong financial management, healthy reserves, and sustained infrastructure investment. The higher rating is expected to reduce future borrowing costs, generating long-term savings
Authorizes an infrastructure construction agreement with Downtown Fort Worth Initiatives, Inc. to reimburse up to $500,000.00 in construction costs for improvements at six downtown parks and public spaces
authorize use of portions of Twin Mills Park and Little Acorn Park for stormwater infrastructure, establishing maintenance areas and temporary workspace areas within the parks. (CD 7) Conduct Public Hearing
water use approvals in place, and the data center project will activate TIF-funded infrastructure reinvestment in the surrounding area. The Veale Ranch site already has compatible zoning and land
charter election, the swearing-in of a new District 10 councilmember, and several major infrastructure items including water main replacements and roadway improvements totaling nearly $40 million. Budget work session
discretionary electrical service agreement with Oncor Electric Delivery Company LLC for installation of electrical infrastructure, transformers, and metering at the Mary's Creek Water Reclamation Facility, along with a resolution
Neighborhood Wi-Fi ($105,319), Public Events Capital Projects ($84,876), and IT Services Infrastructure ($24,736), with adoption of an appropriation ordinance and amendment to the FY2026–2030 Capital
affordable housing construction and rehabilitation), Proposition E ($63.9M for public safety infrastructure including two fire stations and a new 911 call center), and Proposition F ($59.8M to construct
overview of three of the bond propositions: Proposition A: Streets and Mobility Infrastructure This proposition would authorize the City to issue public securities in the amount
reviewed community engagement results for a proposed $840 million 2026 bond program, with transportation infrastructure receiving the largest share; some councilmembers pushed to increase the affordable housing allocation
District, reallocation of $214,932 in ARPA funds for neighborhood Wi-Fi and IT infrastructure, purchase of disaster recovery equipment, a new habitual nuisance commercial property ordinance, and eleven zoning
package. If approved by voters, the bonds would provide funding for streets and mobility infrastructure including roadways, sidewalks, bridges and intersection improvements. They would also support expanded parks and recreational
tour included city leadership and department representatives who met with residents to discuss infrastructure and safety improvements. Top City officials tour newest Neighborhood Improvement Program area A bus full