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The District of Columbia Department of Public Works (DPW) is an agency of the government of the District of Columbia, in the United States.The department oversees solid waste (e.g., garbage) and recyclables collection, street cleaning, parking enforcement, and governmental vehicle procurement, maintenance and fueling.
Structures built as part of the New Deal-era Public Works Administration in the U.S. state of Wisconsin. Pages in category "Public Works Administration in Wisconsin" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total.
In response to the impending management crisis in its transportation division, in May 2002, the Council of the District of Columbia passed the District Department of Transportation Establishment Act of 2002 (D.C. Law 14-137), which separated the Division of Transportation from the Department of Public Works and created a standalone D.C ...
(The Center Square) – Wisconsin’s new 3-cent per kilowatt hour state tax on electricity sales for electric vehicles starts Jan. 1. Any owner, operator, manager, or lessee of an EV charging ...
Vetoed in part, this law implemented Wisconsin's landmark Wisconsin Works program, which became a model for the "welfare-to-work" programs of the 1990s. Also allowed the Wisconsin Department of Industry, Labor and Job Development to rename itself the Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development.
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During the 1930s and 1940s, the responsibilities of the commission continued to expand. By 1940, it had 500 employees. In 1967, the Highway Commission was merged with the Wisconsin Aeronautics Commission, Department of Motor Vehicles, and the Wisconsin State Patrol to form the Wisconsin Department of Transportation. [6]
After several attempts through the 1930s, the Wisconsin Legislature established the State Department of Public Welfare in 1939 (1939 Wisconsin Act 435), to provide unified administration of all welfare programs. [1]: 385