Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
After his stint in the mayor's office, he suffered some reversals of fortune, and was forced to return to clerking at the City Hall. [45] 39 William G. Thompson: 1880–1883 Republican [46] Thompson was a Republican while serving as mayor, and a delegate to both the 1876 and 1880 Republican National Convention. [46]
Municipal elections for Mayor, City Council, City Clerk and Community Advisory Council Members are held in years following presidential elections (such as 2013, 2017 and 2021). [1] In 2018 the people of Detroit voted to revise the city charter, and elected a Charter Commission for that purpose. [11]
The Coleman A. Young Municipal Center is owned and operated by the Detroit-Wayne Joint Building Authority, which was created in 1948 by the Michigan Legislature. [2] The building contains a library, a courthouse, and the city hall. When it opened, the City-County Building replaced both the historic Detroit City Hall and Wayne County Building.
Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan speaks about a plan to increase City of Detroit employee wages to a minimum of $15 at the Detroit Public Safety Headquarters in Detroit on Feb. 9, 2022. Homelessness
Nonemergency issues can be reported via DDOT Customer Service at 313-933-1300. This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Mayor Duggan rides bus to Detroit's new Jason Hargrove ...
City Council adopted some of the mayor's proposals. The Detroit Department of Transportation will receive a $20 million boost, hiking employees to 1,083, up by 106 from last year.
Duggan drastically increased the number of parks that receive regular maintenance, which increased from 25 parks in 2013 to 275 by 2017 per reporting by the mayor's office. [ 20 ] Towards the end of his first term, Duggan established Detroit's first office of sustainability which focuses on creating green, sustainable spaces in Detroit and ...
The former mayor's activities cost the city an estimated $20 million. [91] Roughly half of the owners of Detroit's 305,000 properties failed to pay their 2011 tax bills, resulting in about $246 million (~$329 million in 2023) in taxes and fees going uncollected, nearly half of which was due to Detroit.