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Six Bloomington-Normal projects are included in a list of federal funding requests from the area's two members of Congress. Reps. Darin LaHood and Eric Sorensen have submitted requests for Community Project Funding for 2024.
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The 36-acre site in northeast Normal stands north of Beech Street, bordered by Towanda Avenue and the property lines of Pfitzer Road homes.
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Normal residents buying vehicles after June no longer will have to pay a one-time “vehicle use” tax, after the town council voted Monday to eliminate it.
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Normal Mayor Chris Koos expects the increased tax revenue the town saw in the last year will continue into the future.
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The Normal Town Council on Monday adopted the next annual budget, reflecting a year of economic growth.
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The future of Normal’s Uptown South will be the focus of a special Normal Town Council work session Monday, just before the council’s regular meeting.
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High Haven would be located at 106 Mall Drive, near Veterans Parkway and College Avenue in Normal in the current Mandarin Garden restaurant building in a busy commercial district.
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As expected, the Normal Town Council on Tuesday OK'd the annexation agreement of 36 acres for the planned Carden Springs development, making way for nearly 500 new apartments and townhouses, near Interstate 55.
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On the agenda are a final plat for three Weldon Reserve houses on Beech Street, and an annexation agreement that sets aside nearby property for Carden Springs, a complex of garden-style apartments and townhouses.
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Normal’s latest five-year outlook calls for putting $175 million toward hundreds of capital projects — about $18 million more than last year’s plan.