As a reminder to myself and new readers, I want to re-emphasize the goal and purpose of the site—particularly the weekly preview post/newsletter—to draw attention to what council is voting on this week. We are still in Fiscal Year 2025 (FY25) working under the current land development code and future land use map. To that end, I wanted to share some improvements I rolled out for my version of the agenda after the last preview post went out.
The goal has always been for a version of the agenda you can easily scan and view additional context without commentary. The point I want to emphasize is this: these are staff’s words. Each summary sheet is signed off on by everyone from the mayor’s office through the legal department down to department head.
As to the District 5 special election, I won’t be doing any candidate coverage until after the Aug. 15 deadline for qualifying. At the time of writing, there are 11 candidates with applications in with Supervisor of Elections. With such a large field and the possibility of it growing, the prospects of an Oct. 28th run-off remain high. There is a page with general details, including an interactive map of the district.
Again, council will not be taking any votes related to FY26 until the first public hearing Sept. 3. My main hope for this year’s budget is for council (and the community) to really vet the five-year capital improvement plan (CIP) and start treating it like a, well, a plan. What will the next mayor and council be stepping into? What will already be in motion?
It takes a majority of council and the mayor to change this plan each year. The five-year CIP is as much a state requirement as the comp plan.
Appropriately things kick off with the mayor’s presentation. Beyond that there are 73 additional items, 62 requiring a vote with approximately $16 million in spending. Contracts range from the federal Housing and Urban Development Dept clawing back $9,524.42 of housing assistance (item 15) to $7.2 million for Ford vehicle maintenance for the police and logistics and asset management departments (item 64) . Not to be confused with the $40 million dollar contract approved in May for NAPA Auto parts.
Beyond that, items of interest in the consent portion include $555,000 for the West Tampa water tower (item 17) and $1.7 million for 3 years of tire disposal (item 20). Additionally, council will be hearing second readings on several land use applications as well as three new vacating applications. There are also numerous requests for updates from staff on the agenda with most coming in the form of written reports, even if council asked for them to be in person. Anything of note will be covered in a wrap up post at the end of the week along with details of the mayor’s budget presentation.
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This article appears in Jul 10-16, 2025.

