City seeks police recruitment services to help bolster staffing
The consulting company will work with the department for three months to help devise strategies and best practices for recruiting.
There are 164 article(s) tagged city of Memphis:
The consulting company will work with the department for three months to help devise strategies and best practices for recruiting.
The City of Memphis paid $600,000 for the high-visibility location at 61 S. McLean.
The upgrades for the 2022 season include fan experience enhancements, security upgrades, expedited points of entry and concession improvements.
A loss by DeSoto County could end up being an expensive venture.
Morant’s extension means he’ll be here when the Grizzlies and the city and county negotiate the guts of a new FedExForum lease. All of which makes him the most important Grizzly at the most important moment in the city’s NBA history. Just another reason to thank Ja.
Bartlett is facing some decisions on how to treat its wastewater, some of which could eliminate reliance on holding tanks and the City of Memphis handling the issue.
To determine a projected financial plan, the University of Memphis looked at the funding precedents of stadiums at nine universities.
The renovation is expected to cost between $150 million and $200 million.
A $5 entry fee, plus weapon and ID checks, were required to enter Beale Street between 8 p.m. Friday and 3 a.m., helping officials track the number of visitors.
By the summer of 2024, the South City Museum & Cultural Center will celebrate the people and landmarks of the Historic South Memphis area.
More than $139 million will be pumped into parks and community centers managed by several entities within the city, an investment that will change the face of the city for years to come.
Lakeland wants to purchase the sewer assets in the Stonebridge community so the suburb can continue to separate itself from the Memphis system.
The planned $267 million revitalization of 100 N. Main would include 60,000 square feet of office space for the City of Memphis.
The Grizzlies may be closing in on an agreement with the city and county that would dramatically reduce the chance the team relocates under the “early termination” clause of the arena lease.
A Thursday, Dec. 9, joint session of Memphis City Council members and Shelby County commissioners drew sparse attendance from the two bodies.
The Pipkin Building site is planned to close Dec. 15, but City of Memphis COO Doug McGowen said if demand peaks it would reopen.
The 330-acre park will add soccer fields, security lights and additional parking, and it will connect nearby neighborhoods to the Wolf River Greenway as part of a revamped plan.
Mayor Jim Strickland said the architect’s conclusion will lead to “cost-efficient” considerations.
The Liberty Bowl has a new name, which is fine. But the old stadium needs a whole lot more than that.
The naming rights deal with Simmons Bank will help make dramatic improvements to the stadium, Mayor Jim Strickland said.
City overturned its original decision because of “overwhelming demand.”
While there are no firm plans on a solution, for the first time in three years, TDOT, the city and community members seem to be on one accord. A significant departure from a few months ago when Scott Street closure, as part of a $45 million redesigned Poplar Viaduct, seemed a formality.
While proponents of merging the City of Memphis and Shelby County governments cannot promise that consolidation would mean a spike in economic development, they believe it is the straightest line to major growth. Opponents aren’t so sure and worry about negative fallout.
Shelby County is about 51% toward its goal of vaccinating 700,000 people, according to the county Health Department. As of Thursday, 355,102 total people are vaccinated with 270,297 of them fully vaccinated.
City offers appointment, no-appointment vaccine access at public sites.