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Glendale Votes Down $33M City Upgrade

Glendale Votes Down $33M City Upgrade

Published 2 days, 8 hours ago
Description

Glendale voters won’t see a ballot measure this November to fund $33 million in city upgrades — parks, libraries, and a new operations center — after the City Council voted 4-3 to kill it, citing poor timing and doubts it would pass. The plan, which included projects from a 2025 bond measure that narrowly failed by 12 votes, nearly made it to the ballot this year — until one councilmember flipped their vote after the mayor warned it was “destined to fail.” The mayor supports the projects but opposes the general obligation bond, which funds big public works through future property taxes — like a homeowner’s renovation loan. Even if approved, the city faces debt caps and public skepticism: a community survey showed younger voters and Democrats were supportive, but others worried about affordability and taxes, calling it a “heavy lift.” The proposed funding split into three parts: $175 million for parks and recreation (including Thunderbird Conservation Park and pickleball courts), $75 million for libraries, and $80 million for modernizing the city’s Services and Safety Center.

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