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City Offices Reopening to the Public on June 22

The City of Corvallis is reopening most offices and facilities to the general public on June 22. Visitors will be required to follow posted signs and maintain physical distancing while conducting business at City offices. In some cases, visitor traffic flow at certain entrances and exits will be managed to promote physical distancing. Masks or face coverings are strongly encouraged. Some City sites may have a limited supply of masks for customer use.

City Legislative Committee

Pursuant to Governor Brown’s Executive Order 20-16, issued in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, this meeting will be online only. The public may sign up to watch the meeting live on the internet via this link:

https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/3692103278972075020

Community members wishing to offer comments on this agenda are encouraged to submit them through this form www.corvallisoregon.gov/publicinput .  

Reopening Signs

These PDF signs are available for anyone in the community to download and print to help share consistent public health messages as Corvallis and Benton move forward on their reopening plans. 

City Eases Restrictions on Parking Lot Use for Local Businesses

The City of Corvallis is implementing new measures to ease parking restrictions for businesses to help shift some operations outdoors and better accomplish physical distancing requirements.

City Council Adopts $179.7 Million 2020-21 Budget

The Corvallis City Council voted Monday to approve an annual budget totaling $179,764,500 for Fiscal Year 2020-2021. The Council’s action was the final step in the annual budget process, which began in May with a series of Budget Commission meetings and included deliberations, analysis and feedback from the public.

The new budget goes into effect on July 1, when the City of Corvallis begins its new fiscal year.

Corvallis Public Parking Audit

The City of Corvallis is interested in learning more about its current parking program operations and programs. To accomplish this, the City hired a consultant to audit six key elements of its program and produce a series of white papers and recommendations.  The intent of each audit is to evaluate current parking program management practices, policies, and code to determine if inefficiencies are in place, identify strengths and make recommendations for improvements based on industry best practices and what is most reasonable and feasible for Corvallis.

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