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Insights
Read what the region's councils are doing — by money, topic, vendor, and city. Each lens leads with an answer and drills to the verbatim source.
- Coverage is 10 of LA County's 88 cities today, expanding across the county — not yet a full regional census.
- We compare shares of council attention (% of substantive items), not raw counts, so a small city and a large one compare fairly. Procedural boilerplate (minutes, warrants, proclamations, appointments, presentations) is stripped first.
- Dollars are $ on items naming an amount, deduped to one figure per item — not verified award totals. "—" means no amount was extracted, never that $0 was spent.
- The ingested window differs by city, so totals aren't over identical periods.
What each city prioritizes — share of council attention
Each bar is one city's substantive items split by topic and normalized to 100%, so cities of any size compare directly.
Open a topic's full brief:
Where the money goes
Extracted dollars by category — contracts, appropriations, and grants are different flows and never summed. $ on items naming an amount, not verified award totals.
Biggest single decisions
Vendors & contractors — who cities are paying
Ranked by $ on items naming the vendor (one amount per item) — not a verified contract-award total. Click a vendor to see its items.
Vendor names are extracted from each item's text, so coverage is skewed toward cities with more detailed agendas (notably Long Beach). This evens out as more cities and richer item text are added.
Cross-city overlap is still small (11 vendors span 2+ cities): Arcadis U.S., Inc., West Coast Arborists, Inc., Willdan Engineering, Toro Enterprises, Inc., C J CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION, INC., General Pump Company, Inc.. It grows as cities are added.
Common Threads across cities
Similar actions surfacing in 2+ cities, from the cross-city similarity graph. Note that linkage is sparse for lightly-covered cities.
Quarterly Investment Report Review Budget & Finance — 4 cities: Calabasas, Claremont, Long Beach, Sierra Madre
Calabasas, Claremont, Long Beach, and Sierra Madre each presented routine quarterly reports on their public investment portfolios, giving councils a periodic snapshot of how city funds are invested and performing. AI summary
Redevelopment Successor Agency Budget Approval Budget & Finance — 3 cities: Culver City, Glendale, Signal Hill
Culver City, Glendale, and Signal Hill are each approving their annual Recognized Obligation Payment Schedules (ROPS) for fiscal year 2026–27, a required step for successor agencies winding down former redevelopment agency obligations. AI summary
SB1 Road Repair Project Lists Approved Budget & FinanceStreets & Infrastructure — 3 cities: Glendale, Pomona, Signal Hill
Glendale, Pomona, and Signal Hill are each submitting their required annual project lists for state SB1 funding, identifying local road repair and infrastructure improvements slated for Fiscal Year 2026-27 under California's Road Repair and Accountability Act. AI summary
General Plan Annual Progress Reports Permitting & Land Use — 3 cities: Calabasas, Glendale, Signal Hill
Calabasas, Glendale, and Signal Hill are each reviewing their annual General Plan progress reports, a standard requirement for California cities to track how well local development and land-use decisions align with their long-term planning goals. AI summary
Annual Budget Study Sessions Budget & FinanceGovernance & Administration — 2 cities: Sierra Madre, Signal Hill
Sierra Madre and Signal Hill are each holding budget study sessions in which city departments present spending plans and financial priorities to the council for review and deliberation ahead of budget adoption. AI summary
Labor Negotiation Closed Sessions Governance & Administration — 2 cities: Calabasas, Sierra Madre
Both Calabasas and Sierra Madre are holding closed-session meetings with their labor negotiators, a standard process cities use when discussing employee contracts and collective bargaining terms. AI summary
Mid-Year Budget Status Reviews Budget & Finance — 2 cities: Glendale, Los Angeles
Glendale and Los Angeles are each reviewing their fiscal year 2025-26 financial status, with council committees examining revenue and expenditure progress at quarterly checkpoints during the budget year. AI summary
City Manager Performance Evaluation Governance & Administration — 2 cities: Calabasas, Glendale
Both Calabasas and Glendale city councils are conducting formal performance evaluations of senior public employees, a routine governance process for holding top municipal staff accountable. AI summary
City Employee Performance Reviews Governance & Administration — 2 cities: Culver City, Long Beach
Culver City and Long Beach each held closed-session performance evaluations of senior public employees — the City Manager and Police Oversight Director respectively — as authorized under California Government Code Section 54957. AI summary
Mid-Year Budget Review 2025-26 Budget & Finance — 2 cities: Calabasas, Claremont
Calabasas and Claremont are each conducting mid-year reviews of their fiscal year 2025-26 budgets, assessing revenues and expenditures at the halfway point to inform any needed adjustments. AI summary
Automated Speed Camera Systems Contract Public SafetyStreets & Infrastructure — 2 cities: Glendale, Los Angeles
Glendale and Los Angeles are each entering agreements with Verra Mobility (American Traffic Solutions) to operate automated speed safety camera systems, covering installation, maintenance, and citation processing. AI summary
Annual Financial Report Approval Budget & Finance — 2 cities: Glendale, Signal Hill
Glendale and Signal Hill are each reviewing and accepting their Annual Comprehensive Financial Report for fiscal year 2024-25, a standard end-of-year accountability process required of local governments. AI summary
Notable decisions
Biggest dollars
Contested votes
Vote records are currently ~96% Long Beach (from scanned minutes); this is not a cross-city contestedness comparison.
Flagged for review (5)
Recovered from PDF/scanned sources; titles not fully verified. Shown for transparency.