Butte, Montana — week of 2026-06-29 · all Butte meetings

Study Commission Amends Fire Services Ballot Question, Other Boards Eye Grants and Budget

The Butte-Silver Bow Local Government Study Commission approved revised ballot language for the fire services question on July 1, adding a volunteer fire coordinator appointed by volunteers. The amendment passed 8-1 as part of a broader set of unanimous votes finalizing ballot questions for executive and legislative structure, neighborhood councils, and the reclamation department.

The commission also reaffirmed a contingency plan for a two-option fire question if the current three-option version is rejected by election officials, relying on a prior 6-3 vote. Those decisions, drawn from official minutes, cap months of study on potential changes to the city-county government.

Meanwhile, the Urban Revitalization Board weighed more than $200,000 in matching grant requests, the Council of Commissioners began its budget review, and several boards set the stage for mid-July actions on historic properties, public health funding, and land sales.

Study Commission Finalizes Ballot Language

Meeting on July 1, the commission marked up the unified fire services ballot option to include a volunteer coordinator role. The commission then unanimously approved ballot language specifying an at-large mayor and the phrase “form of government” for the executive question, and removed the word “part-time” from the current legislative option. Corrections to the neighborhood councils and reclamation department questions also passed without dissent. No action was taken on the commission’s final report or preliminary report revisions, which remain under discussion.

Budget and Revitalization Grants

The Council of Commissioners held a preliminary budget presentation on June 29, with Finance Director Karen Hassler outlining the FY2026-2027 proposal. The council voted to refer the budget to the Finance & Budget Committee for detailed review. No dollar figures from the proposed budget were immediately released.

On June 23, the Urban Revitalization Board considered several matching grant requests: up to $21,375 for exterior work at 742 Maryland; up to $43,568 for stained glass and masonry at 215 W. Broadway; an increase to $28,914.50 for St. Mary’s Church at 440 N. Main; and up to $95,640 for a fire sprinkler system at 341 Anaconda Rd. The board also reviewed a loan underwriting agreement with the Butte Local Development Corp. Official minutes were not yet published.

Public Safety, Property, and Animal Ordinances

The Council of Commissioners met June 24 with a public hearing on Ordinance 2026-02, which would amend the designated jurisdictional area of the fire department. The same agenda included proposed updates to nuisance dog barking and tiered chicken-keeping ordinances, a request to purchase a vacant lot at 640 S. Dakota, and committee reviews of personnel policy amendments and $859,331.63 in expenditures.

On July 1, the council again considered the fire department jurisdictional ordinance, as well as a resolution authorizing sale of real property for community development (Home Addition block 16). The consent agenda that day included labor agreements with police, operating engineers, and transit workers; a $39,000 grant for library solar panels; and a request to apply for a $7,000 TBID grant for parks marketing.

The Local Emergency Planning Committee on June 24 heard a Red Cross presentation, reviewed one hazmat incident, and discussed an upcoming tabletop exercise at Bert Mooney Airport in August. The Business Improvement District board on July 1 reviewed financials, discussed hiring an administrative assistant, and prioritized streetscape projects.

Airport Authority

The Airport Authority Board approved minutes, bills, and financial statements unanimously on July 1, with no new policy decisions. The meeting focused on progress updates for AIP and hangar projects.

Coming Up

Generated from official meeting agendas and minutes — every underlying document is linked from the city page. Read the primary source before you rely on a detail.