Zanesville City Council weighs banking deal, software switch, and zoning map update in committee meetings
The Zanesville City Council took up a slate of financial and operational items during its June 22 committee meetings, including a proposed five-year banking agreement with Park National Bank and a software transition for community development permitting. All items appeared on meeting agendas; official minutes were not yet published at the time of this report.
Banking and depositories
The Ways and Means Committee discussed two emergency ordinances that would authorize a banking services and cash management agreement with Park National Bank for the period 2026–2031 and designate public depositories for the city for the same five-year term. Both ordinances would be declared emergencies if adopted.
Community development and zoning
In separate sessions, the City Council — and specifically its Community Development Committee — considered a trio of related measures. A first reading was held on Ordinance 2026-64, which would terminate existing contracts with Tyler Technologies for permitting software. A companion ordinance, 2026-65, would execute a new agreement with Vertosoft to provide permitting and licensing software. The committee also gave a first reading to Ordinance 2026-66, which would amend and revise the city’s zoning map to establish permanent zoning.
Other agenda items
Council documents also listed resolutions to settle prior-year invoices tied to the Riverside Park Pickleball Courts. Additionally, the same meeting materials referenced competing software contracts — ending the Tyler Technologies relationship and starting fresh with Vertosoft — alongside the zoning map overhaul.
Because no record of final votes was available, the disposition of each ordinance remains unconfirmed from the available agenda documents.
Coming up
No government meetings are currently listed on the public calendar for the next 14 days.
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.