City Council Agenda Includes $4.2M Homeless Services Contract
The most significant item on Coronado’s recent government agendas was a proposed $4.2 million contract with Mercy House for homeless services, published as part of the July 1 City Council meeting materials. Only agendas—not minutes—were available for all bodies as of July 5, making it unclear which items were approved or discussed in depth.
City Council (July 1)
The council agenda featured several notable items alongside the Mercy House contract:
- Southern California Edison gave a presentation on its wildfire mitigation plan.
- A second reading was scheduled for an ordinance that would allow religious facilities up to 10,000 square feet in the M-4 industrial zone.
- A second reading of an ordinance updating regulations for bicycles and e-bikes was also on the calendar.
- The council was asked to approve a $4,209,038 agreement with Mercy House for homeless services and a $512,028 property management contract with Newmark for The Hub.
No votes or discussion summaries were available.
Historic Preservation Board (June 29)
The board’s agenda centered on a public hearing for project MARD2026-0002, concerning proposed alterations to City Park at 930 East Sixth Street as part of the Corona City Park Revitalization Project. Other items included election of a chair and vice chair, approval of minutes from September 30, 2025, and a routine consent calendar.
Library Board of Trustees (June 23)
The Library Board’s agenda was limited to routine business: approval of the May 26, 2026, minutes, a consent calendar with board graphs, statistics, calendars, and flyers, and the library report for June 2026.
Planning and Housing Commission (June 22)
The published agenda for this meeting contained only technical software interface elements and no substantive items, suggesting a placeholder or error in the posting.
Coming up
No upcoming government meetings were listed in the provided schedule as of July 5. Residents should monitor the city website for future postings.
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.