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City outlines neighborhood association recognition, benefits and grant process

5392228 · July 11, 2025
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Summary

Nicole Carr reviewed Boise's neighborhood association structure, the city's recognition policy, benefits for recognized associations and recent demand for neighborhood investment grants; she said 30 associations are recognized and described registration, annual reporting, grievance expectations and the block-party trailer program.

Nicole Carr, who leads the Energize Our Neighborhoods program for Boise City, briefed the City Council on how neighborhood associations form, how the city recognizes them and what benefits recognition carries, including access to grants, a postcard mailer and one annual free park reservation.

Carr said neighborhood associations in Boise date to the 1970s and that the first official association formed in the North End in 1976. The city adopted a resolution in 1998 to formalize recognition and support practices and maintains an internal policy (updated in February 2008) plus a public toolkit to help groups organize, draft bylaws and sustain activity.

Carr described the city's eight-step registration process: check for an existing association,…

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