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Lauderhill brings median and park work in‑house, launches NEET and Jan. community cleanup
Summary
Lauderhill has shifted median, park and street‑cleaning work in‑house, added dedicated pressure‑wash, irrigation and trash crews, and created a Neighborhood Enrichment & Appearance Team (NEET) to inspect public facilities and plazas. The city proposed a community cleanup day for January 2026 dividing Lauderhill into eight zones.
At the Nov. 10 workshop Mayor Denise Grant and City Manager Kenny Hobbs presented a multi‑part beautification strategy that brings many previously outsourced services into public‑works operations and creates a neighborhood inspection team.
City management said the change reduced contracted expenditures (the city cited about $1.4 million previously spent on median/landscape contracts) and…
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