The City of Dublin offers block party packages to Dublin civic and homeowners associations once per calendar year. The package includes tents, chairs, tables, trash bins, sandwich boards, barricades and a sound system. Association leadership may formally reserve the package in January of each year for block party events falling between May 1 and Oct. 31.
Resilient Neighborhoods is a free service for local groups to schedule a time to talk about community policing and neighborhood-specific information with Dublin Police officers. Dublin residents can ask officers to join their group meetings, such as homeowners and civic associations, to present theft prevention techniques and important public safety information.
Please fill out the below form or contact Becky Metcalf with the Dublin Police at bmetcalf@dublin.oh.us or 614.410.4804.
Do you represent your neighborhood association?
Please fill out the contact form and the City’s Communications & Marketing team will keep you informed.
April 28
Oct. 27
Oct. 28
Agenda | Presentation | Survey
April 15
Agenda | Presentation | Meeting Survey Results
Oct. 18
Agenda | Presentation
April 19
Agenda | Presentation
Oct. 18
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Civic associations are the most informal of the three types of residential groups. Common activities for Civic Associations include, but are not limited to:
Although participation in civic associations cannot be required, residents can voluntary pay dues to help support neighborhood projects.
A homeowners’ association is a formal organization that is made up of property owners and is responsible for the governance, maintenance, and upkeep of the neighborhood.The groups establish a declaration of covenants and a set of bylaws must be filed in office of the recorder with the county. To view any of Dublin’s Homeowner Association’s declarations, check with the county recorder for that neighborhood.
The declaration and bylaws include such information as:
By law, all condominiums in Ohio must have a “unit owner association” that includes all owners. The condo association as they are commonly called, starts with a declaration outlining common areas and other details that is placed on file with the county recorder’s office. The association is managed by a board of directors. The board of directors can enact budgets, levy assessments, as well as enforce the declaration, bylaws, and rules of the condo. The board also has the right to make rules and manage the common areas and to grant permission to alter a limited common area or element.
In order to support faster response and better tracking of requests, the City of Dublin uses JustFOIA to collect, respond to and manage public information requests.
JustFOIA is a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) online application that helps streamline the open records request process for the community and improve efficiencies in getting requested information quickly and accurately.
The application lets community members submit requests for all city records, including police reports. Commonly requested information includes accident reports, copies of resolutions and body-camera video.
We are and always have been a proud local democracy. In our service, we strive to provide the best quality of life and environment in which our residents and businesses can thrive. We seek to ally our proud traditions with the best innovations of the future.
Dublin, Ohio, is the most sustainable, connected and resilient global city of choice.
Integrity, Respect, Communication, Teamwork, Accountability, Positive Attitude & Dedication to Service.
The City of Dublin operates under a set of seven key core values: integrity, respect, communication, teamwork, accountability, positive attitude and dedication to service. Staff members use these seven values as the basis for daily decision-making, including the decisions that go into the budget process.
We are members of an organization that succeeds because of teamwork, dedication, diversity and the innovative spirit of all of our members. Together, we build a culture of trust, service, mutual respect, inclusion and open communication. We hold ourselves mutually accountable to promote and sustain continuous learning and to develop the learning potential that exists in every member of our team.
The complete Dublin City Code is available online at American Legal City Ordinance website. Information staff at the Dublin branch of the Columbus Metropolitan Library are available to help navigate this website.
This Revised Charter, as adopted on March 19, 1996, became effective on July 4, 1996.
The Zoning Code for Dublin is Chapter 153 of the Dublin Code of Ordinances. The Zoning Code sets land development requirements and establishes different uses within individual districts. Zoning regulations address the physical development of a site, such as building height, lot requirements, setbacks from lot lines, minimum numbers of parking spaces, sign types and sizes, and other related regulations.
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Dublin, Ohio 43017
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