Pursuant to NRS 241.020, the Agenda for the has been posted at the following locations:  
Although no longer required under NRS 241.020, the agenda has been physically posted at the following  
locations: Washoe County Courthouse-Second Judicial District Court (75 Court Street), Reno City Hall - Clerk's  
Office (1 E. 1st Street), Sparks Justice Court (1675 East Prater Way).  
Support documentation for the items on the agenda, provided to the Washoe County Board of Commissioners,  
is available to members of the public at the County Manager’s Office (1001 E. 9th Street, Bldg. A, 2nd Floor,  
Reno, Nevada) Washoe 311 (washoe311@washoecounty.gov), (775) 328-2000 and on Washoe County’s website  
Pursuant to NRS 241.020, the Agenda for the Board of Fire Commissioners has been physically posted at  
Truckee Meadows Fire Protection District Administration building located at 3663 Barron Way, Reno , Nevada  
89511 and electronically posted at https://tmfpd.us/agendas-minutes/ and https://notice.nv.gov.  
Although no longer required under NRS 241.020, the agenda has been physically posted at the following  
locations: Washoe County Courthouse-Second Judicial District Court (75 Court Street), Reno City Hall - Clerk's  
Office (1 E. 1st Street); Sparks Justice Court (1675 East Prater Way) and Washoe County Administration Building  
(1001 E. 9th Street, Bldg. A)  
Support documentation for the items on the agenda, provided to the Board of Fire Commissioners is available  
to members of the public at the District's Admin Office (3663 Barron Way, Reno, Nevada) Sandy Francis,  
Administrative Assistant II, phone (775) 328-6124 and on the Truckee Meadows Fire Protection District's  
We begin by acknowledging that we gather today on the ancestral homelands of the Waší·šiw (Washoe), Numu  
(Northern Paiute), Newe (Western Shoshone), Nuwu (Southern Paiute), and Pipa Aha (Mojave), the original  
caretakers of the land that we now call Nevada. Washoe County, formally named after the Washoe people in  
1861, continues to be a gathering place and home for Indigenous Peoples, and we recognize their rich history  
and deep connections to these lands. May we honor their past, present, and future stewardship by  
remembering that the health of the land and its people are inextricably linked.