Here is how to reach them
650 S. Griffin St., Dallas, TX, 75202
The City of Dallas Office of Special Events helps people get permits for outdoor events, street festivals, parades, and movie filming. They handle permits for special events, commercial filming, neighborhood markets, streetlight banners, and First Amendment activities. If you want to host an event or film something in Dallas, you need to get permission from this office first. They also register commercial promoters who organize events in the city.
Who can use this
Anyone planning outdoor events or commercial filming in Dallas
Cost
Varies by permit type
The City of Dallas home page has information about employment, elected officials, online services and city departments for residents and visitors.
The City of Dallas checks all restaurants and food places to make sure they are clean and safe. They give each place a score from 0-100. Higher scores mean the place follows good food safety rules. You can see restaurant scores online or ask the restaurant to show you their latest report. If you get sick from food at a restaurant, you can report it to the city. The city inspects restaurants every 6 months to keep food safe for everyone.
This service helps people resolve warrants for unpaid Dallas city tickets. If you missed court or didn't pay a ticket, you may have a warrant. You can pay online, by phone, by mail, or in person. You can also request a payment plan, post bond, or hire a lawyer. Each violation adds a $50 fee when it becomes a warrant. You can check your citation status and balance online.
Dallas Animal Services helps pets and pet owners in Dallas. They run an animal shelter where you can adopt pets, surrender pets you can't keep, and get help finding lost pets. They offer pet licensing, microchipping, and spay/neuter services. You can also volunteer or foster animals. They enforce pet laws and investigate animal cruelty. Their goal is to save 90% of healthy pets that come to their shelter through their Dallas90 campaign.
A little simplification would be the first step toward rational living, I think.
Eleanor Roosevelt.