e/Township (Pennsylvania)

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has glosseng: A township in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania is a unit of local government (see civil township) subordinate to a county, and distinct from cities and boroughs. Townships were established based on convenient geographical boundaries and vary in size from six to forty square miles (15–104 km²). There are two classifications of townships, first class and second class. To become a first class township, townships of the second class must have a population density of and voters must approve the change of classification in a referendum. However, many townships have chosen to remain second class townships even though they meet the population density requirements to become first class townships.
lexicalizationeng: township
instance ofc/Townships in Pennsylvania

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Language: (ISO 639-3 code, e.g. "eng" for English)


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