Thanks for your answers. They are geo-blocking access to their permit websites, utility payment websites, etc.
First, have you contacted the city to request that your access to the site be unblocked? That is the first step to take.
Even when IP
regions have been blocked from a website - which is generally done for data security reasons or to stop unwanted spam (and this is legal) - access can still be granted (or unblocked) for select IP addresses in that blocked region when shown that these specific addresses are not a security threat to the system.
Cities throughout the U.S. have experienced cyberattacks by cybercriminals who infect the selected computer systems with ransomware. The systems are restored only when a demanded ransom is paid. A few cities in Florida and elsewhere in the country experienced these costly attacks in the past and many cities now use GeoBlocks to restrict access to either the city websites as a whole or only to certain vulnerable pages of the websites.
If memory serves me, FreeAdvice temporarily used GeoBlocking at one time to halt the rampant postings of spam coming from countries overseas. This worked well.
What is weighed with GeoBlocking for a website is the potential harm of blocking access to the site from innocent visitors against the risk of opening the site up to cybercriminals.