Redlands Investment Corporation, the quality of the city's water, next year's meeting schedule and renaming a Birkdale street will be discussed at Wednesday's council meeting.
The meeting will not be privy to findings in Redland Investment Corporation's first quarterly report, which will be tabled and discussed behind closed doors.
The corporation was set up in June to help council get better returns on sales of its surplus land and to buy strategically-placed land.
It made headlines last month after Redland City Bulletin revealed a list of council-owned parks tipped for rezoning under the draft City Plan.
Some of those properties were transferred to the corporation to investigate their potential uses.
The city's four water supply schemes all got clean bills of health in Redland Water's annual report to be tabled at the meeting.
The report said water supplies on the mainland, Dunwich, Amity Point and Point Lookout were "100 per cent compliant" over the 2014-15 year.
However, there were 200 complaints from people who suspected water from the mainland made them ill, even though the report said there were no confirmed cases of illness due to the city's water.
There were 2170 complaints about discoloured water from the mainland and 530 gripes about taste and odour.
There were 1260 complaints about the taste and odour of water from the Point Lookout supply.
Council said investigation of each complaint found no public health risks.
The next internal review of the city's Drinking Water Quality Management Plan will be before July 1, next year.
Wednesday's agenda includes a reduced appeals list with the absence of the long-running Joe George appeal against a 2009 council refusal of a neighbourhood centre and residential estate.
Also up for debate will be the renaming of Birkdale's Surman Street into distinct east and west segments.
Council parkland and a 4m-wide concrete stormwater drain separates the two sections of road.