HomeMy WebLinkAbout193-11 RESOLUTIONRESOLUTION NO. 193-11
A RESOLUTION TO AMEND THE RULES OF ORDER AND PROCEDURE
OF THE FAYETTEVILLE CITY COUNCIL TO CLARIFY THE PROCEDURE
OF PRESENTING AGENDA ITEMS DURING CITY COUNCIL MEETINGS
BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
FAYETTEVILLE, ARKANSAS:
Section 1: That the City Council of the City of Fayetteville, Arkansas hereby amends
Rule A. 6. Public Notification and Participation by repealing it in its entirety and enacting a
replacement Rule A. 6. Public Notification and Rule A. 7. Presentation of Agenda Items as
shown below:
"6. Public Notification
The City will go further than legally required in order to inform
citizens of the items to be considered by the City Council. The
means used may include press releases or advertisements in a local
newspaper, special notice to citizens who have shown a direct
interest in matters to be considered, Government Channel
announcements and presentation, and agenda copies available at City
Council meetings.
"7. Presentation of Agenda Items
(a) Agenda additions. A new item which is requested to be added to
the agenda at a City Council meeting should only be considered if it
requires immediate City Council consideration and if the normal
agenda setting process is not practical. The City Council may only
place such new item on the City Council meeting's agenda by
suspending the rules by two-thirds vote. Such agenda addition shall
be heard prior to the Consent Agenda.
(b) Consent Agenda. Consent Agenda items shall be read by the
Mayor and voted upon as a group without discussion by the City
Council. If an Alderman wishes to comment upon or discuss a
Consent Agenda item, that item shall be removed and considered
immediately after the Consent Agenda has been voted upon.
Page 2
Resolution No. 193-11
(c) Old business and new business.
(i) Presentations by staff and applicants. Agenda items shall
be introduced by the Mayor and, if an ordinance, read by the City
Attorney. City staff shall then present a report. An agenda applicant
(city contractor, rezoning or development applicant, etc.) may
present its proposal only during this presentation period, but may be
recalled by an alderman later to answer questions. Staff and
applicants may use electronic visual aides in a City Council meeting
as part of their presentation.
(ii) Public comments. Public comment shall be allowed for all
members of the audience on all items of old and new business and
subjects of public hearings. No electronic visual aid presentations
shall be allowed, but the public may submit photos, petitions, etc. to
be distributed to the City Council. If a member of the public wishes
for the City Clerk to distribute materials to the City Council before
its meeting, such materials should be supplied to the City Clerk's
Office no later than 9:00 A.M. on the day of the City Council
meeting. Any member of the public shall first state his or her name
and address, followed by a concise statement of the person's position
on the question under discussion. Repetitive comments should be
avoided; this applies to comments made previously either to the City
Council or to the Planning Commission when those Planning
Commission minutes have been provided to the Aldermen. All
remarks shall be addressed to the Mayor or the City Council as a
whole and not to any particular member of the City Council. No
person other than the Aldermen and the person having the floor shall
be permitted to enter into any discussions without permission of the
Mayor. No questions shall be directed to an Alderman or city staff
member except through the Mayor.
(d) Courtesy and respect. All members of the public, all city staff
and elected officials shall accord the utmost courtesy and respect to
each other at all times. All shall refrain from rude or derogatory
remarks, reflections as to integrity, abusive comments and statements
about motives or personalities. Any member of the public who
violates these standards shall be ruled out of order by the Mayor,
must immediately cease speaking and shall leave the podium.
Section 2: That the City Council of the City of Fayetteville, Arkansas hereby renumbers
current subsections 7. and 8. of Rule A. City Council Meetings to 8. and 9.
PASSED and APPROVED this 1st day of November, 2011.
APPROVED:
By:
ATTEST:
Page 3
Resolution No. 193-11
SOND E. SMITH, City Clerk/Treasurer
AGENDA REQUEST
FOR: COUNCIL MEETING OF NOVEMBER 1, 2011
FROM:
KIT WILLIAMS, CITY ATTORNEY
SONDRA SMITH, CITY CLERK
DON MARR, CHIEF OF STAFF
ORDINANCE OR RESOLUTION TITLE AND SUBJECT:
A Resolution To Amend The Rules Of Order And Procedure Of The Fayetteville City
Council To Clarify The Procedure Of Presenting Agenda Items During City Council
Meetings
APPROVED F # ' AGENDA:
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Departmental Correspondence
ARKANSAS
www_accessfayetteville.org
LEGAL
DEPARTMENT
TO: Mayor Jordan
City Council
CC: Don Marr, Chief of Staff
Sondra Smith, City Clerk
FROM: Kit Williams, City Attorne
DATE: October 11, 2011
Kit Williams
City Attorney
Jason B. Kelley
Assistant City Attorney
RE: Clarification of Rules of Order and Procedure concerning order of
agenda item presentation and disallowing members of the public to use
electronic visual aide presentations
Pursuant to the Chief of Staffs presentation at the Agenda Session and the
Mayor's and Aldermen's comments, Don, Sondra and I have drafted an
amendment to your Rules of Order and Procedure #A. 6. Public Notification and
Participation. First, we broke up this too long and too many subjects subsection
into two: 6. Public Notification and 7. Presentation of Agenda Items. I only
slightly redrafted Public Notification.
In Presentation of Agenda Items subsection (a), I presented what has been
your unwritten policy for adding an item to your Agenda during a City Council
meeting including the necessity for the statutory two-thirds vote to suspend the
rules. In subsection (b) I explained your established policy for Consent Agenda
items.
Subsection (c) is for old and new business items. We broke it into two parts.
The first is for presentations by city staff and the Agenda item applicant which
allows the use of electronic visual aides and requires the applicant (city contractor,
rezoning or development applicant) to present its proposal before the public
comment period.
The second part is for Public Comments and does not allow electronic visual
aides to be presented. The public may continue to submit photos, petitions, etc. to
you at the meeting through the City Clerk. It also provides that the pubic should
submit materials to the City Clerk's Office by 9:00 A.M. of the day of the meeting
if the public desires that the City Clerk's Office reproduce such materials before
the meeting for you.
Finally subsection (d) Courtesy and respect is only a slight redrafting of the
existing language which now applies to everyone and requires that someone ruled
out -of -order by the Mayor for violating your rules must leave the podium.
We recommend that the City Council approve these amendments to Rule A.
City Council Meetings, 6. Public Notification and Participation.
2
1rie i e
ARKANSAS
www.accessfayettevilie.org
MEMORANDUM
TO: City Council
THRU: Mayor Lioneld Jordan
FROM: Sondra Smith
Don Marr
Lindsley Smith
THE CITY OF FAYETTEVILLE, ARKANSAS
ADMINISTRATION
113 West Mountain
Fayetteville, AR 72701
P (479) 575-8330 F (479) 575,8257
RE: Staff Recommendation for Public Comment Period Audiovisual Use
DATE: September 8, 2411
Fayetteville has an enviable reputation for open, vigorous, and robust public debate that assures the
expression of diverse viewpoints and opinions on issues of public concern. The Mayor and City Council
welcome and encourage community participation in all public meetings, and we appreciate local residents
who share their views on public business before the Council. Our process has been for the Mayor, Staff,
Council or any Elected Official to place an agenda item before the City Council. The meetings are then
broken into various steps per agenda topic: Those areas are:
• Agenda Item Introduced (Read by the Mayor and City Attorney)
• Staff Report, and Supplemental Presentations to facilitate understanding of the proposed agenda item.
(Most often presented by Staff, but sometimes deferred to a Service Provider and/or Contractor to
highlight Services Offered, Performance, or Report on Project Progress, and other times deferred to a
Developer/Engineering Firm/Architect to review a proposed Development Project or Re -Zoning
Request.)
• Council Questions
• Public Comment Period with Council Questions
• Council Discussion
• Council Vote
This memo addresses specifically the Public Comment Period. Some cities have imposed limits on public
comment during City Council meetings. North Little Rock, for example, requires speakers to register in
advance of meetings and limits each speaker to three minutes. Other cities limit total public comment to 30
minutes on any agenda item. We have not done that, because we are dedicated to open government and the
full expression of all points of view on any issue.
Telecommunications Device for the Deaf TDD (479) 521-1316 113 West Mountain - Fayetteville, AR 72701
THE CITY OF FAYETTEVILLE, ARKANSAS
To assure that as many citizens can speak as desire to do so and that all opinions are considered, we have
adopted Rules that allow meetings of the City Council to effectively conduct City business in a fair and
timely manner, while assuring that residents attending meetings of the City Council can be heard in a fair,
impartial and respectful manner, free from abusive, distracting, intimidating, or dilatory behavior.
We value the voice of our citizens directly communicating their opinions and concerns. Of course, if a
resident is unable to attend a meeting or would rather not give testimony at the meeting, he or she is
encouraged to mail, fax, or email a letter or statement to be distributed to the Mayor and each member of the
City Council for their consideration. Additional data can be attached or submitted in advance of meetings,
including charts, graphs, photographs, or other audiovisual and digital formats.
Citizens choosing to address the Council directly during meetings can also submit supporting materials to the
Council in advance, but the public comment period is reserved for citizen comments to the Mayor and
Council, rather than playing audiotapes, videotapes, slide presentations, compact disks, digital video disks, or
other materials that distract from testimony and disrupt or delay the timely presentation of views. Citizens
wishing to share such materials can provide sufficient copies to the City Clerk for advance distribution to the
Mayor and Council members.
Should the Council agree with these points, I will be glad to request the City Attorney to draft a Resolution
reflecting your consensus on this issue.
Telecommunications Device for the Deaf TDD (479) 521-1316 113 West Mountain - Fayetteville, AR 72701
RESOLUTION NO.
A RESOLUTION TO AMEND THE RULES OF ORDER AND PROCEDURE
OF THE FAYETTEVILLE CITY COUNCIL TO CLARIFY THE PROCEDURE
OF PRESENTING AGENDA ITEMS DURING CITY COUNCIL MEETINGS
BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
FAYETTEVILLE, ARKANSAS:
Section 1: That the City Council of the City of Fayetteville, Arkansas hereby
amends Rule A. 6. Public Notification and Participation by repealing it in its entirety
and enacting a replacement Rule A. 6. Public Notification and Rule A. 7. Presentation
of Agenda Items as shown below:
"6. Public Notification
The City will go further than legally required in order to inform
citizens of the items to be considered by the City Council. The
means used may include press releases or advertisements in a local
newspaper, special notice to citizens who have shown a direct
interest in matters to be considered, Government Channel
announcements and presentation, and agenda copies available at City
Council meetings.
"7. Presentation of Agenda Items
(a) Agenda additions. A new item which is requested to be added to
the agenda at a City Council meeting should only be considered if it
requires immediate City Council consideration and if the normal
agenda setting process is not practical. The City Council may only
place such new item on the City Council meeting's agenda by
suspending the rules by two-thirds vote. Such agenda addition shall
be heard prior to the Consent Agenda.
(b) Consent Agenda. Consent Agenda items shall be read by the
Mayor and voted upon as a group without discussion by the City
Council. If an Alderman wishes to comment upon or discuss a
Consent Agenda item, that item shall be removed and considered
immediately after the Consent Agenda has been voted upon.
(c) Old business and new business.
(i) Presentations by staff and applicants. Agenda items shall
be introduced by the Mayor and, if an ordinance, read by the City
Attorney. City staff shall then present a report. An agenda applicant
(city contractor, rezoning or development applicant, etc.) may
present its proposal only during this presentation period, but may be
recalled by an alderman later to answer questions. Staff and
applicants may use electronic visual aides in a City Council meeting
as part of their presentation.
(ii) Public comments. Public comment shall be allowed for all
members of the audience on all items of old and new business and
subjects of public hearings. No electronic visual aid presentations
shall be allowed, but the public may submit photos, petitions, etc. to
be distributed to the City Council. If a member of the public wishes
for the City Clerk to distribute materials to the City Council before
its meeting, such materials should be supplied to the City Clerk's
Office no later than 9:00 A.M. on the day of the City Council
meeting. Any member of the public shall first state his or her name
and address, followed by a concise statement of the person's position
on the question under discussion. Repetitive comments should be
avoided; this applies to comments made previously either to the City
Council or to the Planning Commission when those Planning
Commission minutes have been provided to the Aldermen. All
remarks shall be addressed to the Mayor or the City Council as a
whole and not to any particular member of the City Council. No
person other than the Aldermen and the person having the floor shall
be permitted to enter into any discussions without permission of the
Mayor. No questions shall be directed to an Alderman or city staff
member except through the Mayor.
(d) Courtesy and respect. All members of the public, all city staff
and elected officials shall accord the utmost courtesy and respect to
each other at all times. All shall refrain from rude or derogatory
remarks, reflections as to integrity, abusive comments and statements
about motives or personalities. Any member of the public who
violates these standards shall be ruled out of order by the Mayor,
must immediately cease speaking and shall leave the podium.
Section 2: That the City Council of the City of Fayetteville, Arkansas hereby renumbers
current subsections 7. and 8. of Rule A. City Council Meetings to 8. and 9.
PASSED and APPROVED this 1St day of November, 2011.
APPROVED: ATTEST:
By: By:
LIONELD JORDAN, Mayor SONDRA E. SMITH, City Clerk/Treasurer
A.
‘1,
RULES OF ORDER AND PROCEDURE
OF THE FAYETTEVILLE CITY COUNCIL
CITY COUNCIL MEETINGS
1. Regular Meetings
Revised February 17, 2009
The City Council shall meet in regular session on the first and third Tuesday of each
month at 6:00 P.M. When a holiday or general election occurs on any such Tuesday, the
regular meeting shall be held on the following Thursday at the same hour unless
otherwise provided for by motion. The regular meeting time may be rescheduled by the
City Council in special circumstances, but when so done the change must be made far
enough in advance to allow normal public notification.
2. Location
The place of City Council meetings shall be in the City Council Chambers in the City
Administration Building unless another place has been previously set by the City
Council.
3. Special Meetings
Special meetings may be called by three or more Aldermen or by the ]Mayor.
Notification of a special meeting, including specific items to be considered, shall be at
least two hours prior to the meeting. Such notification shall be by personal service to
each member or by telephone, specifying time and place of meeting.
4. Executive Session
An executive -session may be requested by any member of the City Council or the Mayor.
A majority vote by the City Council is required to convene in executive session.
Executive sessions will be permitted only for the purpose of considering the employment,
appointment, promotion, demotion, disciplining, or resignation of any public officer or
employee.
5. Quorum
A majority of the City Council shall be necessary to constitute a quorum .to do business.
The concurring vote of a majority of those attending a meeting shall be sufficient to pass
procedural motions except a Motion to Suspend the Rules which requires six affirmative
votes. Ordinances and Resolutions require five affirmative votes to pass.
6. Public Notification and Participation
The City will, if necessary, go further than legally required in order to inform citizens of
the items to be considered by the City Council. The means used will include
advertisements in a local newspaper, special notice to citizens who have shown a direct
interest in matters to be considered, and agenda copies available at City Council
meetings.
rt
1
Revised February 17, 2009
Members of the audience will be offered an opportunity to speak on all questions before
the City Council. Any public member shall first state his or her name and address.,
followed by a concise statement of the person's position on the question under
discussion. Repetitive comments should be avoided; this applies to comments made
previously either to the City Council or to the Planning Commission when those Planning
Commission minutes have been provided to the Aldermen. All remarks shall be
addressed to the City Council as a whole and not to any particular member of the City
Council.. No person other than the Aldermen and the person having the floor shall be
permitted to enter into any discussions without permission of the Mayor. No questions
shall be asked an Alderman or city employee except through the Mayor.
All Members of the public are requested to accord the utmost courtesy to members of the
City Council, to other members of the public appearing before the City Council and to
city staff, and are asked to refrain at all times from rude or derogatory remarks,
reflections as to integrity, abusive comments and statements as to motives and
personalities.
Srn.ek rig Pr ohjbited
There will be no smoking allowed in the City Council Chambers during City Council
meetings:
Cell Phones Azad Pagers
Cell phones must be turned off or put in silent mode and not used within the City Council
Chambers during City Council meetings. Pagers must be turned off or put in silent mode
within the City Council Chambers during City Council meetings. These restrictions also
apply during Agenda Sessions in Room 326.
1 UTIES.ANt PRIVILEGES OF ALDERMEN AT CITY COUNCIL MEETINGS
Seating
Members shall occupy the respective seats in the City Council Chambers assigned by
position "nuni'ber. The Mayor (oi Assistant Mayor in the Mayor's absence) shall be seated.
near the center of the Aldermen's table.
Conduct
During City Council meetings, City Aldermen shall preserve order and decorum and shall
neither by conversation or otherwise delay or interrupt the proceedings. Neither shall
they refuse to obey the orders of the Mayor or the rules of the City Council.
Every member of' the City Council desiring to speak shall address the chair and, upon
recognition by the Mayor, shall confine herself or himself to the question under debate
and shall avoid all personalities and indecorous language. A City Council member once
recognized shall not be interrupted while speaking unless called to order by the Mayor,
unless a point :of order is raised by another member or, unless the member chooses to
yield to questions from another member.
2
City Council Rules of Order and Procedure
Resolution 193-11
November 1, 2011
Page- 1 -of9
RULES OF ORDER AND PROCEDURE
OF THE FAYETTEVILLE CITY COUNCIL
A. CITY COUNCIL MEETINGS
1. Regular Meetings: The City Council shall meet in regular session on the first and third
Tuesday of each month at 6:00 P.M. When a holiday or general election occurs on any such
Tuesday, the regular meeting shall be held on the following Thursday at the same hour unless
otherwise provided for by motion. The regular meeting time may be rescheduled by the City
Council in special circumstances, but when so done the change must be made far enough in
advance to allow normal public notification.
2. Location: The place of City Council meetings shall be in the City Council Chambers in the
City Administration Building unless another place has been previously set by the City
Council.
3. Special Meetings: Special meetings may be called by three or more Aldermen or by
the Mayor. Notification of a special meeting, including specific items to be
considered, shall be at least two hours prior to the meeting. Such notification shall be
by personal service to each member or by telephone, specifying time and place of
meeting.
4. Executive Session: An executive session may be requested by any member of the City
Council or the Mayor. A majority vote by the City Council is required to convene in
executive session. Executive sessions will be permitted only for the purpose of
considering the employment, appointment, promotion, demotion, disciplining, or
resignation of any public officer or employee.
5. Quorum: A majority of the City Council shall be necessary to constitute a quorum to do
business. The concurring vote of a majority of those attending a meeting shall be sufficient to
pass procedural motions except a Motion to Suspend the Rules which requires six affirmative
votes. Ordinances and Resolutions require five affirmative votes to pass.
6. Public Notification: The City will go further than legally required in order to inform citizens
of the items to be considered by the City Council. The means used may include press
releases or advertisements in a local newspaper, special notice to citizens who have shown a
direct interest in matters to be considered, Government Channel announcements and
presentation, and agenda copies available at City Council meetings.
7. Presentation of Agenda Items:
a. Agenda additions: A new item which is requested to be added to the agenda at a City
Council meeting should only be considered if it requires immediate City Council
consideration and if the normal agenda setting process is not practical. The City Council
may only place such new item on the City Council meeting's agenda by suspending the
rules by two-thirds vote. Such agenda addition shall be heard prior to the Consent
Agenda.
City Council Rules of Order and Procedure
Resolution 193-11
November 1, 2011
Page -2-of9
b. Consent Agenda: Consent Agenda items shall be read by the Mayor and voted upon as
a group without discussion by the City Council. If an Alderman wishes to comment upon
or discuss a Consent Agenda item, that item shall be removed and considered
immediately after the Consent Agenda has been voted upon.
c. Old business and new business:
i) Presentations by staff and applicants: Agenda items shall be introduced by the
Mayor and, if an ordinance, read by the City Attorney. City staff shall then present a
report. An agenda applicant (city contractor, rezoning or development applicant,
etc.) may present its proposal only during this presentation period, but may be
recalled by an alderman later to answer questions. Staff and applicants may use
electronic visual aides in a City Council meeting as part of their presentation.
ii) Public comments: Public comment shall be allowed for all members of the audience
on all items of old and new business and subjects of public hearings. No electronic
visual aid presentations shall be allowed, but the public may submit photos, petitions,
etc. to be distributed to the City Council. If a member of the public wishes for the
City Clerk to distribute materials to the City Council before its meeting, such
materials should be supplied to the City Clerk's Office no later than 9:00 A.M. on the
day of the City Council meeting. Any member of the public shall first state his or
her name and address, followed by a concise statement of the person's position on the
question under discussion. Repetitive comments should be avoided; this applies to
comments made previously either to the City Council or to the Planning Commission
when those Planning Commission minutes have been provided to the Aldermen. All
remarks shall be addressed to the Mayor or the City Council as a whole and not to
any particular member of the City Council. No person other than the Aldermen and
the person having the floor shall be permitted to enter into any discussions without
permission of the Mayor. No questions shall be directed to an Alderman or city staff
member except through the Mayor.
d. Courtesy and respect: All members of the public, all city staff and elected officials
shall accord the utmost courtesy and respect to each other at all times. All shall refrain
from rude or derogatory remarks, reflections as to integrity, abusive comments and
statements about motives or personalities. Any member of the public who violates these
standards shall be ruled out of order by the Mayor, must immediately cease speaking and
shall leave the podium.
8. Smoking Prohibited: There will be no smoking allowed in the City Council Chambers
during City Council meetings.
9. Cell Phones and Paters: Cell phones must be turned off or put in silent mode and not used
within the City Council Chambers during City Council meetings. Pagers must be turned off
or put in silent mode within the City Council Chambers during City Council meetings. These
restrictions also apply during Agenda Sessions in Room 326.
B. DUTIES AND PRIVILEGES OF ALDERMEN AT CITY COUNCIL MEETINGS
1. Seating: Members shall occupy the respective seats in the City Council Chambers assigned
by position number. The Mayor (or Assistant Mayor in the Mayor's absence) shall be seated
near the center of the Aldermen's table.
City Council Rules of Order and Procedure
Resolution 193-11
November I, 201
Page - 3 - of 9
2. Conduct: During City Council meetings, City Aldermen shall preserve order and decorum
and shall neither by conversation or otherwise delay or interrupt the proceedings. Neither
shall they refuse to obey the orders of the Mayor or the rules of the City Council.
Every member of the City Council desiring to speak shall address the chair and, upon
recognition by the Mayor, shall confine herself or himself to the question under debate and
shall avoid all personalities and indecorous language. A City Council member once
recognized shall not be interrupted while speaking unless called to order by the Mayor, unless
a point of order is raised by another member or unless the member chooses to yield to
questions from another member.
If a member is called to order while he or she is speaking, the member shall cease speaking
immediately until the question of order is determined. If ruled to be not in order, the member
shall remain silent or shall alter his or her remark so as to comply with the rules of the City
Council.
All members of the City Council shall accord the utmost courtesy to each other, to city
employees, and to members of the public appearing before the City Council, and shall refrain
at all times from rude or derogatory remarks, reflections as to integrity, abusive comments
and statements as to motives and personalities. City Council members shall confine their
questions as to the particular matters before the City Council and in debate shall confine their
remarks to the issues before the City Council.
3. Financial interest: No member of the City Council with a direct or indirect financial
interest in any items before the City Council shall participate in the discussion of or voting on
such matter.
4. Votinr_: Every member present when a question is put to a vote shall vote either "yes" or
"no", except that a member may abstain from voting if he or she has not participated in the
preceding discussion of the question and if that member has previously stated the reason for
the abstention. Except for a question necessary to clarify the meaning of the motion,
resolution or ordinance being voted upon, no questions or comments by members of the City
Council including the Mayor shall be made during the voting on the pending motion,
resolution or ordinance. The Aldermen will vote at City Council meetings in the order of
their position number, but with a progressively different position voting first at each meeting.
5. Roll CaII: Upon every vote the affirmative and negative votes shall be called and shall be
recorded on every motion, resolution and ordinance; however, items which may be approved
by motion, or contracts and leases which can be approved by resolution, may be grouped
together and approved simultaneously with one roll call, under a "Consent Agenda.
C. MAYOR & VICE MAYOR
1. Mavor:
a. General Power to Preside and Vote: The Mayor is the presiding officer and ex officio
president of the City Council. The Mayor may vote to establish a quorum or to pass an
ordinance, resolution or motion if the Mayor's vote is needed for passage. The Mayor
does not have the right to vote for an Emergency Clause on an ordinance. An Emergency
Clause requires six affirmative votes by aldermen to pass.
City Council Rules of Order and Procedure
Resolution 193-11
November 1, 2011
Page -4-of9
b. Mayor's Veto Power: The Mayor has the power to veto any ordinance, resolution or
order, or part thereof, adopted by the City Council within five (5) days (Sundays
excluded) of the City Council vote. Before the next City Council meeting, the Mayor
shall file in the City Clerk's office a written statement of reasons for the veto. At the first
City Council meeting following the veto, the City Council can override the veto by two-
thirds majority (6 affirmative votes).
2. Vice Mayor: The City Council shall at the time of organizing, in public session, elect one of
its members as Vice Mayor. Any Alderman may nominate himself or herself or any other
member of the City Council for Vice Mayor, and no second of a nomination is required.
Each Alderman shall vote by naming his or her choice by voice vote if there is more than one
nominee for a pbsition. A majority vote of the City Council shall be required for election. In
the absence of the Mayor, the Vice Mayor shall preside at the City Council meeting.
3. Privileges of the Vice Mayor: The Vice Mayor acting as the Mayor may move, second and
debate from the chair and shall not be deprived of the rights and privileges of being a member
of the City Council by reason of her or his acting as the Vice Mayor.
D. PROCEDURES AND PARLIAMENTARY RULES
1. Agenda: The City Council's agenda order shall be coordinated by the Mayor. All items for
discussion or action at the regular council meeting shall be included in a Tentative Agenda
provided to Aldermen prior to an Agenda Session where the Aldermen shall determine the
final arrangement of the Agenda. Any item the Mayor or an Alderman wishes to include on
the Final Agenda that was not included on the Tentative Agenda may only be added to the
Final Agenda during the Agenda Session. At the regular meeting of the City Council, the
Council, by majority vote, may rearrange the order of the Agenda. An item may be added to
the Agenda at the City Council meeting only by a Motion to Suspend the Rules:
2. Precedence of Motions: The City Council shall follow the precedence and classification of
motions as given in the most recent edition of the Arkansas Municipal League's `Procedural
Rules for Arkansas Municipal Officials.' In the event a matter is not covered by the
`Procedural Rules for Arkansas Municipal Officials,' the most recent edition of Robert's
Rules of Order shall apply. On questions of appeal, a majority of those present is required to
overturn a ruling by the chair."
3. Motions to be Stated by the Chair/Withdrawal: When a motion is made and seconded, it
shall be stated by the Mayor before debate. After being stated by the Mayor, a motion may
not be withdrawn by the mover without the consent of the member seconding it and approval
of the City Council.
4. Reconsideration: After the decision of any question, any member of the majority may
request a reconsideration of any action at the same or the next succeeding meeting; provided,
however, that a resolution authorizing or relating to any contract may be reconsidered at any
time before final execution thereof. A motion to reconsider requires a simple majority for
passage. After a motion for reconsideration has once been acted on, no other motion for
reconsideration thereof shall be made without unanimous consent.
5. Readings: All ordinances shall be read aloud at three different meetings unless the City
Council votes to suspend the rules.
City Council Rules of Order and Procedure
Resolution 193-11
November 1, 2011
Page - 5 - of 9
The following guidelines for reading ordinances are recommended:
• After the ordinance's first reading, aldermen may briefly point out potential concerns or
benefits from the proposed ordinance, but should refrain from attempting to persuade
each other or arrive at a final consensus.
• Unless there is clearly no opposition or concern about the ordinance, it should be read
and open for public discussion during at least two City Council meetings.
• Complex ordinances that need further clarification or drafting work should be referred to
the Ordinance Review Committee.
6. Items Tabled Indefinitely: Any item tabled indefinitely may be taken from the table by
majority vote of the City Council during the calendar year in which it was tabled indefinitely.
All items tabled indefinitely and remaining on the table at the end of the calendar year shall
be deemed denied and rejected for appellate and all other purposes on December 31' and
shall not be considered by the City Council in the future unless brought forward as a new
item.
E. INTERNAL BOARDS, COMMITTEES, COMMISSIONS AND APPOINTMENTS
1. Membership Of Internal Boards, Committees, Commissions And Appointments
a. Standing City Council Committees: The four standing committees of the City Council
are: Nominating, Ordinance Review, Streets, and Water and Sewer. Each committee
shall have four aldermen members appointed by the Mayor in January after every regular
election. All Aldermen shall serve on two of these four committees. Each committee
shall elect a chairman and vice chairman during the first committee meeting after the
aldermen are appointed.
b. Other committees (See also Section H. Citizens Committees)
c. Aldermen may volunteer or request to serve on any of the various other committees
which have Alderman slots. The Mayor may appoint Aldermen to the other committees
pursuant to their request.
d. Appeal Right To City Council
e. Any Alderman who is dissatisfied with his or her committee assignments can appeal to
the whole City Council who can determine by majority vote which Alderman will be
appointed to a specific committee.
f. Ad Hoc Committees.
g. Ad hoc committees may be appointed either by the Mayor or by a majority vote of the
City Council to study special problems and projects of the City.
2. Notification and Attendance: All Aldermen, representatives of the news media who have
requested notification, and other persons who have shown a direct interest in matters to be
considered at a committee meeting shall be notified of City Council committee meetings.
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Committee meetings shall be held when possible at times that allow all members of the
committee to attend. In order for a committee to make an official recommendation to the
City Council, a majority of the committee members must agree on that recommendation.
Aldermen who are not members of a particular City Council committee may generally
participate in the meeting of that committee except for voting on committee
recommendations, but the chairperson may rule otherwise.
3. City Council Representation on Other Governmental Groups: When it is necessary to
appoint an Alderman to an external board, commission or committee, selection of that
Alderman shall be made by a majority vote of the City Council. That selection shall be made
by nomination and vote in a public session. Any Alderman may nominate himself or herself
or (any other member of the City Council), and no second is required. Each Alderman shall
vote by naming his or her choice by voice vote if there is more than one nominee for a
position. A majority vote of the City Council shall be required for election.
F. MAYOR RELATIONSHIP
1. Definition of Authority: In exercising its legislative responsibilities, the City Council may
approve policy which represents broad statements of its intentions, approve plans and
programs, and manage the financial aspects of the city through its budgetary powers. The
Mayor is empowered to hire capable personnel within the approved wage and salary policy,
to plan and establish schedules and to train, supervise and terminate employees.
2. Definition of Responsibilities: The Mayor has the principal responsibility for directing the
operations of the city government, and for advising and assisting the City Council in its
deliberations. In connection with this latter responsibility, the City Council expects and
requests the Mayor shall furnish the City Council with whatever data, information and
material it may need to properly carry out its functions in an informed manner. The City
Council also expects the Mayor to abide by the Code of Ethics of the International Mayor's
Assoc iation.
3. City Council/Mayor Cooperation: Efficient management of the city can exist only through
mutual understanding and complete cooperation between the City Council and the Mayor.
The Mayor's performance cannot be of the best unless the Mayor is given the latitude to
exercise independent judgment in executing policies of the City Council. The City Council
acknowledges that obligation and gives the Mayor the latitude of judgment and discretion,
and expects faithful performance in carrying out the policies of the City Council.
While open communication between the City Council and City personnel is encouraged, it
shall be understood that administrative authority for the management of the City rests with
the Mayor. Members of the City Council should refrain, as individuals, from giving specific
direction or instruction to City personnel pertaining to the discharge of assigned duties.
G. CODE OF ETHICS
1. General: Members of the City Council and the Mayor occupy positions of public trust. All
business transactions of such officials dealing in any manner with public funds, either directly
or indirectly, must be subject to the scrutiny of public opinion both as to the legality and to
the propriety of such transactions.
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2. Conflict of Interest: Members of the City Council and the Mayor shall refrain from making
use of special knowledge or information before it is made available to the general public;
shall refrain from making or influencing decisions involving business associates, customers,
clients, competitors and immediate family members and shall comply with all lawful actions,
directives and orders of duly constituted municipal officers as such may be issued in the
normal and lawful discharge of the duties of these municipal officers. Nothing herein,
however, shall serve to deny the Members of the City Council and the Mayor of the legal
rights and privileges available to all Fayetteville citizens.
3. Responsibility of All Citizens: Members of the City Council and the Mayor shall conduct
themselves so as to bring credit upon the city as a whole and so as to set an example of good
ethical conduct for all citizens of the community. The Members of the City Council and the
Mayor shall bear in mind at all times their responsibility to the entire electorate, shall refrain
from actions benefiting special interest groups at the expense of the city as a whole, and shall
do everything in their power to ensure equal and impartial law enforcement throughout the
city without respect to race, creed, color, or the economic or social position of individual
citizens.
In an effort to allow the public full knowledge of financial and personal interests, the
Members of the City Council and the Mayor are expected to disclose annually all real estate
holdings in Fayetteville and the Fayetteville planning area, and any business or financial
interest which could affect or be affected by decisions of the City Council. Such disclosure
should be made in writing to the City Clerk in January of each year.
H. CITIZEN COMMITTEES
1. Authorization by the City_ Council: The City Council may authorize citizen advisory
boards, committees and commissions to assist the City Council in discharging its
responsibilities more effectively. Authorization will be made by majority vote of the City
Council.
2. Selecting of Members: The Nominating Committee shall have the responsibility of
coordinating the selection process of members for the citizen advisory groups prior to the
final City Council decision. The objectives of the selection process shall be as follows: To
provide a broad diversity of qualified individuals for service on the appointed bodies; and to
provide an opportunity for participation in city affairs by interested citizens.
The selection process shall follow these procedures:
a. Periodic news releases and articles, generally at least two weeks in advance of
appointments, requesting interested individuals to notify the City Clerk's office of their
interest in being considered for appointment. Application forms should be completed by
each person who expresses an interest in a position.
b. City Council members, city staff members and interested individuals and organizations
who know of qualified persons should encourage them to apply for appointment.
c. Cable television should be used to notify citizens of vacancies in citizen committees.
d. The City website, accessfayetteville.org, shall list vacancies in citizen committees.
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e. Any person who has served two consecutive full terms on any City commission or board
shall not be eligible for reappointment to the same commission or board until one full
term of office has expired, unless there is an insufficient number of qualified applicants
to fill all vacancies. Service of a partial term shall not count against the two terms that
are allowed.
Prior to any appointment, the City Clerk's office will circulate to the full City Council copies
of applications of the individuals on file for the appointive body. Aldermen may recommend
applicants or offer comments to the Nominating Committee prior to their scheduled meeting.
The Nominating Committee will narrow the list of prospective appointees to no more than
two individuals for each position. This decision will be made in an open meeting. The
recommendations will be submitted to the full City Council for final decision. The
committee's first choice may be indicated. All positions shall be decided by majority vote of
the City Council. In instances where there is more than one nominee for a position, either by
Nominating Committee recommendation or by other nominations, each Alderman shall vote
by naming his or her choice for that position. The City Council will act officially on all
appointments in public session.
L APPOINTMENT OF NEW ALDERMAN:
The City Council shall vote on the appointment of any replacement to fill a vacancy on the City
Council. The Council may meet in executive session, after taking applications, and decide if
personal interviews are necessary and set dates for interviews. After interviewing any or all
candidates, the Council may again meet in executive session on the matter. The City Council will
then vote in an open public session and the candidate with the majority of votes will be appointed
the new alderman at the following meeting.
J. ORIENTATION OF NEW ALDERMEN:
1. Orientation Meeting scheduled: The City Council, Mayor, City Attorney, City
Clerk/Treasurer and appropriate City Staff shall meet with and conduct one or more
orientation sessions with newly elected Aldermen in December after each General Election or
within one month after a Special Election in which
a. New alderman is elected: Each newly elected alderman shall attend the orientation
session(s).
2. Content of Orientation. The City Council, Mayor and other members of the orientation
group shall explain:
a. Rights and duties of aldermen;
b. Organizational structure of city government;
c. Role of the Aldermen Committees;
d. How to initiate Resolutions and Ordinances;
e. The purpose and procedure for the City Council Agenda session;
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f. Reasons to approve or disapprove land use and development issues;
g.
Council tours to view and discuss land proposed for rezoning or development;
h. City Council Rules of Order and Procedure;
1 Freedom of Information Act requirements.
K. ONGOING ORIENTATION:
a. Within the first week of an alderman's term, the administration should provide an
administrative and human resources orientation to include issuing parking permits, fobs,
and other necessary equipment for the aldermen, as well as assistance for the completion
of all necessary state and federal documents.
b. Within the first quarter of an alderman's term, the administration should arrange for a
budget overview and tours of all major city facilities and functional areas.