HomeMy WebLinkAbout10D Amend Bylaws O� P ��+P
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v � 4646 Dakota Street SE
Prior Lake, MN 55372
� CITY COUNCIL AGENDA REPORT
MEETING DATE: January 13, 2014
AGENDA #: 10D
PREPARED BY: Frank Boyles, City Manager
PRESENTED BY: Frank Boyles
AGENDA ITEM: CONSIDER APROVAL OF RESOLUTIONS AMENDING CITY COUNCIL
AND ADVISORY COMMITTEE BYLAWS AS RECOMMENDED BY THE
BYLAWS AND COMPENSATION COMMITTEE
DISCUSSION: Introduction
Councilors Morton and Soukup as the Bylaws and Compensation Commit-
tee, together with the City Attorney's office have reviewed the City Council
and advisory committee bylaws as is the Committee's role from year to
year. This agenda item seeks City Council approval of the proposed revi-
sions.
Hi StOry
The City Council established the Bylaws and Compensation Committee to
periodically recommend revisions in City Council compensation and vari-
ous City committee related bylaws.
In accordance with their mission, the Committee reviewed compensation
figures from other communities and advisory committee bylaws. At the
City Council's direction the Committee also reviewed City Council bylaws
to address the Consent Agenda question raised in late 2013.
Current Circumstances
Compensation
The Bylaws and Compensation Committee concluded that the annual
salaries paid to the Mayor and City Councilors is comparable for similar
metropolitan area communities and, therefore, recommends no adjust-
ment. If the council desires to modify the compensation then statute
provides that the ordinance amendment revising council compensation
must be adopted before the local election but may not take effect until
after the election.
City Council Bylaws
The City Council directed that the Committee review the question of
who should be able to remove or add items to the Consent Agenda.
The City Attorney prepared language which, on Section 401, page 6
provides, "A member of the public may request that the City Council
consider removing an item from the Consent Agenda following the pro-
cedures set forth in 401.5." Items so removed from the Consent Agen-
da would be taken up by the City Council following New Business rather
than immediately after the Consent Agenda vote. I believe that the ra-
tionale was that persons who are present for Old or New Business
items should not be delayed because items are removed from the Con-
sent Agenda, which by their nature are intended to be comparatively
minor and non-controversial.
Phone 952.447.9800 / FaY 952.447.4245/ www.cityofpriorlake.com
All Other Bylaws
In the case of the Bylaws for the Community Safety, Communication
and Technology, Lakes, Parks and Traffic Safety advisory committees,
the following identical changes were made:
Section 206, page 2, the staff liaison acts as secretary for the com-
m ittee.
Section 208, page 3, "lack of connection to a business" is removed
as one of the rationale for eliminating a member.
Section 404, page 4, the staff liaison will prepare the agenda, in-
cluding reports, etc.
Section 405, page 5, the staff liaison will prepare the minutes and is
responsible for their maintenance and filing.
Section 406, page 6, 3. The staff liaison should be contacted before
the meeting if there are questions or information desired.
Section 406, page 6, 4. The secretary may call the meeting to order
in the event that both the president and vice-president are absent.
Section 406, page 8, 7. The chair should consult with the staff liai-
son if and when a public hearing is to be rescheduled.
Section 503, page 9, the staff liaison is to maintain the record of all
resolutions, numbering and execution thereof.
Certain committee bylaws recommend changes unique to that particular
body as follows:
Community Safety Advisory Committee
Section 202, page 1, duties were revised so the Committee (and not
the precursor task force) be empowered to recommend priorities for
the 2030 Vision and Strategic Plan.
Lakes Advisory Committee
Section 202, page 2, the composition of the LAC will have a mini-
mum of two members who are non-riparian property owners.
Parks Advisory Committee
Section 202.5, page 1, the duties are to assist the staff and not the
Council in researching and identifying CIP funds.
Traffic Safety Advisory Committee
Section 202, page 1, added duty 5. "To recommend signage
changes."
Section 203 clarifies that the City Engineer, Fire Chief and Police
Chief are ex-officio, non-voting members.
ISSUES: The revisions are intended to make the bylaws more consistent with one
another and reflective of the way the City Council would like the commit-
tees to operate. Staff members have been asked to review these revisions
and advise if they have concerns.
FINANCIAL None.
IMPACT:
ALTERNATIVES: The City Council has the following alternatives:
1. Adopt all bylaws revisions by adopting the approving resolution.
2. Adopt modified revisions by amending the approving resolution.
3. Take no action and provide staff direction.
RECOMMENDED Alternative #1.
MOTION:
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O .� PRIp�
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" �' CITY OF PRIOR LAKE, MINNESOTA
A � t I� , NESp� P
Mayor and City Council
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Bylaws
Adopted on May 27, 1986
Revised:
January 1991 October 2002 ��,
January 1993 March 2006 ',
May 1993 May 2006 '
January 1994 June 2007
January 1995 November 2008
January 1996 September 2009
January 1997 January 2011
May 1997 June 2012
January 1998 March 2013
March 1998 January, 2014�°^���
January 1999 �-�
April 2000
FRANK BOYLES, CITY MANAGER
TABLE OF CONTENTS
' Section # To ic Page #
p
Section 100 Pur ose � 3
p
Regular, Special and Emergency Meetings and Work
Section 200 Sessions 3
Section 300 Annual Meetin � 5
9
Section 400 Meetin A enda Format and Consent A enda � 5
9 9 g
Section 500 Quorum and Votin Procedures � 8
� 9
Section 600 Minute Pre aration I y
p
tion 700 Roles at Meetin 10
�ec g
Section 800 Motions Resolutions Ordinances 11 '
, ,
Section 900 Public Hearin Format � 2
� g
Section 1000 Committee Structure 14
Section 1100 Sus ension of Rules � 7
p
Section 1200 Travel and Reimbursement for Ex enses 17
� p
Section 1300 Statement of Ethics � 9
Section 1400 Cit Council Reco nition 20
Y 9
A endix A T es of Motions 22
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SECTION 100:
PURPOSE
101: PURPOSE: The purpose of the Prior Lake City Council Bylaws is to provide the
members of the City Council with a set of operation procedures designed to guide them
during the Council meetings, and to establish a code of ethics and conduct.
102: The Bylaws shall be considered and adopted at the annual meeting of the Prior Lake
City Council. The Annual Meeting is the first regular meeting in January. Bylaws can be
reviewed and amended at any meeting other than the annual meeting. Any changes or
amendments to the Bylaws shall follow this procedure:
102.1 A motion to amend is proposed.
102.2 A second to the motion is required.
102.3 Discussion on the Bylaws amendment occurs.
102.4 The vote is taken. A simple majority is required to pass the Bylaws at the annual
meeting. A super majority is required at any meeting other than the annual
� meeting -unless otherwise provided by these bylaws, State Statute or City Code.
103: These Bylaws shall govern the procedures of the Prior Lake City Council immediately
upon adoption. If an issue is raised which is not covered in the Bylaws, the procedures
to respond to the issue shall be governed by Robert's Rules of Order Revised. Failure to
comply with these Bylaws or Robert's Rules of Order shall not invalidate Council action
unless at the time the action is taken a member of the Council raises a parliamentary
objection and advises the Council of the particular rule which was not observed. If these
Bylaws conflict with State or Federal law, or the City Code the State or Federal law or
City Code, as applicable, shall govern.
SECTION 200:
REGULAR, SPECIAL AND EMERGENCY MEETINGS, AND WORK SESSIONS
201: Except as otherwise provided in the Minnesota Open Meeting Law, M.S.A. Chapter 13D,
all meetings of the City Council, including regular, special, emergency, work sessions,
and adjourned meetings shall be open to the public.
202: REGULAR MEETINGS: The City Council shall establish a regular meeting schedule.
Notice of all meetings, both regular and special, shall follow the requirements of the
Minnesota Open Meeting Law. All regular meetings shall be held in the designated City
Council Chambers.
When a regular meeting is projected to fall on an official holiday, the City Council shall
reschedule the meeting for the following business day. The City Manager may cancel or
reschedule a regularly scheduled Council meeting when the amount of business pending
does not warrant a meeting.
The City Manager shall post any decision to reschedule or cancel a meeting. The
procedures provided for in the Open Meeting Law shall be followed. In addition, notice
shall be posted on the City website.
In a situation where the City Manager learns prior to a scheduled meeting that there will
not be a quorum of the Council available to attend a scheduled meeting; or when
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weather conditions develop or are forecast prior to a scheduled meeting that make
attendance at the meeting impractical, imprudent, or dangerous for the Council
members, staff and public, the City Manager may cancel a meeting. When a meeting is
cancelled based on such contingencies, the City Manager shall use all means
reasonably available to announce the cancellation; however, posted notice shall suffice.
A City Council member shall inform the City Manager when an absence is planned or
pending prior to the meeting. ,,
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203: SPECIAL MEETINGS: Special meetings may be called by the Mayor or any two (2)
members of the City Council by writing, filed with the City Manager. The City Manager
shall then provide notice to all members of the time and place of the meeting. Notice
shall be posted at City Hall and provided to any member of the public or news media
who have requested notification in writing. All notice for special meetings shall comply
with the Minnesota Open Meeting Law.
204: The agenda for a regular meeting will be prepared by the City Manager and shall be
available the Wednesday before the following Monday meeting, except in the event of a
holiday during agenda preparation week in which case the agenda will be available on
Thursday. The agenda shall include the items set forth in Section 400 - Meeting Agenda
Format and Consent Agenda. Copies of the agenda, supporting documentation and
minutes from the previous meeting will be made available to the public once they are
delivered to the Council members.
204.1 A copy of the agenda materials will be available in the Council Chambers for
public inspection at the time of the meeting.
204.2 Agenda materials will also be available online through the City's website on the
Friday preceding the City Council regular meeting.
204.3 If distribution of an agenda item or materials relating to the agenda item is
delayed and not distributed as part of the Council agenda package, the agenda
shall indicate when the materials will be distributed. Once distributed to the
members of the Council the materials shall be included in the agenda materials
on the City website and with the agenda materials for public inspection at the
time of the meeting.
205: EMERGENCY MEETINGS: The Mayor or City Manager may call an emergency
meeting. Notice of the emergency meeting shall be given by either telephone, fax,
electronic communication or written notice to members of the City Council. Notice shall
be provided to each news medium and individual that has filed a written request for
notice. Posted or published notice of an emergency meeting shall be in accordance with
the requirements of the Minnesota Open Meeting Law. An "emergency" meeting is a
special meeting called because of circumstances that require immediate consideration
by the City Council.
206: WORK SESSIONS: The City Manager may schedule work sessions subject to Council
approval. The purpose of the work session is to afford the City Council, City Manager
and City staff the opportunity to discuss policy matters in a more informal environment.
Public input will not be allowed unless specifically scheduled in the agenda or requested
by the Council at the meeting. The work session may be canceled at the discretion of the
City Manager.
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SECTION 300:
ANNUAL MEETING
301: The first regularly scheduled meeting in January shall be referred to as the annual
meeting. Regular business may be conducted at this meeting and the following
organizational business is required unless deferred by the Council for a specific reason:
301.1 Swear in newly elected officials, if applicable.
301.2 Appoint Acting Mayor. At its first meeting each year the Council shall appoint an
acting mayor from the Council members. The Mayor shall recommend a council
member to serve as acting mayor and the Council will affirm or deny the
recommendation. The acting mayor shall perform the duties of mayor during the
disability or absence of the mayor from the City or, in case of vacancy in the
office of mayor, until a successor has been appointed and qualifies. MN Stat.
412.121. The acting mayor, in the absence of the mayor, is known as the Mayor
Pro Temp. ("Mayor for the Time")
301.3 Appoint the official newspaper.
301.4 Designate the official bank.
301.5 Designate the Local Board of Appeals and Equalization.
301.6 Appoint an auditing firm.
301.7 Appoint a fiscal consultant.
301.8 Designate an emergency management director.
301.9 Designate a health officer.
301.10 Appoint Council members to serve as liaisons to the various City advisory
committees.
� 301.11 Approve -City Council appointed committee bylaws and procedures.
301.12 Approve City Council bylaws.
301.13 Designate an animal control officer.
301.14 Adopt the yearly fee schedule.
301.16 Appoint the Special Assessment Committee.
301.17 Other appointments as may be appropriate.
302. Items normally scheduled for the annual meeting may be considered at an earlier
meeting at the discretion of the City Council.
SECTION 400:
MEETING AGENDA FORMAT AND CONSENT AGENDA
401: Business of the meeting will be conducted according to the agenda prepared by the City
Manager. The City Manager will prepare an agenda that follows this order:
401.1 Call to Order and Pledge of Allegiance
401.2 Public Forum
• The City Council Agenda sheet shall include the following statement: "The
public forum is intended to afford the public an opportunity to address
concerns to the City Council. The public forum will be no longer than 30
minutes in length and each presenter will have no more than ten (10) minutes
to speak. Topics of discussion are restricted to City governmental topics
rather than private or political agendas. Topics may be addressed at the
public forum that are on the agenda except those topics that have been or
are the subject of a scheduled public hearing or public information hearing
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before the City Council, the Economic Development Authority (EDA),
Planning Commission, or any other City Advisory Committee. A member of
the public may request that the City Council consider removinq an item from
the Consent Aqenda following the procedure set forth in Sectian 401.5. The
City Council may discuss but will not take formal action on public forum
presentations. Matters that are the subject of pending litigation are not
� appropriate for the forum."
• Every individual who addresses the Council at the forum must first be
recognized by the presiding officer and then shall state his/her name and
address before beginning any comments. The City Manager shall be the
timekeeper for the Forum so that each speaker receives an appropriate
amount of time.
• No Council action may take place during the forum. However, council
members may express their views or reaction to a presentation and may ask
questions of the presenter.
• At the conclusion of the public forum, the Council may, by motion and
majority vote unless otherwise provided by these bylaws, State Statute or
City Code, indicate its interest that the subject presented at the Public forum
be placed on a subsequent City Council agenda.
• Items to be considered on the agenda may be addressed at the public forum
consistent with the limitations set out in Section 401.2 of these Bylaws.
• Presentations at the public forum must be consistent with Section 901.6 of
these Bylaws.
• If any council member deems that the comments are not germane to issues
within the purview of the City Council, the council member may appeal to the
presiding officer to request the speaker yield the podium. Further, any council
member may object to the appeal to the presiding officer to request a speaker
yield the podium, in which case, the presiding officer shall put the matter to a
vote of the Council.
• Public forums are included as part of the regular meeting minutes and
cablecast live.
• The presiding officer shall have the authority to adjourn the public forum,
censure a speaker or take other action as deemed appropriate if there is a
breach of decorum.
401.3 Approval of Agenda
• The City Council may, by motion, add, delete or change the order of an item
to be considered on the agenda except it may not begin a public hearing
before the time specified in the public notice.
401.4 Approval of Minutes
401.5 Consent Agenda
• With the adoption of these Bylaws, a Consent Agenda is created. The
purpose of the "Consent Agenda" is to group items of a routine and non-
controversial nature for consideration under one motion. There wi�l be no
separate discussion of items placed on the "Consent Agenda." If discussion
of an item on the "Consent Agenda" is desired, any member of the Council
may request the item be removed from the Consent Agenda and considered
separately.
• The City Manager shall determine what items may be considered routine and
non-controversial; and therefore appropriate for inclusion as a Consent
Agenda item. To provide the City Manager with guidance, the following types
of items tend to be routine and non-controversial: grant deeds, grants of
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easements, adoption of ordinances and resolutions previously considered by
the city council, investment report, quarterly budget report, treasurer's report,
animal control report, building inspection report, non-controversial license
requests, standard development contracts, calis for bid, reports of
administrative actions and proposals, leases and agreements previously
approved in principle, reports for filing or setting dates for public hearings,
approval of payment of contracts, approval or denial of claims, award of bids,
and other items of a like nature that the City Manager considers routine and
non-controversial.
• The City Council Agenda sheet shall include the following statement: "Those
items on the Council Agenda which are considered routine and non-
controversial are included as part of the Consent Agenda. Unless the Mayor
or a council member specifically requests that an item on the Consent
Agenda be removed and considered separately, Items on the Consent
Agenda are considered under one motion, second and vote. Any item
removed from the consent agenda shall be placed on the council agenda
under "Removed Consent Agenda Items."
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401.�6 Presentations and Proclamations
• The City Manager may schedule presentations and proclamations before the
City Council giving preference to presenters and topics that relate to City
governmental business.
401.�7 Public Hearings
401.�8 Old Business
401.a-89 New Business
401.10 Removed Consent Aqenda Items
o Any item removed from the Consent Aqenda shall be placed here for
separate Council discussion and consideration.
401.11 Other Business - Including Community Events and Council member Reports
• Members of the City Council and staff may present items under Other
Business that will be discussed and deliberated for the first time. These items
should, for the most part, be informational. The City Council has the authority
to request action or take a formal position on the item(s); however, this shall
be done on an item-by-item basis.
401.12 Adjournment
402: CITY MANAGER TO DETERMINE AGENDA: It shall be the responsibility of the City
Manager to prepare and decide the City Council agenda. The City Manager shall be
responsible for overseeing and reviewing the preparation of all agenda items.
402.1 If a member of the public requests to appear before the City Council or requests
an item to be placed on the Council agenda, the City Manager shall determine
whether the item should appropriately be considered by the City Council at a
regular meeting.
402.2 If the City Manager determines that an item should not be placed on a City
Council agenda, the City Manager may recommend that the individual appear at
a City Council Forum.
402.3 The City Manager shall maintain a list of items scheduled to appear on meeting
agendas. The City Manager shall endeavor to manage the anticipated length of
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Council meetings in order to assure each matter receives full and fair
consideration, and that the meeting can be concluded by 11 p.m.
402.4 The City Council maintains final authority to approve, disapprove or modify the
agenda.
403: The Mayor or Acting Mayor shall preside over all Council meetings. The presiding officer
may call a recess at any time during the meeting. Except for recesses for closed
meetings, the presiding officer shall announce the length of the recess. The purpose of
the recess is to provide the City Council, City staff and the public attending the meeting
with a short rest period from the Council business. The presiding officer may also
recess or adjourn a meeting if a member(s) of the public is behaving in a disruptive
manner or using inappropriate language.
404: Unless waived by motion, second and majority vote, no agenda item shall be initiated
after 11 p.m. If a motion to extend the meeting is tendered, it shall include the time the
meeting is to be adjourned. A meeting, once extended, must be adjourned at or prior to
the time specified in the approved motion to extend.
SECTION 500:
QUORUM AND VOTING PROCEDURES
501: At each meeting, a majority of all the members elected (3 out of 5) shall constitute a
quorum for the transaction of business.
502: The voting options available to the City Council when a vote has been initiated are: "aye"
— an affirmative vote; "nay" - a negative vote. A council member may abstain only when
they have a disqualifying conflict of interest as determined by the City Attorney.
503: Three votes shall be necessary for approval of any ordinance unless otherwise provided
by these bylaws, State Statute or City Code. A majority vote of inembers present at a
meeting, which must be at least a majority vote of a quorum, is necessary for the
approval of all general motions and resolutions unless otherwise provided by these
bylaws, State Statute or City Code.
504: When a question is put before the Council by the presiding officer, every member
present shall vote. If a member intends to abstain from voting based upon a disqualifying
conflict of interest, the council member must advise the presiding officer of the nature of
the conflict. Otherwise, any council member, who being present when his or her name is
called fails to vote upon any then pending proposition, shall be recorded as having voted
in the affirmative unless otherwise provided by these bylaws, State Statute or City Code.
505: VOTING PROCEDURE: An agenda item shall be put before the City Council by the
Mayor for its consideration. The agenda item should be considered in the following
manner:
505.1 The City Manager or the Manager's designee will provide the City Council with a
description of and presentation on the item and the action requested of the
Council.
505.2 Following the presentation Council members may ask questions of City staff or
provide information concerning the agenda item. If a council member intends to
recognize a member of the public for the purpose of asking a question it should
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be done so at this point and not once the matter has been formally put before the
Council by motion and second.
505.3 Discussion of the agenda item by the Council requires a motion and second to
formally put the matter before the CounciL
505.4 Council members may, at this point, ask further questions of staff, present their
views and engage in a dialogue with other members of the Council. The Mayor
should manage the discussion by calling upon and recognizing Council members
to speak.
505.5 After discussion concludes, the presiding officer shall call for a vote on the
pending motion.
505.7 When a vote is to be taken, the presiding officer shall first call for the ayes, then
the nays. The votes of each member shall be recorded in the Minutes. If a
member of the City Council is absent during a vote, the member's vote for the
official Minutes shall read as "absent."
SECTION 600:
MINUTE PREPARATION
601: The City Manager is responsible for the preparation of the minutes of the meeting. The
meeting proceedings will be audio-recorded and written minutes will be prepared. The
written minutes of the meeting as approved by the City Council are the official record of
the meeting. The audio recording is intended to supplement the minutes for the purpose
of an "on the record review" in a judicial proceeding. A DVD recording may also be
prepared for the purpose of rebroadcast of the meeting on the City's public access cable
channel. The following finro requirements for "minute" preparation shall be adhered to:
601.1 All motions typed in capital letters.
601.2 List the names of the City Council Members after their vote on each motion.
602: The official minutes shall be prepared and presented to the City Council at the next
regularly scheduled meeting as part of the agenda packet. The text of the minutes shall
consist of official Council business conducted while the Council is in session. Any
comments made at a meeting that are made prior to the start of or after adjournment of
the meeting, or during any recess, shall not be made part of the minutes. The City
Council shall review the minutes and the presiding officer shall call for any additions or
corrections. If an addition or correction is presented, the change must be specific as to
place, paragraph, and sentence, if applicable. The official minutes shall be corrected to
reflect the change.
603: Approval of the minutes requires a motion, second and a majority vote of the members
present at the meeting unless otherwise provided by these bylaws, State Statute or City
Code. Council members who were not present at the meeting for which the minutes are
being approved shall abstain from voting on the action to approve the minutes.
604: The City Manager is responsible for the maintenance and filing of the minutes.
604.1 The approved minutes shall be retained as a permanent record of the Council
meeting.
604.2 The approved minutes of the past twelve months of Council meetings shall be
available on the City Website.
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604.2 All audio and DVD recordings will be retained in accordance with the City's data
retention schedule.
605: A verbatim transcript of all or any part of a meeting may be requested by a member of
the general public. A fee for the transcript shall be in accordance with the City's official
fee schedule unless the City has, for its own purposes, previously prepared a verbatim
transcript, in which case the individual requesting a copy of the transcript shall pay the
City's standard photocopy charge.
SECTION 700: I
ROLES AT MEETING
701: All meetings of the City Council shall comply with the Minnesota Open Meeting law,
which requires meetings (with few exceptions) of all municipal bodies to be open to the
public. The City Council of Prior Lake encourages citizen attendance. Public attendance
at meetings of the Council helps to develop a more enlightened, interested and
participatory citizenry.
702: Any council member may recognize a member of the public for the purpose of asking
question(s) relating to the matter under consideration by the Council. Members of the
City Council must use judgment and discretion when recognizing members of the public
to answer a question during the time they have the floor. ,
703: Members of the Council may also ask questions of staff in order to clarify their
understanding of the relevant information necessary to make an informed judgment. In
preparation for Council meetings, Council members may want to consider contacting the
City Manager, in sufficient time prior to the meeting, to advise the question they intend to
ask in order for the City Manager to attempt to bring the additional information to the
Council meeting.
704: The Mayor has the same voting powers as do the other members of the Council. The
Mayor may vote on all motions and he/she does not have any extra voting powers if the
vote results in a tie, except as may be authorized by state statute.
705: The Mayor shall be the presiding officer at all meetings. If the Mayor is absent, the
Acting Mayor shall preside at the meeting. If the Mayor and Acting Mayor are absent, the
City Manager shall call the meeting to order and preside until such time the City Council
elects among itself a member to preside at the meeting. The presiding officer, at all
times, shall be allowed to vote in the same manner as all other members of the Council.
706: The presiding officer has two unique powers: (1) interpreting and applying the rules of
procedure; and (2) recognizing speakers from the audience.
707: The presiding officer is responsible for maintaining order at the meetings.
708: The presiding officer shall recognize all speakers from the audience, except when a
member of the Council has the floor and they expressly recognize a member of the
audience to answer questions relating to the issue under consideration.
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709: The presiding officer has the responsibility to facilitate discussion by the City Council.
This may occur in a variety of ways, including:
709.1 Interpret and apply rules of procedure.
709.2 Decide whether motions are properly made.
709.3 Decide whether motions are in order.
709.4 Decide whether questions of special privilege ought to be granted.
709.5 Decide when to recognize speakers.
709.6 Call for motions or recommend motions.
709.7 Expel disorderly persons from the meeting.
709.8 Enforce speaking procedures.
710: All members of the City Council may make and second motions, participate in
discussions and vote whenever a vote is taken.
711: As individuals, Council members have no administrative authority. When acting as a �
Council, however, the legislative body has authority over the appointed City Manager.
712: The City Manager shall attend all meetings of the City Council with the right to take part
in the discussions, but not to vote. In the absence of the City Manager, the Assistant City
Manager or designated department head shall serve as the City Manager's
representative at the meeting.
713: Department Heads may attend all meetings. Department Heads shall attend the
meetings when directed by the City Manager.
714: A memorandum report or brief explanation of each agenda item shall be included in the
materials that accompany the agenda. The information provided by staff should serve to '
inform the City Council on the subject matter under discussion. The information should
explain in detail the staff comments or work, or state that staff will present the necessary
details and comments at the meeting. If an agenda item requires more than a majority
vote, the agenda report shall specify the votes needed to pass the matter under
consideration.
SECTION 800:
MOTIONS, RESOLUTIONS, ORDINANCES AND PROCLAMATIONS
801: The City Council may take formal action in any of three methods - motions, resolutions
or ordinances. All motions in any form require a second unless otherwise stated herein.
All votes of the City Council in any of the three methods require a majority vote of those
members present at a meeting for approval unless otherwise provided by these bylaws,
State Statute or City Code.
802: MOTIONS: A motion is a matter of parliamentary procedure. Motions are a formal
method of bringing business before the Council and for stating propositions on which a
decision will have to be made. It also can be used in the form of a proposal so that the
City Council can act by resolution or by ordinance. Motions may be used to introduce
resolutions and ordinances, to amend them, and to take any other actions concerning
them. Motions may also be used for action on simple administrative acts, such as
approving the monthly department reports, or directing the City Manager.
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803: Every motion shall be stated in full and be reasonably understood before it is submitted
to a vote by the presiding officer.
804: RESOLUTIONS: Resolutions are normally used to reflect the City Council position on
items of business that do not require or warrant an ordinance. Resolutions may be
enacted on a motion, which has been duly seconded, and receives a majority vote of
those members present at the meeting unless otherwise provided by these bylaws, State
Statute or City Code. The City Manager will maintain a record of all resolutions and will �
be responsible for the proper numbering and execution of each resolution adopted by
the City Council.
804.1 Notwithstanding other instances where resolutions may be needed, resolutions
are required to authorize the execution of any contract exceeding $20,000 or as
otherwise specified in the City's purchasing policy.
805: ORDINANCES: An ordinance is a law governing or regulating some activity that is
properly within the power of the Council to regulate. Ordinances shall be used when the
City Council action regulates or governs people or property. All police regulations for
public health, morals, economic well-being, welfare and safety must be passed in
ordinance form. Ordinances may also be used to provide permanent rules for the
organization and operation of the City Council. Ordinances may be enacted upon a
motion and a second. A majority of the members present must vote in the affirmative for
the ordinance to pass unless otherwise provided by these bylaws, State Statute or City
Code i
806: An ordinance shall become effective upon passage and publication unless otherwise
specified in the ordinance. Consistent with State Statute the Council may authorize
publication of a summary of the ordinance rather than its full text. The Council, by
motion, must approve and authorize the proposed summary. Proof of publication shall
be attached to and filed with every ordinance.
807: All ordinances shall be reviewed by the City Attorney prior to presentation to the Council.
The ordinance format includes: title; number; enacting clause; the contents or body; the
penalty; the closing; the attestation, publication date and the effective date. The City
Manager will maintain a record of all ordinances and will be responsible for the Prior
Lake City Code and codification requirements. The Council may authorize the City
Manager to contract for codification services.
808: PROCLAMATIONS: Proclamations are used to show the City Council's support for a
cause, person or organization. Proclamations may be read aloud and presented by the
Mayor on behalf of the City Council.
SECTION 900:
PUBLIC HEARING FORMAT
901: Public Hearings shall be conducted in the following manner:
901.1 The presiding officer announces the agenda item that is the subject of the public
hearing.
901.2 It is the intent of the City Council to open all public hearings at the time indicated
in the public hearing notice, or as soon as possible thereafter. From a practical
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standpoint, not all hearings can be opened at their designated time. The Council
may delay the start of a hearing until the pending business is acted upon.
However under no circumstances may a public hearing be opened prior to the
time specified in the notice and published in the official newspaper.
901.3 Staff and/or a consultant make a presentation or report on the subject matter of
the public hearing.
901.4 At the conclusion of any presentation or remarks by staff and/or a consultant, the
presiding officer asks the City Council members if they have questions of the
staff or consultant.
901.5 The presiding officer requests a motion and second from a member of the
Council to open the public hearing and calls for a vote.
901.6 The presiding officer declares the public hearing opened, announces the time
and then proceeds to ask for citizen input, comments and questions. '�
901.6.1 Members of the public, interested parties or their authorized
representatives may address the City Council orally. If the speaker
intends to present written or hard copy materials to support their
presentation to the Council, they must provide the staff, at the time of
their presentation or before, nine (9) copies of the original for
� distribution to Council members, -the City Manager, and City staff.
The materials will be included in the public record. If the speaker
intends to present audio or video materials to support their
presentation to the Council, such materials must be in an electronic
format that is compatible with the City's existing equipment. An audio
or video presentation may not introduce testimony from any person
other than the author. The electronic materials must be submitted to
the staff by 12:00 p.m. noon of the day of the meeting.
901.6.2 If unable to attend the meeting, members of the public, interested
parties or their authorized representatives may submit written
comments and supporting materials. Nine (9) copies of the comments
and materials must be submitted to the City staff prior to the Council
meeting. The comments and materials will be distributed to Council
members, the City Manager, and City staff. The written comments
and materials will become part of the record, but will not be read aloud
at the meeting
901.6.3 If unable to attend a meeting, members of the public, interested
parties or their authorized representatives may submit testimony to
the City Council using a prerecorded audio or video communication.
An audio or video communication must be in an electronic format that
� is compatible -with the City's existing equipment. An audio or video
presentation may not introduce testimony from any person other than
the author. The author of the recorded testimony must provide nine
(9) copies to the City staff at least seven (7) calendar days prior to the
meeting in order to allow staff an opportunity to view the presentation
and prepare a written summary. The recorded testimony and
summary prepared by the staff will be provided to the City Council as
part of their Council agenda package. The audio or visual
communication may be used by individual Council members in
preparation for the Council meeting, but will not be played during the
meeting. The presentation and the summary will become a part of the
public record. Generally, Council agenda packages are distributed to
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members of the City Council on the Wednesday preceding the
meeting.
901.7 After all persons have been heard, the presiding officer will ask whether there are
any other persons in attendance who want to be heard on the matter pending. If
there is no other testimony, the presiding officer requests a motion. There are
two (2) possible motions, seconds and votes:
• A motion and second to close the public hearing. Once the vote is taken, the
public hearing is closed. The presiding officer announces, for the record, the
time the public hearing is closed; or
• A motion and second to continue the public hearing to a date certain. The
presiding officer, in consultation with the City Manager and Council members,
shall select and announce a time and date certain for the continued public
hearing. No additional publication or notice are needed if a hearing is
continued to a later specified date. No public hearing may be continued more
than once without re-notice, publishing the time, date, location and subject of
the public hearing.
901.8 Discussion of the subject matter of the public hearing by the Council requires a
motion and a second to formally put the matter before the Council. The City
Council addresses the subject matter through deliberation. The Council may ask
questions of the staff and City Attorney. If the public hearing has been closed
Council members should refrain from calling upon a member of the public except
for the sole purpose of asking a question that can be answered by a"yes" or "no"
response. ,
I
901.9 If the public hearing has been closed, rather than continued until a date certain,
the City Council may take action on the subject matter.
SECTION 1000:
COMMITTEE STRUCTURE
1001: TYPES OF COMMITTEES
1001.1 Special City Council Committees. The Council may from time to time establish
special committees by designating two (2) Council members to a specific issue.
Council members will be appointed to the special committees on an annual
basis. Special committees established by the Council are generally established
to deal with single transactions or projects as they arise. The membership of a
special committee does not extend beyond the appointed City Council members
and staff liaisons. The responsibilities of the special committee are limited to
making recommendations to the City Council or City staff. A special committee
has no authority to make decisions on behalf of the City Council. Special
committees may be required to provide periodic status reports as requested by
the City Council or upon their own initiative. Examples of special committees of
the City Council include:
• Bylaws & Compensation Committee
• City Manager Evaluation Committee
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• Annexation Task Force
• Special Assessment Committee
1001.2 Research Work Groups. The City Council may establish from time to time
temporary research work groups to study, research, analyze and make
recommendations to the Council or City staff on a particular issue or subject
matter. There is no limit to the size of a research work group. The number of
committee members, the purpose of the committee and the duration of the
committee will be determined by the City Council. Generally the composition of
research work groups include up to two Council members, City staff, and
members of the public. Research work groups may only deal with those issue or
projects assigned to them by the City Council (conduct investigations, make
reports on facts, interview individuals, and gather information and/or public input). j
A research work group may not make decisions independent from the City
Council. Research work groups will be required to make periodic reports to the
City Council on their progress. The City Council may use either a motion or
resolution to establish a research work group depending upon the subject matter.
These committees may include, for example:
• Water Treatment Plant Committee
• Tree Preservation Task Force I�
• Heritage Committee i,
• Snowmobile Task Force '
• County Road 21 Advisory Committee
Research work groups are expected to be short-term in nature and to disband
upon completion of the assigned task, but no later than the assigned end date
determined by the City Council. Only action by the City Council may extend the
life of a research work group, and the Council must determine a new end date for
the group. In some cases, the City Council may decide that the work of the
research work group should continue on a permanent basis, in which case the
City Council must determine whether to convert the research work group to either
(1) an advisory committee as outlined in Section 1001.3 of these bylaws, or (2) a
special City Council subcommittee as outlined in Section 1001.1 of these bylaws.
1001.3 Advisorv Committees. The City Council may establish advisory committees to
monitor significant issues in the community of on-going concern. Advisory
committees are composed of citizen volunteers appointed by the City Council, or
a combination of citizen volunteers, appointed City Council members, and City
staff. Advisory committees are limited to making recommendations to the City
Council or City staff and have no authority to make decisions on behalf of the
City Council.
An advisory committee's Bylaws reflect any unique circumstances applicable to
the committee. Amendments to an advisory committee's bylaws are
recommended by the advisory committee for approval by the City Council.
Amendments shall not take effect until thirty (30) days after their passage.
Advisory committees may meet with the City Council in a public workshop to
discuss goals and objectives, mutual concerns or questions and other business
as appropriate.
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Advisory committees may include, for example:
• Planning Commission. (The Planning Commission has been established by
statutory authority and the structural composition and Commission rules are
set forth in the City Code.)
• Park Advisory Committee
• Lakes Advisory Committee
• Communications and Technology Advisory Committee
• Community Safety Advisory Committee
• Traffic Safety Advisory Committee
1001.4 A list of the Council advisory committees and members shall be maintained on '
the City Website. �'
1002: CITY COUNCIL LIAISONS TO CERTAIN ADVISORY COMMITTEES: Annually, the
City Council shall appoint at least one council member to serve as a liaison to the
Advisory Committees identified in Section 1001.3. The role of the liaison is to act as a
conduit and resource for information by and between the Council and the Planning
Commission or Committee. The liaison shall make periodic reports to the Council on the
activities of the Planning Commission or committee. The authority and involvement of
the liaison shall be established by each advisory committee's bylaws.
A liaison may always testify or submit comments at a public hearing in their capacity as
a private citizen as long as they make clear at the beginning of their testimony or in their
written comments that they are speaking on their own behalf and not on behalf of the
Council.
1003: COMMITTEE VACANCIES: When the term of an individual serving on a committee
identified in Section 1001 expires, the individual may apply to be reappointed if they
have not exceeded their term limits and they have met or exceeded the performance
standards of the committee. An individual seeking reappointment or an individual
seeking to be newly appointed by the Council must follow the steps set forth below for
filling a vacancy on a committee. A vacant position on any committee identified in
Section 1001 shall be filled following the procedures set forth below:
1003.1 A�plications are solicited. A notice of the vacancy is made public and individuals
may be encouraged to consider the position. The notice shall state the deadline
for submitting applications.
1003.2 Screening Committee. The City Manager or his designee, the Mayor and one
member of the committee appointed by majority vote of the committee shall
serve as the Screening Committee. An individual subject to re-appointment may
not sit on the screening committee.
1003.3 Economic Development Authoritv (EDA). The Screening Committee for EDA
vacancies shall narrow the candidates down to up to three (3) finalists per
vacancy. The names of applicants are private data. Once finalists have been
selected, the names of the finalists become public data. The finalists shall be
interviewed by the Council and allowed to make a five minute presentation
regarding their qualifications and reasons for seeking the appointment. Members
of the Council may ask questions of the candidate, but the time used for
questions will not be counted against the candidates five (5) minute presentation.
The Mayor shall then appoint one of the finalists and the Council shall vote on
approval. If the Council does not approve the finalist appointed by the Mayor, the
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Mayor may appoint one of the other finalists for Council approval or may reopen
the vacancy to the public for new candidates.
1003.4 All Other Committees. The Screening Committee for all other vacancies shall
interview all candidates who have applied for appointment or reappointment and
make a recommendation to the City Council. The recommendation of the
Screening Committee will be presented to the City Council. The Council may
accept or reject the recommendation. If the recommendation is rejected, the City
Council may appoint another individual or reopen the application period and
invite new candidates to apply.
1004: CITY COUNCIL ROLE ON OTHER COMMITTEES OR AUTHORITIES: There are
certain authorities, committees and commissions not under the City Council's direct
control that a council member is appointed to and serves as a representative of the Prior ;
Lake City Council. These appointments should be distinguished from appointments to �
serve as a Council liaison to the Planning Commission or a committee. A council
member appointed to serve as a member of such a committee, commission or authority
shall provide the City Council with periodic reports on the activities of the committee,
commission or authority and, unless provided with specific direction, exercise their
judgment on how frequently to report to the full Council. The authority, committee or �,
commission shall determine if the appointed council member has voting authority in '
connection with its governing authority. Examples of these types of committees or
authorities include:
• Three-member Orderly Annexation Board
• Transit Review Board
• Committees of the League of Minnesota Cities, Metro Cities, or National League of
Cities
SECTION 1100:
SUSPENSION OF RULES
1101: The City Council may vote to suspend the rules set forth herein. The rules may be
suspended for a specific meeting only upon a motion, second, debate, and a four-fifths
(4/5) vote of the members of the Council unless otherwise provided by these bylaws,
State Statute or City Code.
SECTION 1200:
TRAVEL & REIMBURSEMENT FOR EXPENSES
1201: The City of Prior Lake recognizes the need for and value in attending workshops,
conferences, public and private events, and meetings in the conduct of City business.
Such events may take place in the Minneapolis-St. Paul metropolitan area, in out-state
Minnesota, or out-of-state. The purpose of this section is to set forth the guidelines for
participating in such events, as well as reimbursement of expenses incurred as a result
of attendance.
1202: GENERAL CONDITIONS:
1202.1 All expenses incurred by a Council member in connection with fulfilling their
duties to the City shall be reimbursable. Reimbursement of such expenses shall
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be in accordance with these City Council Bylaws, City Code Section 105.300, and
state statute.
1202.2 Attendance at and reimbursement for events, workshops, conferences or
meetings within the Minneapolis-St. Paul metropolitan area and Greater
Minnesota do not require advance approval by the City Council as long as the
costs for attendance are within the approved City Council budget.
1202.3 Attendance at and the traveling budgets for events, workshops, conferences or
meetings conducted out-of-state, or not within the approved City Council budget,
must be authorized in advance by the City Council at an open meeting.
1202.4 In evaluating travel requests for approval, the purpose for attendance must meet
one of the following criteria:
• The elected official will be receiving training on issues relevant to the City or
to his/her role as the Mayor or as a Council member. ',
• The elected official will be meeting and networking with other elected officials i
from around the country to exchange ideas on topics of relevance to the City
or on the official roles of local elected officials.
• The elected official will be viewing a public facility or function that is similar in
nature to one that is currently operating at, or under consideration by, the City
where the purpose for the trip is to study the facility or function to bring back
ideas for the consideration of the full Council.
• The elected official has been specifically assigned by the Council to testify on
behalf of the City at the United States Congress or to otherwise meet with
federal officials on behalf of the City.
1202.5 Council members attending events at City expense are expected to provide the
Council with a summary of the meeting.
1202.6 No reimbursements will be made for attendance at events sponsored by or
affiliated with political parties.
1202.7 The City must have sufficient funding available in the budget to pay the traveling
expenses for the event.
1202.8 The City may make payments in advance for airfare, lodging and registration if
specifically approved by the Council. Otherwise, all payments will be made as
reimbursements to the elected official.
1202.9 Reimbursement of expenses is intended to refund the actual costs incurred and
must be in accordance with the provisions of section 1203 herein.
1203: REIMBURSEMENT REQUIREMENTS: The City will reimburse for transportation,
lodging, meals, registrations and incidental costs if attendance at the event, conference,
workshop, or meeting is authorized in accordance with the above General Conditions. A
receipt must be submitted for reimbursement of all costs.
1203.1 Meals. Daily or event specific reimbursable meal costs are limited to $20.00 per
meal. In the case of out-of-state or overnight travel, reimbursable meal costs
shall not exceed $60.00 per day. Alcoholic beverages and meal expenses
included in the cost of registration are not reimbursable expenses.
1203.2 Lodqinq. Reimbursable lodging costs for travel within the Midwest are limited to
$200 per night. For travel outside the Midwest, reimbursable lodging costs are
limited to those that are reasonable and necessary, and as pre-approved by the
City Council when authorizing the out-of-state travel budget.
1203.3 Mileaae. Mileage will be reimbursed at the IRS rate. If two or more Council
members are traveling together by car, only the vehicle owner will receive
reimbursement. The City will reimburse for the cost of renting an automobile, if
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necessary, to conduct City business. City vehicles should be used for City
Council business in lieu of rental when available.
1203.4 TjpS• Tips paid as part of ineal service shall not exceed 20% of the total bill and
are reimbursable in addition to the cost limits set for reimbursable meals above.
Tips and gratuities for services such as taxis are only reimbursable if a receipt is
provided, and in no case should exceed 20% of the cost of the service. Tips for
non-documented services, such as baggage handling or housekeeping, are
reimbursable in an amount not to exceed $10 per day.
1203.5 Airfare. Airfare shall be reimbursed at the coach rate. The elected official shall '
use the most cost-effective mode of travel taking into consideration reasonable i
time constraints.
1203.6 Non-Reimbursable Expenses. The City will not reimburse for personal telephone
calls, rental of luxury vehicles, recreational expenses such as movies, golf,
shows, or concerts, or the costs associated with the attendance of a family
member or person unauthorized to attend the event on the City's behalf.
1204: EXCEPTIONS TO POLICY: Any exceptions to the bylaws relating to expenses and
reimbursement must be approved by the City Council at an open meeting.
SECTION 1300:
STATEMENT OF ETHICS
1301: POLICY STATEMENT: The City of Prior Lake recognizes our system of democratic
representative government is dependent in large measure, upon people having trust and
confidence in their public officials. The public rightfully expects governmental officials
will conduct City of Prior Lake business in ways which benefit the public good generally
and that public office will not be used chiefly or improperly to advance personal interests.
The City Council of Prior Lake has pledged the goals of fair, efficient and honest
government will be fostered and that it will strive for integrity and objectivity from all of its
officials.
1301.1 The City of Prior Lake finds that the proper operation of democratic
representative government requires that:
• Elected and appointed officials be independent, impartial and responsible to
the people;
• Governmental decisions and policy are made in the proper channels of the
governmental structure;
• Public office and position not be used for personal gain; and
• The public have confidence in the integrity of its government.
1301.2 The City of Prior Lake shall adhere to the highest ethical standards that enhance
the public trust in local government by:
• Creating transparency in its actions through honest and open communication;
• Basing decisions and adopting public policies based on what is in the best
interest of the public and the overall community;
• Supporting the public's right to know the public's business; and
• Exercising fairness, optimism, responsiveness and respect in communicating
with the public.
• Providing a forum and periodic training for public officials and employees to
discuss organizational values that reflect high standards and current
conditions and concerns.
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1301.3 This Statement of Ethics shall be liberally construed in favor of protecting the
public's interest in full disclosure of conflicts of interest and promoting ethical
standards of conduct.
1302: ETHICS IN GOVERNMENT: Minnesota Statutes, Chapter 10A, Ethics in Government,
is incorporated herein by reference. This policy shall be construed and interpreted in
consultation with the City Attorney according to Minnesota Statutes and case law.
1303: GIFTS AND FAVORS: No public official shall accept any valuable gift, favor or thing of
value, regardless of amount whether in the form of money, service, loan, thing or
promise from any person which to the official's knowledge is concerned, directly or �
indirectly in any manner whatsoever in business dealings with the City.
1304: USE OF EQUIPMENT AND FACILITIES: No public official shall request or permit the
unauthorized use of City-owned vehicles, equipment, materials, property, labor or
services for personal convenience or profit.
1305: CONFLICT OF INTEREST: Except as authorized in Minn. Stat. 471.88, a public officer
who is authorized to take part in any manner in making any sale, lease, or contract in
official capacity shall not voluntarily have a personal financial interest in that sale, lease,
or contract or personally benefit financially therefrom. (Minn. Stat. Section 471.87) ,
1306 A public official or local official elected to or appointed by a metropolitan governmental
unit who in the discharge of official duties would be required to take an action or make a
decision that would substantially affect the official's financial interests or those of an
associated business, unless the effect on the official is no greater than on other
members of the official's business classification, profession or occupation, must take the
following actions:
1306.1 Advise the City Attorney of the potential conflict of interest as soon as possible,
preferably before the meeting; and
1306.2 The City Attorney shall determine whether a disqualifying conflict of interest
exists.
1306.3 Any council member shall orally inform the City Council of the potential conflict
and abstain from any participation in that agenda item if a conflict is determined
to exist.
1307: The purpose behind the creation of a rule, which would disqualify public officials from
participating in proceedings in a decision-making capacity when they have a direct
conflict of interest in its outcome, is to ensure that their decision will not be an arbitrary
reflection of their own selfish interests. There is no settled general rule as to whether
such an interest will disqualify an official. Each case must be decided on the basis of the
particular facts present. Among the relevant factors that should be considered in making
this determination are: (1) nature of the decision being made; (2) the nature of the
pecuniary interest; (3) the number of officials making the decision who are interested; (4)
the need, if any, to have interested persons make the decision; and (5) the other means
available, if any, such as the opportunity for review, that serve to ensure that the officials
will not act arbitrarily to further their selfish interests.
SECTION 1400:
CITY COUNCIL RECOGNITION
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1401: COMMENDATION AND CENSURE: To the extent allowed by law, the City Council
desires to encourage appropriate behavior and discourage inappropriate behavior
among its members. The City Council, as a body, may by motion and four-fifths (4/5)
vote, commend or censure one of its own. If the act involves two members of the
Council, a majority vote is required.
1401.1 Commendation: A member may receive public commendation for the exercise of
positive leadership, community vision or other actions considered meritorious by
the City Council.
1401.2 Censure: A member may receive a public reprimand for failure to conform to any
provisions of these bylaws, state statute, misconduct at meetings, violating
confidentiality or the attorney-client privilege, absenteeism, disloyalty, a violation
of the standards of ethics or violating other value the City holds dear. The
purpose of the censure is to reprimand a council member with the hope of
reforming him or her so that he or she won't behave in the same way again.
A motion to censure is amendable, debatable, requires a 4/5 vote and cannot be
reconsidered.
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APPENDIX A: TYPES OF MOTIONS AND PROCEDURES
The following motions will be available for use by the members:
1. Main Motion: An act to bring substantive proposals before the City Council for
consideration and action. After the motion is stated and seconded, the subject of the
motion may be deliberated and voted upon. Deliberation may take place by the Mayor,
Council, staff or the general public as long as the procedures for citizen input are
� followed pursuant to these Bylaws.
2. Amend Main Motion: A main motion that is being deliberated and has not been voted
upon may be changed or modified by a motion, a second, deliberation and a subsequent
vote. The only motion that may be amended is the main motion.
3. Postpone Definitely Motion: A motion to put off consideration or discontinue discussion
of any motion on the floor and that which established a definite time for the motion to be
reconsidered. A motion to postpone definitely requires a second, deliberation and a
subsequent vote.
4. Vote Immediately Motion (Previous Question): A motion to prevent or stop deliberation
on a pending motion and to bring the pending motion to an immediate vote. A motion to
the "Previous Question" requires a second and a two-thirds majority vote to pass,
however, no discussion is allowed on the motion. Two votes are required when a
Previous Question motion is seconded. The first vote is to close the debate (requires two
thirds majority vote) and, if that passes, the second vote is then on the original motion
being deliberated prior to the Previous Question being called. If the close the debate
motion fails, then deliberation on the original motion continues.
5. Substitute Motion: This is a motion that replaces the motion being considered with
another motion on the same subject. A motion to substitute may be made for either a
main motion or an amendment to a main motion. A substitute motion requires a motion
and second. The Council then votes on the substitute motion and if that passes, the
original motion dies. If the substitute motion fails, the deliberation on the original motion
continues.
6. Withdraw a Motion: Any member of the City Council who has made an allowable
motion has the authority to remove the motion from consideration by the total body. If a
member desires to remove a motion that has been seconded, but not yet voted upon,
the member who has seconded the motion must consent to the request of the member
to remove the motion from consideration. If the motion has not been seconded, the
member may remove the motion from consideration by his/her own request.
7. Division of Motion: A motion that is composed of two or more independent sections or
ideas may be deliberated, considered and voted on separately. Each section or idea that
is to be voted on separately must be acted upon through a separate motion, second,
discussion and subsequent vote. Any member of the City Council may request a motion
to be divided into two or more individual motions.
8. Eligibility of Motion: The presiding officer may rule on the eligibility of a motion that has
been requested to be divided into two or more individual motions.
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9. Privileged Motion: These motions do not relate to pending business, but have to do
with special matters of immediate and overriding importance, which without any debate,
shall be allowed to interrupt the consideration of anything else. These motions can be
made at any time, even if another motion is being considered at the time, and they must
be settled or voted upon immediately. Motions to adjourn the meeting or take a recess
cannot interrupt a speaker, while a motion on a question of privilege or point of vote can
interrupt a speaker.
Privileged motions include:
Raise a Question of Privilege: Raising a question of privilege allows a member to make
a request or motion related to the rights and privileges of the members or an individual
members such as noise or temperature in the assembly room. The chair of the meeting
rules on questions of privilege.
• Recess: A motion to recess may be made by any member and if approved results in
a short intermission and then resumption of business.
• Adjourn: A motion to adjourn may be made by any member and if approved results in
the adjournment of the meeting.
10. Incidental Motion: These motions concern questions of procedure related to pending
business. Incidental motions can be made by any member of the City Council and are
taken up and decided immediately.
• Point of Order: Whenever a member thinks that the rules of the City Council are
being violated, he/she can make a Point of Order. Whenever a question of the order
is called, the presiding officer shall make a ruling on whether the City Council rules
have been violated. If a Point of Order is to be raised, it must be raised promptly at
the time the violation occurs. This procedure does not require a second, is not
debatable and can be used to interrupt a speaker.
• Appeal Decision of Chair: The presiding officer will be called on to rule on
questions of City Council procedure as set forth in these Bylaws. The decisions of
the presiding officer may be appealed by the City Council. A statement of appeal
constitutes a motion that, in turn, requires a second and the opportunity for
discussion.
11. Motions that Bring a Question before the Council again. These motions allow the
Council to consider a question that has already been considered.
• Motion to Reconsider: A motion to reconsider any action taken by the Council may
be made at the meeting at which such action was taken or the regular meeting
following. Such motion must be made by one of the prevailing side, but may be
seconded by any member and may be made at any time and have precedence over
all other motions or while a member has the floor; it shall be debatable. A motion for
reconsideration requires only a majority vote regardless of the vote necessary to
adopt the motion reconsidered.
Renew a Motion: If a motion is defeated it can be reintroduced at a future meeting.
The same or substantially same motion is introduced at a later meeting as new
business.
Notwithstanding Robert's Rules of Order, a motion to "lay on the table" shall be debatable.
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