|
Resolutions
and ordinances

The City
Council, city manager, City department, citizen or group may request
resolutions and ordinances. Resolutions and ordinances
are the tools the City Council uses to implement policies.
Resolutions
state the opinion or the feeling of the City Council and are used to dictate
policy to City employees, congratulate an organization or a person, express
sorrow at the death of a well-known person or urge another governmental
body, such as the U.S. Congress, to take a desired action. An ordinance
authorizes the spending of City money, sets tax levies or establishes
regulations that govern the actions of City agencies and citizens.
Matters before the
City Council are read once each week for three weeks. A reading consists
of reading aloud the number of the resolution or ordinance and a brief
description of its purpose. When a measure is introduced (its first reading),
it is assigned to one of the committees: Aviation;
Finance;
Legislative,
Rules
and Ethics; Neighborhood
Development and Housing; Operations;
Planning,
Zoning
and Economic Development; and Budget
and Audit. These committees hold weekly public hearings as necessary
to receive testimony from people who support or oppose the resolutions
or ordinances being considered. Testimony helps the committees decide
to recommend passage or defeat.
After a committee
reaches a decision on a resolution or ordinance, it is returned to the
full City Council. The following week, it is read for the third time and
unless there is a delay, the full City Council will take a final
vote. Most ordinances and resolutions require seven
votes for passage.
An ordinance usually
goes into effect 10 days after passage. The City Council may
declare an ordinance an emergency measure, in which case it goes into
effect immediately.
The City Council often
bypasses the required three readings, which can be done if at least nine
members agree and if the ordinance does not make a grant, renew a franchise
or regulate a utility charge.
back
|