Hi
I think Bourinot's rules of order for debate should simply have been adopted with changes to suit a council meeting. The rest of the procedure and schedule and times of meetings ,should all have been handled in committee and would not have needed much time.
In the last administration, at the beginning, the CAO proposed daytime meetings. It would have meant the entire staff would not have to attend for the whole meeting.They could be in their offices doing their own work until called upon.
Thumbs were turned down on that idea or any other advice he had to give. Councillors are part-time ,they said. They can't be expected to attend daytime meetings.
Now we have an increasing number of 4.p.m. meetings with only the member of staff present for the item being considered.
The new schedules have been become a regular feature.I may have missed the discussion.
Like agendas, with twenty-six items at one meeting plus presentations and delegations and other meetings with one item ,such as the last one. How is that efficient use of time ?
When the Clerk presented his revision to council on June 14th, a solicitor sat alongside to assure council , he found the bylaw satisfactory as written. He was retired legal counsel to the Region of Sudbury.
What was he there for? Can't we do anything without bringing in consultants to fatten up the payroll ?
Last week, the Mayor told Councillors we could let the Clerk know of further concerns we had on the procedure bylaw, by e-mail.
I did that already, every time I thought of something. Nothing came of that approach. I thought a list might be compiled for council. The Clerk can't change stuff now that the revision has been before Council.
It seems to me some of the boys decided how it should be, from stuff they learned at workshops for councillors. They've decided it's not worth spending time to get everybody on board or even a shared understanding.
I'm firmly of the view, wording should be reduced to a minimum. It's far from there at the moment. There should be no room for interpretation. If it gets passed in its present form, we will continue to spend as much time disputing rules as we do attending to real business
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We should discuss and agree for example, whether a point of order means disagreement with a point being made in debate. It doesn't.
Opposite views on an issue is debate.
Opposite views on an issue is debate.
Does a point of order mean a councillor can be interrupted because somebody else doesn't understand or disagrees with the meaning of a word?
Or somebody decides they know better the meaning of improper conduct?
Why is it appropriate to record comments of non-elected delegates while the Municipal Act does not permit notes or comments made by elected representatives in the public record to be kept by the clerk?Why is the person who can recruit two more to expand the time allowed to delegate, have fifteen minutes, while an elected representatives is to be limited to ten?
Why are non - elected allowed to come back again and again to press their case, when councillors are not permitted such excess? Nor should be.
This crap was introduced during the last administration to create a champion for those who felt they have the more authority than the elected, to participate formally in the decision making process.
At the end of the term, staff were directed to prepare a report of all that was accomplished by volunteer advisory committees. It was so much reading it was directed to be condensed. That was done too.
Staff time was no object.
Doesn't anyone understand the reason we hold elections ?
My God, why is it hard for people, who put their name up for office, tramp the street for weeks and knock on thousands of doors to be given the trust and confidence of the people, to understand the authority they have received on successful election.
The entire slant of the last administration was to remove authority from all but one and to denigrate the role of Council.
It doesn't look like change is intended in the current term.I just recalled an exercise from the Council of 2003/6.
We had an interim CAO until the deal with Power Stream was complete. His contract was extended because the deal took longer.
During the extension , he occupied some of his time with Councillors individually to hear their concerns with the procedure bylaw. He had been CAO in the Town of Vaughan for a couple of decades.
He produced a revised bylaw. Can't say what became of it.
Don't know if larger print is accident or deliberate.
ReplyDeleteMakes a big difference. Can you keep it up or are
you restricted in some way ?
There should be a round ring constructed of three heavy ropes and eight strong timber poles from which these ropes are suspended. Into the ring should be placed about 15 inches of fine granular sand.
ReplyDeleteOn the outer side of each of the eight strong timber poles should be hung the personalized thick heavy padded leather shields and three inch diameter oaken staves, each six feet in length, one for each Councillor.
These are to be used by the individual councillors to settle irrelevant or irregular points of order, fought to the finish within the ring. The declared winner will have his or her point of order heard by all for up to 15 minutes whereupon the loser shall be banned from Council meetings for one month with commensurate loss of pay.
The mayor will not be able to participate in the ring-wars. He will be the final arbiter to declare winners and losers. If he is challenged by another member of Council he shall be able to appoint a champion to fight in his place. If his champion loses then the mayor agrees to remain seated without speaking for a period of 30 minutes during which time all rules of procedure are temporarily suspended.
This latter situation will hardly be noticed for its difference from present Council meetings.