Last night's agenda for the Council-in-Committee meeting was completed and ended exactly at the hour of adjournment.
First in months.
Councillor Ballard was in the chair. There was no rancour. Which is not to say the meeting was entirely smooth..
At one point, I had the floor. Rules state a member who is recognised by the chair and has the floor "shall speak without interruption".
The rule is essential. Interruptions throw a speaker off stride.
Councillor Gallo interrupted. He said' "on a point of order". But it wasn't.
Councillor Gallo disagreed with the point I was making or how I was making it and simply decided to interrupt.
The problem was exacerbated by the Ruling of the Chair.
The non-point of order was upheld.
Well, you know, rules of order are at one and the same time, simple and complex .
Everyone is responsible for respecting and maintaining the rules. Or no-one is bound by them.
Mutual agreement and unanimous commitment is essential for the Rules to prevail.
They can't be imposed. They must be observed.
Microphones can be shut off. Voices can rise. Tempers can be explode and objects can fly though the air as if by their own volition.
Mayhem can ensue if a council fails to uphold the same set of rules.
I used to have a clear and distinct impression of a particular Councillor zoom in an upward trajectory on a broom , swoosh three times around the vaulted ceiling like a hot air missile before coming back to rest at the table.
Whereupon the presiding member would direct myself to apologize to the Councillor for her behavior
Like that was going to happen.
But it ended up in a phoney- baloney code of conduct and hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars being spent on legal fees
Cutting-off a Councillor, with a mission to speak, in mid-sentence
on a point of order that is no more than disagreement with what the councillor is saying, is an act fraught with potential risk.
I know the rules. I respect them. I believe they are the essence of orderly conduct.
They are not tools to disrupt a speaker's thought process. To quell a particular perspective. To undermine an argument. To create disorder where intended.
Rules abused are impediments to order and good will.
ReplyDeleteSo why do you expect Gallo and Ballard to understand and uphold the Rules of Procedure?
Surely you are no longer surprised.
Councillor Abel ran a tidy ship & now Councillor Ballard keeps things moving along despite irritating rulings. Could we please see some of the same from the Mayor?
ReplyDeleteThe swooshing one swooshed too high & crash-landed. Miracles do occur.
ReplyDelete