Council may get stop light
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Barbara Diamond
City officials couldn’t decide Tuesday where to put a stop sign on
Nyes Place, but the council chamber might get a stop light.
The council voted 4 to 1 at its retreat Saturday to investigate
lighted clocks that go from green for talk, to yellow that cautions
time’s almost up, to red for stop, to replace the buzzer that shuts
off public comment at the council meetings. It was the only formal
vote at the retreat
“Anything, anything we can do to shorten meetings -- to not have
25-hour weeks for the council,” Councilwoman Toni Iseman said.
Time was the essence of the retreat: reducing the time of the
council meetings; making time to discuss city policies; and finding
time for all the invitations extended to the council took up most of
the time Saturday.
The retreat was open to the public. Only the evaluation of City
Manager Ken Frank was held behind closed doors.
Councilman Wayne Baglin opposed the notion of the stoplight.
“We have one of the most open meetings in Orange County,” Baglin
said. “We are the standard bearer for citizen involvement. This would
make [the process] more rigid.”
Councilwoman Elizabeth Pearson said that limiting the number of
speakers to those who sign in would help shorten the meetings.
“I hate people who come up and say, ‘I wasn’t going to say
anything, but ...,’” Pearson said.
She also suggested that time could be saved if council members did
not feel it necessary to explain the reasons for their vote when it
has already been articulated by another council member.
“Just say, I agree and I am ready to vote,” Pearson said. “Why do
we have to have all the grandstanding?”
Proposals to shorten meetings included requiring anyone who wants
to address the council to sit in the front rows, now simply a
request; starting the meeting promptly at 6 p.m. and eliminating
extraordinary business and responses to public comments, as suggested
by Baglin.
“You talked a few minutes ago about the value of public input. Now
you are worried about the city manager, which is a first,” Iseman
said. “I think five minutes is well spent in responding.”
Baglin also said that too much business is conducted in closed
session.
“The people’s business should be done in public,” Baglin said.
In other action, the council discussed the plethora of invitations
it receives.
“People don’t understand,” Kinsman said. “They plan one event a
year, and they don’t realize we get two invitations a week. Some of
them cost more than our monthly salary.”
The council also asked Treasurer Laura Parisi and City Clerk Verna
Rollinger to write job descriptions to be included in the city code.
“Verna is probably the only one who knows it,” Kinsman said. “The
one we have was written after the first time she was elected.”
Rollinger will retire in December after more than 28 years in
office.
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