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Richmond Free Press

Perspective

New rules at City Hall

Mayor will be strong — but there’ll be checks

By John V. Moeser

In about two months, Richmond moves to a new form of government for the first time in 57 years. Most attention thus far has focused on the election of the mayor.

Little discussion, however, has focused on the structural changes in government instituted by the revised charter.

The council-manager form of government, which gives the city manager responsibility for overseeing the administration of city government and gives City Council responsibility for overseeing the city manager, will be abolished.

The new form of government will place all executive responsibility in the hands of a popularly elected mayor, who will appoint a chief administrative officer upon the advice and consent of City Council.

The new city government will be characterized by separation of powers between the legislative and executive branches, much like the arrangement at the state and national levels of government.

The City Council will occupy a comparable relationship to the mayor as the Virginia General Assembly has with the governor. Like the governor, or the President of the United States, the new mayor, through the chief administrative officer, will supervise the administrative organs of government and will be directly accountable to the voters.

Under the revised charter, the mayor will be responsible for advising council of the city’s financial condition. The mayor’s budgetary powers will range from overseeing the preparation of the general operating and capital budgets and submitting them to council to introducing before council appropriation ordinances and ordinances altering tax rates.

The mayor can also recommend supplemental appropriations to council. These powers are currently those of the city manager. The difference is that now the manager reports to City Council.

Under the revised charter, however, the mayor will be independent of council. In addition, the mayor can issue, to quote from the revised charter, "any regulations as may be necessary in order to implement his/her duties and powers."

This last provision gives considerable leeway to the mayor. An assertive mayor could subsume much authority under this "any regulations" provision of the charter.

While the initial selection of the chief administrative officer (CAO) requires agreement between the mayor and the council, the CAO, once selected, can be removed unilaterally by the mayor.

Except for the difference in appointment, the function of the city manager and the CAO is essentially the same. For example, the CAO, like the city manager, will have the power to appoint all heads of administrative departments of the city. That the CAO will report to the mayor, not to council, will require a major adjustment, however, since, for over half a century, the appointed head of government has been answerable to City Council.

With the CAO being accountable to the mayor, the mayor will have access to a vast storehouse of information ranging from how police officers are deployed and the number of abandoned buildings in the city to the turnover of case workers in the Department of Social Services and the latest figures on infant mortality.

Having information of this detail provides considerable leverage in shaping policy. That the charter calls for the mayor "to attend all council meetings with the right to speak but not to vote" means that the mayor can assume the same role in terms of overseeing information flow from the administration to council as was assumed by the city manager. This power to determine the amount and quality of information transmitted to City Council vastly increases the mayor’s ability to influence legislation even without the mayor’s right to vote.

Nothing in the charter prevents the council from establishing its own means of gathering and analyzing information. Indeed, the new charter grants council the power to investigate departments, boards, commissions and agencies of the city.

The council could flex its muscle and create a local version of the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission (a General Assembly watchdog agency) or create its own budget review office similar to that of Congress.

But would such a move be in the best interests of the city?

Funding could become an issue. Given the huge demands on the city’s scarce resources, would citizens sanction the creation of such an entity?

The council would have to weigh the merits of developing such a legislative check on the executive against the costs of diverting precious resources from important programs already underfunded.

Moreover, when does the small scale of Richmond city government, at least when compared to the large scale of state government, work against creating additional checks and balances that could jeopardize the more personal, more consensual relationships that characterized administrative-legislative relationships when the city manager reported and was accountable directly to the council?

The revised charter places with City Council all legal authority for the passage of city ordinances, including the adoption of the budget. Only if the council fails to adopt a budget by May 31, does the mayor’s proposed budget become the operating budget for the city.

Such a scenario would hopefully never occur, but should majority support for the mayor’s budget never materialize by the end of May, then the power of the mayor to implement his/her proposed budget without council approval is formidable.

Having that power gives great leverage to the mayor when dealing with a recalcitrant council. Under the current charter, the city manager also possesses that power.

The difference, however, is that the city manager is an appointee of council and, thus, does not have an independent political base. Not so with a mayor who is elected citywide.

On the other hand, council also possesses considerable power. Under the new charter, the mayor does not have the power to veto legislation. Thus, a council majority working independently of the mayor could pass legislation without mayoral approval.

Given this power of council, a key figure in the new government will be the vice mayor. In some respects, the title of this position is misnamed since this person is associated with the legislative branch, not the executive branch. The vice mayor is a member of City Council whom the council selects from among its membership to preside over council meetings.

The primary loyalty of the vice mayor, therefore, will be to the City Council, not the mayor. The vice mayor could become the legislative leader of Council and thus a prominent figure in policymaking.

What gives some credence to the title "vice mayor" is that, in the event of a vacancy in the office of the mayor, the vice mayor becomes the acting executive until a successor is elected.

Regardless of title, the vice mayor could play an important role in brokering relationships between the City Council and the mayor.

For the mayor to advance his public agenda, the mayor will need to develop alliances with City Council since any legislation introduced by the mayor must garner the support of at least five council members.

There are even instances under the new charter, as is the case now under the current charter, when six votes are necessary to adopt legislation.

Such is the case, for example, when supplemental appropriations are approved following the adoption of the budget. Similarly, the council cannot afford to work independently of the mayor. Self interest alone will compel local legislators to develop positive relationships with the executive in order to secure fiscal and administrative resources for their council districts.

One would hope, however, that close alliances between executive and legislative branches would be forged, not out of narrow political considerations, but out of a common recognition that a united front is necessary to address issues of crime, poverty, joblessness and an array of other challenges including public schools. Relative to the latter, both the legislative and executive branches also will need to work cooperatively with the School Board.

The School Board is comprised of independently elected officials and functions independently of the mayor and the City Council. The charter, however, requires the School Board to submit its budget estimates to the mayor, who then submits the budget to City Council for final approval.

The council approves a lump sum appropriation to the School Board and the School Board expends this sum at its discretion.

If the School Board fails to get the appropriation that it seeks, then either the mayor or the City Council, whichever shortchanges the School Board, regardless of the reason, could be targeted as insensitive to the needs of public education.

Once again, turf issues and questions related to "who’s in charge" could easily arise, as they do occasionally even now with the council-manager form of government.

Such instances, however, could become even more common in the new mayor-council form of government unless all of the parties make a conscious effort to pull together. After all, nothing less than the welfare of the city’s school children is at stake.

With time, we’ll know much more about our new city government. Both the mayor and the council will learn from experience what provisions of the charter work well and what provisions may need revision.

Citizens, too, will learn whether the most significant change in Richmond government in several generations proved effective.

Hopefully, as we look back we can say with pride that our new city government worked successfully in addressing the challenges confronting Richmond and that while the executive and legislative branches each exercised their legal prerogatives and gave voice to their respective constituencies, the mayor and City Council did so out of mutual respect for each other and out of a common devotion to the city they all serve.

The writer is a professor of urban studies and planning at Virginia Commonwealth University.

©Richmond Free Press November 4-6, 2004 Page A11

 

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