R-06-41
RESOLUTION NO. R-06-41
CITY COUNCIL RULES OF PROCEDURE
WHEREAS, the City Council desires to provide rules and procedures for conducting
City business; and
WHEREAS, by this resolution, the Council is adopting the hereinafter attached rules
of procedure;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the City Council of the City of Fairfax,
Virginia, hereby adopts the attached rules of procedure for conducting City business.
Adopted this 25th day of July 2006.
~
Mayor
ATTEST:
1J~
City Clerk
The vote on the motion to approve was recorded as follows:
VOTE:
Councilwoman Cross Aye
Councilman Greenfield Aye
Councilwoman Lyon Aye
Councilman Rasmussen Aye
Councilman Silverthorne Aye
Councilmember Winter Aye
\
CITY COUNCIL
RULES OF PROCEDURE
I. Types of Meetings
A. Regular - A meeting held at the regularly scheduled day and time adopted by the
City Council for its regular meetings. Action may be taken and the public may
speak.
B. Special - May be called at the request of either the Mayor or not fewer than three
(3) members of Council. Normally, a special meeting is called for a specific
reason. Action may be taken at a special meeting.
C. Work Session - A meeting to discuss issues and develop consensus thereon. No
formal action may be taken at a work session.
II. Rules of Council
A. The Council may adopt rules of Council, as it deems necessary for the regulation
of its proceedings and the transaction of its business. These rules may not conflict
with requirements of the City Charter or general law.
B. Examples of matters which may be addressed by rules of Council are:
1. Order of business and agenda item summary (formats - Attachments A
and B).
2. Procedures for conduct of public hearings
3. Time limitation on presentations to Council.
4. Meeting schedules.
5. Boards and Commissions appointments.
6. Tasking of staff and City Attorney.
7. Submission of quarterly reports.
8. Budget process.
III. Rules of Order
In addition to the rules of Council, the Council may adopt Robert's Rules of Order
and provide that Robert's Rules apply, except where inconsistent with the rules of
Council (including these procedures).
IV. Examples of Frequently Encountered Motions
Motions should be clear and simple. All motions should be stated in full by the mover
(Summary Table - Attachment C).
A. Recess or Adiourn. "I move that we recess (or adjourn)." [This motion is not
debatable unless it is qualified by the mover. A motion may be made at the
beginning of a meeting whereby the Council agrees to adjourn at a specified time
or after discussion of a specified agenda item. Adoption of an agenda with
adjournment reflected after a specified agenda item accomplishes this result].
B. Point of Order. "I rise to a point of order" [The purpose of this motion to call for
the Mayor to enforce the rules of Councilor rules of order].
C. Withdraw or Renew a Motion. "I desire to withdraw my motion (describe the
motion)." [A motion can be withdrawn before final action is reached. !fno one
objects, the motion is withdrawn. If an objection is made, then another member
must make a motion granting the mover leave to withdraw the motion. Leave to
withdraw a motion does not require a second and is not debatable].
D. Previous Question (Close Debate). "I move the previous question on (describe the
motion)." [The object of this motion is to bring the Council to vote on the
question. The effect of this motion is to close debate immediately. It cannot be
debated. This motion requires a 2/3 vote of the Council present (4 of 6, 4 of 5 or 3
of 4). If the motion passes, the previous question is voted upon without debate].
E. To Refer. "I move that we refer this question (or resolution) to (state the
committee to which or person to whom it is being referred).
F. To Amend. "I move that we amend the motion (by adding, striking out, inserting)
the words "
G. To Postpone or Defer. "I move that we postpone (or defer) a vote upon this
motion or item (state date or state that the motion or item is postponed or deferred
indefinitely). "
H. To Table. "I move that we table this item (describe the item)." [The item remains
tabled until a motion is passed to remove the item from the table].
1. To Reconsider. "I move that we reconsider (describe the motion, vote or item be
reconsidered)." [The motion must be made on or before the conclusion of the next
regularly scheduled meeting of the Council by a member who voted on the
prevailing side of the prior motion, vote or item. The motion may be seconded by
any member of Council. The allowable time for making this motion, under these
rules of procedure, differs slightly from Robert's Rules].
v. Mayor
A. The Mayor shall preside over the meetings of the Council and shall have the same
right to speak. The Mayor is the head of the City government for all ceremonial
purposes, the purposes of military law, and the service of civil process.
B. The Mayor, together with the City Manager, prepares the proposed agenda for
Council meetings. The agenda is acted upon by the Council.
C. The Mayor shall not have the right to vote except in the case of a tie. This rule is
subject to certain exceptions [i.e. closed meeting certification]. Under limited
circumstances, the Mayor may make motions regarding matters on which he or
she is entitled to vote [e.g. closed meeting certification or motion to reconsider a
matter on which the Mayor voted to break a tie].
D. The Mayor may veto ordinances and resolutions. Vetoes may be overridden by a
2/3 vote of all Council members [i.e., 4 of6].
E. The Mayor signs ordinances, resolutions, proclamations and other documents
required by law or by action of the Council to be signed by the Mayor.
F. In the absence or disability of the Mayor, the Mayor may designate a member of
Council to perform duties of Mayor and, if the Mayor fails to do so, then the
Council shall, by a majority vote of those present, choose a member of Council to
perform the duties of Mayor. A Council member designated to serve in the
absence or disability of the Mayor does not lose his or her right to vote as a
Council member.
VI. Quorum
Unless otherwise specified by the Charter or general law as related to a specific
action, a majority of the full Council (i.e. a majority of 6 members) of the Council
(not simply members present) constitutes a quorum for the transaction of business.
The Mayor is not considered in determining whether or not a quorum is present.
VII. Forms of Action
A. Ordinances
An ordinance is a local law of a municipal corporation, duly enacted by the
Council, prescribing general, or permanent, actions or rules of conduct relating to
the affairs of the City (unless subsequently amended or repealed by further
ordinance, duly adopted). A duly enacted ordinance has the force and effect of
law.
1. In addition to other acts required by law or by provisions of the Charter
to be done by ordinance, the following acts must be accomplished by
ordinance:
a. To adopt or amend the City Code or establish, alter or abolish any
City Department, office or agency;
b. To establish a law or regulation and fine or any penalty for the
violation thereof;
c. To levy taxes, except as otherwise provided with respect to the
property tax levied by adoption of the budget;
d. To grant, review or extend a franchise;
e. To regulate the rate charged for services provided by a City public
utility;
f. To conveyor lease or authorize the conveyance or lease of any
lands of the City;
g. To amend or repeal any ordinance previously adopted except for
emergency ordinances;
h. Other such acts as provided by law to require an ordinance; and
1. Acts other than those referred to above may be accomplished by
ordinance, resolution or other action of the Council (i.e. motion
adopted at a regular or special meeting of Council).
2. Unless otherwise provided by law, ordinances are adopted by a majority
vote of the members of Council present (assuming a quorum exists).
Examples of ordinances which must be adopted by greater than a
majority vote of the members of Council present are: (i) ordinances
authorizing the issuance of bonds [requires 2/3 vote of the entire
Council, i.e. 4 of 6 votes]; (ii) selling rights in City property dedicated to
public use [requires 3/4 vote of the entire Council, i.e., 5 of 6 votes].
3. The procedure for adoption of ordinances (other than emergency and
zoning ordinances, covered later) is as follows:
a. The proposed ordinance is introduced by a member of Council
during a regular meeting and is approved by a majority of the
Council members present (assuming a quorum exists) [i.e., 40f6,
3 of 5 or 3 of 4]. A proposed ordinance may also be introduced
during a special meeting when either (i) the subject has been
included in the special meeting notice or (ii) the subject has been
approved by a 2/3 vote of members present at the meeting. [i.e., 4
of 6, 4 of 5 or 3 of 4]. A copy of the proposed ordinance shall be
delivered to each member of Council and shall be made available
to the public prior to its introduction.
b. A first reading of the ordinance (upon introduction) is required,
unless waived by a 2/3 vote of the Council members present [i.e., 4
of 6, 4 of 5 or 3 of 4]. Typically, the Council waives the first
reading. Upon concurrence of a majority of the Council members
present [i.e. 4 of 6, 3 of 5 or 3 of 4], the Council sets a time and
date for a public hearing on the ordinance [no sooner than three
days after introduction]. The first reading of an ordinance may be
handled as a consent agenda item.
c. A public hearing is held on the ordinance after publication by the
City Clerk. The Council may direct the Clerk to publish the full
text of the proposed ordinance.
d. The ordinance may be passed upon completion of the public
hearing.
e. Amendments or additions to the ordinance may be made at any
time before adoption.
f. If a proposed amendment introduces an entirely new subject matter
or radically changes the overall purpose of the original ordinance,
then the ordinance as amended must be re-introduced and
advertised as a new ordinance.
g. At the second reading of the proposed ordinance, only the title
must be read unless amendments or additions were made after
introduction. In such case, the amendments or additions must be
read in full prior to enactment.
h. Ordinances which impose or increase public utilities or planning
and zoning levies and fees are subject to special notice and
advertisement requirements, different than those related to the
enactment of other ordinances.
4. The procedure for adoption of emergency ordinances (other than zoning
ordinances/text amendments, which may not be done by emergency
ordinance) is as follows:
a. If, in the opinion of Council, an emergency exists, an ordinance
may be passed with or without amendment during the same
meeting at which it is introduced.
b. The ordinance must contain a specific statement of the emergency
and must be passed by a 2/3 vote of the Council members present.
[i.e., 4 of 6,4 of 5 or 3 of 4].
c. An emergency is an unforeseen event or combination of
circumstances the result of which requires immediate action.
d. No publication, hearing or specific time interval between
introduction and passage is necessary.
e. The ordinance automatically stands repealed, without further
action by Council, as of the ninety-first (91 st) day following the
day upon it was adopted. It may also be repealed by adoption of
an ordinance repealing the emergency ordinance [The procedure
for adopting the repealing ordinance is the same procedure for the
adoption of ordinances].
f. The ordinance may be reenacted by the procedure for adoption of
non-emergency ordinances.
5. The procedure for adoption of zoning ordinances is generally as follows,
subject to any other requirements of applicable law:
a. Zoning map amendments may be initiated by the applicant or the
Council. Other zoning amendments (i.e. zoning text amendments)
may be initiated by the Councilor the Planning Commission.
b. The proposed ordinance is considered by the Planning Commission
in a legally advertised public hearing. The Planning Commission
may recommend to Council that the ordinance be either approved,
approved with modifications, or denied. The Planning Commission
may take no action on the ordinance other than making its
recommendation.
c. The Council then holds a public hearing after advertisement
thereof and takes action on the proposed ordinance.
d. A zoning ordinance cannot be adopted as an emergency ordinance.
6. Appropriations Ordinances or Resolutions
a. Adoption of ordinances or resolutions appropriating money in an
amount greater than $500.00, imposing taxes or authorizing the
borrowing of money requires a majority vote of all members of the
Council. [i.e. 4 of 6]. The Mayor may vote to break a tie on
appropriations ordinances and resolutions (subject to certain
limitations).
b. To meet a public emergency, the Council, by ordinance, may
budget, borrow, appropriate and expend an amount not exceeding
ten percent (10%) of the previous year's budget, without being
bound by the City Charter. This action requires a two-thirds vote of
the entire Council [i.e., 4 of 6] and must contain a clear statement
of the nature and extent of the emergency.
7. Each ordinances (and resolutions having the effect of ordinances),
before they become operative, shall be transmitted to the Mayor for his
signature.
a. The Mayor shall have five (5) days (Sundays excepted) to sign
such ordinance (or resolution having the effect of an ordinance) or
to veto it in writing.
b. If the Mayor fails to sign or veto such ordinance or resolution
having the effect of an ordinance within five days, (Sundays
excepted), then it becomes operative as if the Mayor had signed it
on the fifth day (unless the term ofthe Mayor or that of the
Council expires within the five day period).
c. If the Mayor vetoes an ordinance or resolution having the effect of
an ordinance, in writing, the written veto shall be returned to the
City Clerk and the City Council shall reconsider the ordinance or
resolution having the effect of an ordinance it at the next regular
meeting (no formal reconsideration motion is required - the
ordinance or resolution having the effect of an ordinance is simply
placed on the agenda with a notation that it is being reconsidered
due to a lawfully exercised written veto by the Mayor).
d. An ordinance or resolution having the effect of an ordinance may
be approved over the Mayor's veto by a 2/3 vote of all Council
members. [i.e., 4 of 6], and if so approved, it becomes immediately
operative.
B. Resolutions
1. A resolution is a less formal action than an ordinance. It encompasses
all actions of the Council other than those requiring action by adoption
of an ordinance. A resolution is adopted, for instance, to dispose of
administrative matters of a temporary or special nature.
2. In most cases, a public hearing is not required before adoption of a
resolution.
3. The proper form of a motion adopting a resolution is "I move adoption
of the following resolution (describe the resolution)."
4. A resolution continues in effect until it is repealed, becomes ineffective
either by its terms or by law, or a subsequent resolution is passed which
contradicts or changes its terms.
C. Proclamations
A proclamation is an act stating or causing certain matters to be published or
made generally known. The Mayor, as the ceremonial head of the City
government, typically reads proclamations. Requests for proclamations must be
forwarded to the Mayor.
D. Method and Recordation of Voting
1. The votes of the Council must be determined by yeas and nays. Voting
by secret or written ballot in a public meeting is impermissible.
2. When announcing the vote, the Mayor states after each vote ifthere are
any abstentions or absences, and identifies by name the abstaining or
absent member or members of the Council.
3. The names of the Council members voting for and against each agenda
item and the names of the Council members who abstain or are absent
are recorded by the City Clerk.
E. Abstention from Voting
Abstention from voting does not constitute a negative vote. A motion may pass
with one affirmative vote if a quorum is present and other members present
abstain from voting (assuming that the particular action does not require a certain
number of affirmative votes).
F. Unanimous Consent Compared to a Consensus
1. Unanimous consent is a voice or recorded vote where all persons voting
agree to the motion.
2. A consensus is an informal sense of the majority ofthe governing body.
G. Reports
1. A report may be received by the Council by unanimous consent. Should
a council member object, a motion to receive the report is necessary and
requires a majority vote.
2. Receipt of a report does mean that the report has been approved or
rejected.
3. After the Council receives or considers a report, then Council may either
accept, to, reject or take no action concerning the report.
4. By adopting or accepting a report, the Council makes the acts of the
preparer of the report the acts of the Council. If the report contains
formal resolutions, then the Council, by adopting, accepting or agreeing
to the report, adopts those resolutions.
VIII. Agenda Item Descriptions
A. There are no specific requirements for the descriptions of general agenda items.
However, each description must inform the public of the nature of the item to be
considered (i.e., placed upon the Council agenda) and the purpose sought to be
accomplished by the item.
B. Agenda item descriptions regarding ordinances and public hearings thereon must
include sufficient information to inform the public of the nature of the matter and
the Code the ordinance to be affected. In the case of zoning items, the names of
the applicant, a description of the type of application, the address and the map
number of the subject property must be stated.
IX. Consent Agenda
A. Agenda items for which there is no opposition may be adopted by consent.
B. Examples of items typically placed on the consent agenda are:
1. Introduction of ordinances or resolutions;
2. Transfer of funds;
3. Awarding of contracts; and
4. Authorizing the Mayor or City Manager to sign agreements.
C. The Chair entertains a motion for adoption ofthe consent agenda. The Chair asks
if any member of Council objects to handling the items on a consent agenda. If a
member objects, then the item is removed from the consent agenda and
considered during the regular agenda. The Chair then asks whether anyone wishes
to abstain to any of the items. If a member abstains, the abstention noted. The
motion for adoption of the consent agenda is voted upon.
D. Agenda items that involve public hearings may not be included on the consent
agenda.
NEXT DOCUMENT IS AGENDA TEMPLATE
NEXT DOCUMENT IS THE STAFF REPORT TEMPLATE
PROCEDURE FOR CONDUCTING A ZONING HEARING
BEFORE THE CITY COUNCIL
A public hearing on a zoning application before the City Council will normally be conducted in
the following manner:
1. The Mayor announces the case.
2. The Mayor asks the Clerk whether the notice requirements have been met (newspaper
advertising, posting of the property and notice by the City staff to neighboring property
owners).
3. The Mayor asks the City Manager for staff comments. The Manager asks the Planning
Director or other staff members to locate the property on a map, identify any changes in
the staff report and provide the staff recommendations.
4. The Mayor opens the public hearing and requests the applicant to present his/her case.
5. The Mayor invites public comment on the application in an order determined by the
Mayor. The Mayor and Council members may read into the record any letters from the
public concerning the application.
6. The Mayor invites the applicant to present a rebuttal.
7. The Mayor declares the public hearing closed, unless the Council adopts a motion
continuing the public hearing.
8. The Mayor entertains a motion concerning the application.
9. The Council members discuss the motion and the case.
10. The possible courses of action by the City council are:
a. Approve the application.
b. Approve the application with modifications.
c. Deny the application.
d. Defer, postpone or table the application.
11. If the application is deferred and a public hearing has been held and closed, it remains
closed. No further comments should be received from the applicant or others during
consideration of this agenda item unless specifically requested by the Council.