HomeMy WebLinkAboutAgenda - City Charter Committee - 08/09/2023AGENDA
SOUTH BURLINGTON CHARTER COMMITTEE South Burlington City Hall 180 Market Street SOUTH BURLINGTON, VERMONT
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Wednesday August 9, 2023 4:00 P.M.
1. Welcome and Introductions
2.Agenda Review and Approval
3.Public comment on items not on the agenda
4.*** Approve minutes from the July 12, 2023 meeting
5.Report on the School Board discussion
6.*** Review and possibly approve the Charter Committee Report to the Council
7.Discuss presentation to the City Council (potentially September 5th or 18th – to bedetermined by the Committee)
8.Other Business
9. Adjourn
CITY CHARTER COMMITTEE 12 JULY 2023
The South Burlington City Charter Committee held a meeting on Wednesday, 12 July 2023, at
4:00 p.m., in Conference Room 201, City Hall, 180 Market Street.
MEMBERS PRESENT: P. Taylor, Chair; A. Lalonde, D. Kinville, P. Engels, K. Bailey, C. Hafter,
E. Fitzgerald
ALSO PRESENT: J. Baker, City Manager, C. McNeil, City Attorney; M. Emery, D. Albrecht, S.
Dooley, R. Doyle, B. Minier, C. McDonald, W. Holiman, L. Bailey, T. Bailey, M. Simoneau
1. Welcome and Introductions:
Mr. Taylor welcomed Elizabeth Fitzgerald as a voting member representing the School Board.
2. Agenda Review
No changes were made to the agenda.
3. Comments & Questions from the public not related to the Agenda:
No issues were raised.
4. Approve Minutes from the 22 June 2023:
Ms. Kinville noted that on p. 2, she did not attend the Rotary meeting. She also corrected the
spelling of her name on p. 1.
Mr. Lalonde moved to approve the Minutes of 22 June 2023 as amended. Ms. Kinville
seconded. Motion passed with all present voting in favor.
5. Discussion and possible action on the number of School Board members:
Ms. Bailey said there is a School Board meeting coming up at which she will add an update to
the Agenda.
Mr. Taylor said the Charter Committee can come up with a decision, and if the School Board has
another idea, the Committee can listen to that.
Ms. Fitzgerald said she spoke with former School Board members who favored expansion of the
Board due to the workload and the potential for conflicts with specific topics. Ms. Fitzgerald
CITY CHARTER COMMITTEE
12 JULY 2023
PAGE 2
also felt it would be good to have a recommendation from the current School Board prior to
creating a final report from this committee.
Ms. Lalonde noted that in the survey, 60% of responders favored remaining at 5 members and
40% favored increasing that number. She also cited some increased interest in being on the
School Board.
Mr. Hafter expressed concern with people with “different agendas” trying to be on school
boards.
Mr. Holiman said that 8 members has worked on the boards where he has served.
Mr. Doyle said there weren’t a lot of parents of school children responding to the survey.
Ms. Dooley felt it was an immense amount of work for just 5 people.
Mr. Taylor suggested members take a vote as to whether to increase the number of members
of the School Board with the understanding they will consider the School Board's response.
Ms. Fitzgerald moved that the City Charter Committee recommend the expansion of the
membership on the School Board with the understanding that the Committee will reconsider
based on the School Board’s response. Ms. Lalonde seconded. The motion passed with all
present voting in favor.
Members questioned whether to recommend a number or leave that up to the Council and
School Board. Ms. Fitzgerald suggested looking for a recommendation from the School Board.
Members agreed the number would not necessarily have to be the same for both boards.
6. Discussion and possible action on the number of City Councilors:
It was noted that in the survey 54% of responders favored leaving the Council at 5 members.
46% favored having more than 5.
Ms. Kinville noted that if there are more members on the City Council that would also increase
the number of people on the Board of Civil Authority who are available to help at elections.
Ms. Lalonde said she would favor expansion to get more diversity of representation.
CITY CHARTER COMMITTEE
12 JULY 2023
PAGE 3
Mr. Hafter said he has worked with 3, 5, and 7 member Councils. 5 and 7 work well.
Ms. Fitzgerald said that while 5 works well, the issue she sees is geographic representation. She
questioned whether it would be possible to get a more diverse representation with more
members. She saw an opportunity to foster knowledge for new members.
Ms. Kate Bailey said she would favor expansion.
Ms. Linda Bailey said the demographic issue is the big need. She would favor more members as
long as voting is not at large. She also noted how daunting and expensive it is to run for the
City Council now.
Mr. Holiman said it is a lot of work, and it would be good to have more people to do it.
Ms. Dooley felt it would be good to get more people involved in the work of the city. She cited
that added work of Councilors who serve as liaisons to other city committees.
Mr. Doyle said South Burlington is a large municipality, and smaller communities have more
Councilors. He noted that in order to interview candidates for committee appointments, the
Council had to work in subgroups.
Mr. Simoneau said he supported expansion of the Council.
Mr. Albrecht said the most important reason for expansion is the growing community.
Mr. Bailey said it is hard to think outside the box the city is in. He felt the issue is be more
representative. He favored 10 Council members elected from 5 districts with 2 at large.
Mr. Engels noted that only 3 members of the current City Council have “institutional memory.”
Ms. Emery said that Council membership is not a burden for her. She said the Chicago ward
system is corrupt. She felt 7 members wouldn’t evoke a lot of competition, and competition is
good. She felt with 7 members you could get people with ulterior motives.
Mr. Engels moved that the City Charter Committee recommend the expansion of the number of
City Councilors. Ms. Lalonde seconded. Motion passed 5-1 with Mr. Hafter opposing and the
Chair not voting.
CITY CHARTER COMMITTEE
12 JULY 2023
PAGE 4
7. Discussion and possible action on wards or districts for the School Board:
Mr. Fitzgerald noted that in the survey, 53% favored voting at large and 48% favored another
method. She personally favored at large and noted that finding new talent will require a
community effort. She added that anything that goes to the Legislature should have a solid
rationale, and she hadn’t heard that yet.
Ms. Kate Bailey did not favor a ward system. She felt there hadn’t been an updated
conversation as yet.
Mr. Doyle asked whether the Committee has looked at where past and present School Board
members life. Ms. Lalonde showed a map indicating this. Mr. Engels noted that the School
Board does not have the same “big money” problem the City Council has had.
Mr. Bailey said a more representative system is better and favored a ward system as more
representative.
Ms. Dooley said she would support a ward system for the City Council; she was not sure about
the School Board. She didn’t feel they would have to be the same.
Ms. Emery suggested having people running from all districts but voting at large. Mr. Hafter
said he worked under such a system, and the intent was not to have diversity.
Mr. Minier said he could see the value of having people from different parts of the city.
Housing is different. Transportation is different. He said the value of wards for both City
Council and School Board, more for the Council.
Ms. Kate Bailey then moved that the Committee recommend maintaining at large voting for the
School Board. Ms. Fitzgerald seconded. Motion passed with all present voting in favor.
8. Discussion and possible action on wards or districts for the City Council:
It was noted that in the survey, 37.3% favored voting at large, 32.9% favored legislative districts
only, and 29.75% favored 5 legislative districts and the remainder at large.
Mr. Engels noted that only 37% percent of responders wanted to keep all voting at large.
CITY CHARTER COMMITTEE
12 JULY 2023
PAGE 5
Ms. Kinville said she favored at large because of the costs and the potential change of
Legislative districts every 10 years. She also noted there could be years when a ward wasn’t
voting for a City Councilor, and voters might not understand that.
Ms. Fitzgerald said it was clear from the survey that neighborhoods want to be heard from. She
questioned whether there is a different way to accomplish that. She felt the Committee cannot
ignore the survey results.
Mr. Hafter noted that now he gets to vote for 5 City Councilors; with a ward system, he would
vote for only one. He thought there might be other ways to get diversity. He also noted that
not every Legislative district is entirely in South Burlington.
Ms. Kate Bailey acknowledged the survey results. She felt people deserved a change. She was
open to the ward question being put to the voters though she was not convinced that a
geographic difference would guarantee diversity. She also would like to look at electing the
Planning Commission and Development Review Board and at ranked choice voting.
Ms. Lalonde said you can never guarantee diversity. She was not worried about voting districts
changing. She asked if everything is fine, why is the Committee having this discussion. She
thought 5 districts and 3 at large would be interesting.
Mr. Engels favored a ward system. He noted that 4 of the 5 current Council members come
from the Southeast Quadrant (SEQ). If the Council goes to a 7 person board, that could be 6 of
the 7 from the SEQ. He noted that South Burlington is the second largest city in the State, but
he did not see a corrupt Chicago atmosphere in the city.
Ms. Emery said you don’t have to spend close to $20,000 to be elect3ed, just talk to people,
door to door, and be honest. She said she prefers neighborhood forums instead of voting by
wards. She felt wards would create a situation in which people “seem to be bought.”
Ms. Kate Bailey moved that rather than having the Committee make a recommendation at this
meeting, they recommend the City Council further consider changes to the Council by studying
a ward system, ranked voting system, election of a Planning Commission and Development
Review Board and other representation for neighborhoods. There was no second to this
motion.
CITY CHARTER COMMITTEE
12 JULY 2023
PAGE 6
Ms. Kinville asked whether the State, through the city’s charter, allow the restriction of
campaign spending. Mr. McNeil said he would have to research that before providing an
answer.
Ms. Fitzgerald said she felt there should be further City Council consideration of wards. She
was not sure about the rest of Ms. Bailey’s motion.
Mr. Engels asked if there is support on the City Council for wards. Ms. Emery said “not that I
know.”
Ms. Linda Bailey said wards are important, and South Burlington is not Chicago. Different areas
of the city have different incomes and different issues.
Mr. Bailey thought Ms. Kinville was jumping ahead. If you want a more representative form of
government, you have to go wot a ward system. He urged the Committee to look to the future.
Mr. Doyle did not feel Ms. Emery’s comments regarding Chicago were appropriate here. He
noted that many communities in Vermont have wards. The larger a voting district is, the more
it favors money, and it is a form of disenfranchisement. He felt a ward of partial ward system
was essential.
Mr. Albrecht handed out demographic information. He cited the city’s growing populations,
and the knowledge of where that growth is occurring. He said the city is not monocultural. He
also cited the need to be responsive and prepared for the future by making government more
open to people. He acknowledged that wards don’t guarantee diversity, but he felt that he is
now being taxed without representation..
Mr. Holiman said ranked voting could positively influence many items on the table now.
Ms. Dooley rejected the “if it ain’t broken don’t fix it” notion. She said she comes from the
“how to make it better” point for view. She said that people’s comments on feeling not
represented really touch her. She noted that “diversity” permeates the City’s Comprehensive
Plan, and it should permeate city government as well. She added that she contacts
representatives that don’t technically represent her, and she has never been told not to contact
them. She knows Burlington City Council people who listen to people from other districts then
vote on what is best for the whole city.
CITY CHARTER COMMITTEE
12 JULY 2023
PAGE 7
Ms. Kate Bailey said the conversation needs to continue. She said she would leave a decision
up to the voters.
Mr. Minier agreed with Ms. Bailey.
Ms. Emery said the city is professionally run. The City Council reviews what the professional
staff provides to it. She felt there was a nice balance and didn’t the Council “being the engine.”
She thought South Burlington was very well run.
Mr. Minier said he felt you would get “more Meaghan Emerys” through a ward system.
Mr. Hafter then moved that on the question of whether the city should elect City Councilors
through a ward system, the Committee report that it could not reach a consensus. Mr. Engels
seconded.
Mr. Engels questioned why this is being kept from the voters.
Ms. Kate Bailey was concerned that if the Committee didn’t make it clear they want the
conversation to continue, it won’t. She asked to amend the motion to include the following
words after the word “consensus”: “…on whether to keep the status quo or amend the
system.” Ms. Lalonde seconded that amendment.
In the vote that followed the amended motion passed with all present voting in favor.
9. Discussion of other items for possible consideration: public campaign financing,
ranked choice voting, or other ideas:
Mr. Taylor recommended including those items with no recommendation, stating that they
were a part of the discussion. Mr. Hafter asked to include non-citizen voting. Mr. Engels asked
to include having all candidates on one ballot and having the top 2 elected.
Ms. Emery said it is hard to get people to run in areas with entry level housing. She didn’t think
it was feasible.
10. Discussion of the final report to Council and timeline:
Mr. Taylor suggested trying to draft a report in August.
CITY CHARTER COMMITTEE
12 JULY 2023
PAGE 8
Ms. Baker asked if the Committee wanted the City Attorney to draft language on expanding the
boards for the next meeting. She said they could leave an actual number blank. Mr. McNeil
said the draft would have to include the terms as well. Mr. Taylor said it may be a little early for
language.
11. Other Business:
The next meetings will be on 9 August and 13 September.
As there was no further business to come before the Committee, Mr. Engels moved to adjourn.
Ms. Fitzgerald seconded. Motion passed unanimously. The meeting adjourned at 6:05 p.m.
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DRAFT – South Burlington City Charter Committee
Recommendations to the City Council
City Council’s Direction to the Charter Committee
As part of the South Burlington City Council’s Fiscal Year 2022 Policy Priorities and
Strategies, the Council identified consideration of “charter changes related to governance” as a
priority. The Council passed a resolution on February 22, 2022, convening the Charter
Committee to consider updates to the City’s municipal charter. The resolution stated that the
Council wanted “to explore governance structures to ensure that voices are equitably represented
at policy making tables.” It also sought to be sure the South Burlington School Board was
represented in the governance discussions. The Council then requested that the School Board
appoint two of its members to the Charter Committee.
The Council charged the Charter Committee with considering governance models and
language updates to the city charter. It directed the committee to “engage in a community
feedback process” to “solicit feedback from South Burlington residents on governance models.”
The Council asked that the committee finish its work by July 2023.
Overview of Charter Change Process
In order to amend the City Charter, the Charter Committee first recommends any changes
to the City Council. The Council can approve, amend, or reject the recommendations, which, if
approved, then go before the South Burlington voters. If the voters approve the
recommendations, the changes then go to the State Legislature for a vote and, if approved, to the
Governor for signature.
Charter Changes Considered
The Charter Committee considered different options for Chief Executive of the City:
A City Council/City Manager system (currently the South Burlington model)
A City Council/City Manager system with a policy or “weak” mayor who serves as City
Council Chair but has no executive function
An administrative or “strong” mayor system where the mayor is the CEO of the city
The Committee also considered the composition of the City Council and the School Board.
Section 13.302 of the City Charter limits City Council and School Board membership to 5
members each. The Committee looked into whether that number is still viable for each body or
whether it should be increased for one or both. In addition, the Committee studied the question of
whether the City's voters should continue to elect City Councilors and School Board Directors at
large or whether it would recommend moving to a “ward” or district system or a hybrid system
of some elected at large and some elected by ward.
After a brief discussion of increasing the number of members of the City Planning
Commission from 7 to 9, which would require a charter change, the Committee asked the
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Planning Commission to assess this idea. It did so, voting 5 to 1 with one abstention to maintain
the status quo and stay with 7 members. Those in the majority felt that 9 members could be
unwieldy and “counterproductive.” Council Liaison Emery brought the issue back to the City
Council to see if they wanted the Charter Committee to continue pursuing it, and she reported
that the Council saw no reason to counteract the Planning Commission’s decision to remain at 7
members. This topic was then tabled with no further action by the Charter Committee.
The Committee also looked at language changes to make the charter gender neutral.
However, the legislature had already modernized the charter’s language in 2021 without the
city’s involvement, requiring no action by the Committee.
Charter Committee Process
Interviews on governance structure
The Charter Committee interviewed four Vermont experts on different forms of city
governance:
Montpelier City Manager Bill Fraser on the council/manager form of government (12
October 2022)
Winooski Mayor Kristine Lott on the policy/“weak” mayor form of government (12
October 2022)
Rutland Mayor David Allaire on the administrative/“strong” mayor form of government
(9 November 2022)
South Burlington City Council Chair Helen Riehle on the council/manager form of
government (14 December 2022)
Committee members asked these individuals a variety of questions related to their specific
position, including:
How long they had served in the position
What qualifications they felt were needed to serve in the position
Their thoughts on the various forms of governance the committee was considering (pros
and cons)
Their thoughts on the best size for City Councils
Their thoughts on the use of political affiliations in campaigning for office
How each described their management practice and their role (or not) as “face of the
city”
Their thoughts on at-large vs ward systems
The hours they committed to their city position and the salaries or stipends they were
paid
The cost of campaigning
Any additional thoughts on city government structure
Their thoughts and comments can be reviewed in the Charter Committee meeting minutes.
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List of pros and cons
The Committee worked hard creating and rewriting a list of possible advantages/pros and
disadvantages/cons for each possible charter change, including the status quo. That chart appears
at the end of this recommendation.
Community outreach – survey, forums, other meetings
The Committee engaged in community outreach to determine the views of South
Burlington citizens on the governance structures we were considering. It deliberated on the
questions we were trying to answer and developed a community survey that allowed votes for
the different options as well as the opportunity to provide open-ended responses. City Manager
Jessie Baker developed a document with a message from the Charter Committee, the
Committee’s list of pros and cons, and a link to the survey. See
https://www.southburlingtonvt.gov/government/city_committees_boards/2023_city_charter_com
munity_feedback.php. The survey was publicized in the online City News newsletter, three
editions of the Other Paper, and Front Porch Forum emails. Fliers were posted at City Hall to
encourage people to take the survey. The South Burlington Business Association advertised our
desire for feedback and our survey at one of their membership meetings. Jessie Baker collated
the community survey results, which were posted on the above website.
The committee held two community forums, Wednesday, May 10 and Thursday, May 25,
from 7-9 p.m. in the City Hall auditorium. The forums were recorded and the videos appear on
the website given above. Committee members also spoke with parents at PTO meetings and with
members at a Rotary meeting. At each of the meetings, the committee chair encouraged
attendees to share the survey and their own thoughts on the governance structures with their
neighbors after the meeting.
Review of public input and feedback
Forums
May 10, 2022 and May 25, 2022 - Brief review of comments made:
Concern of using legislative districts as wards because legislative districts may
not be current in the actual distribution of the City population and they will
change every ten years due to the census
Wards vs at-large representation (this was a topic of significant and diverse
discussion)
Possibility of electing Planning Commission members was raised
Support for a non-partisan system was a consistent theme. Residents expressed
concern over having elections involving political party candidates. (this concern
was consistent at hearings, in forums and in survey responses)
At the May 10 meeting, in a straw vote ½ attendees favored wards and ½ at-large
representations
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The Chair of the Board of Civil Authority requested expansion of the size of the
BCA if possible. This was based on his perspective that the BCA members would
support this expansion.
Concern that expanding the School Board may not generate a sufficient number of
candidates
The concept of Ranked Choice voting in various formats was mentioned
The Mayor form of government was not supported by the majority of commentors
The possibility of elections in November with larger voter turnout was expressed
Minutes from the public input sessions are attached to the agendas for the June 22 meeting of the
Charter Committee.
Survey
There were 175 responses to the Charter Committee survey. Ninety-eight percent of the
respondents were South Burlington residents from a variety of districts though not in equal
numbers (24% from CHI-8, 17% from CHI-9, 14% from CHI-10, 16% from CHI-11, 27% from
CHI-12). Eighteen percent of respondents said they had attended a community meeting on the
charter issues. Eighty-five percent said they had reviewed the Committee’s spreadsheet of pros
and cons. Seventy-seven percent of respondents did not have children in the city’s schools.
(Note: the survey was not designed or intended to be a statistically valid survey.)
For the Chief Executive question, 64% preferred the City Manager form of government,
19% wanted to see an executive mayor, and 17% favored a policy mayor.
For City Council, 54% preferred a City Council of 5 members and 46% wanted to
increase that number. For those wanting to increase the number, many comments suggested 7
councilors, while a few mentioned 8, 9, or 10. Regarding voting districts for City Council, 37%
favored continuing to vote at large, 32% favored electing members from the five legislative
districts, and 29% favored a combination of at large and districts.
For School Board, 60% favored the current number of School Board Directors and 40%
preferred increasing that number. For those wanting to increase the number, many comments
suggested 7 School Board members, while a few mentioned 10. Regarding voting districts for
School Board, 53% favored voting for School Board Directors at large, 24% preferred election
by legislative districts, and 24% preferred a combination of at large and districts.
Many respondents provided written comments in their survey responses. These comments were
consistent with input from the hearings. The survey results and written comments can be found at
the link at the end of this report.
Comments at Regular Committee Meetings
Many of those who attended the Committee’s regular meetings advocated in favor of a
ward system. They argued that election by wards would lead to broader participation by South
Burlington citizens and ensure that the Council is more responsive to the concerns of all citizens.
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Though it would not guarantee diversity, these commenters believed that election by district
would make it more likely for all citizens to have a voice at the City Council.
South Burlington resident Dan Albrecht prepared a handout for the Committee with
demographic information on each of the census tracts. The handout also showed South
Burlington’s legislative districts overlaid with a map of single-unit and multi-unit housing in the
city. Dan suggested South Burlington could draw our own voting districts without difficulty. He
distributed another handout to the Committee showing the demographics of South Burlington’s
four census districts with data from the 2020 census, highlighting the different median incomes
and rates of poverty in the districts.
The comments of members of the public can be reviewed in the Charter Committee
meeting minutes.
Recommendations of the Charter Committee
Chief Executive
Based on public feedback, the Committee found that South Burlington citizens did not
want to make a change from the current form of government. In the survey, 64% preferred the
City Manager form of government. The Committee concurred and decided not to continue
consideration of the different options for chief executive.
City Council
The Committee voted unanimously to increase the number of City Councilors. An
increase could increase demographic representation and would allow councilors to mentor newer
members. In the survey, 54% preferred a City Council of 5 members and 46% wanted to increase
that number, close to the same. Should the City Council agree to an expansion of the number of
Councilors, the Charter Committee would be interested in exploring the appropriate number.
The Committee could not reach a consensus on whether councilors should be elected by
district, at large, or some combination of the two (five by district and two at large, for example).
Regarding voting districts for City Council, in our survey, 37% favored continuing to vote at
large, 32% favored electing members from the five legislative districts, and 29% favored a
combination of at large and districts. (Many comments suggested that wards should be different
from the legislative districts.) We recommend that the City Council further consider the
possibility of voting for councilors by wards, but the Committee did not agree on whether to
recommend the change.
Some felt that diverse representation could be encouraged by the use of wards. Four out
of five City Councilors currently live in the city’s Southeast Quadrant, and moving to voting by
wards would mean that different areas of the city are represented on the council. Many people do
not feel represented in city government and a ward system could lead to increased accountability
and representation, as well as a more inclusive government with diverse ideas. A ward system
could also lead to lower costs for campaigns, as at large campaigns have become very expensive.
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Some believe that the council should put a ward system on the ballot for the voters to choose.
Moving to wards with an expanded number of council members would involve a great deal of
consideration, particularly if the boundaries of the wards differ from the legislative district
boundaries. Issues would include the number of wards and geographic considerations, the
frequency of revising ward boundaries when population shifts occur, and polling locations and
staffing.
Others felt that a change to wards was unnecessary because all councilors represent the
entire community and understand issues facing all citizens in South Burlington. Councilors from
different wards may be too interested in their own ward’s issues, to the exclusion of the good of
the city. That may lead to “horse trading” in the city council. Further, it may be difficult to find
candidates in each ward who are willing to serve.
Some comments expressed concern about using legislative districts for city elections
because they are subject to change every ten years, with input and recommendations by the City
Board of Civil Authority but ultimately determined by the legislature. The consensus in the
Committee, however, is that, if wards were used, it would be too confusing for voters for the city
to create different wards, distinct from the legislative districts. In addition, city-created wards
would likely have to change periodically too, due to new data and ultimately approved by the
Legislature.
School Board
The Committee voted unanimously to increase the number of School Board Directors.
While 60% of survey respondents favored the current number of School Board Directors, only a
quarter of total respondents had children in the South Burlington schools. The Committee had
heard from past School Board Directors in favor of an increase. The School Board works in
committees that negotiate with teachers, administrators, and staff, and five people is not enough
to do that work without being a substantial burden. The addition of more Directors could
increase engagement and involve diverse perspectives. The Committee does not recommend a
particular number of Directors.
The Committee also voted unanimously to continue electing Directors at large. In the
survey, 53% favored voting for School Board Directors at large, 24% preferred election by
legislative districts, and 24% preferred a combination of at large and districts. Directors all
represent a single school district with a state-mandated curriculum and school issues are not
localized.
These issues are on the agenda for the August 2 School Board meeting, and any final
recommendation must take into account the views of current School Board Directors. To be
discussed at the Charter Committee’s August 9th meeting.
Further Recommendations
The Committee discussed other means of addressing concerns about under-representation
of certain areas or demographics in city government. One option was alternative election
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methods such as ranked-choice voting or instant runoff voting. Another creative option might be,
if a two-year term and a three-year term were on the ballot, the top vote-getter could have the
three-year seat and the individual with the second most votes could have the two-year seat. The
Committee believes these options should or could receive further consideration.
Another option could be a form of public campaign financing to reduce spending and the
influence of money in local elections and level the playing field for candidates. However, the
City Attorney advised the Committee that this would be very difficult to do at a city level.
Appreciation
The Charter Committee thanks City Manager Jessie Baker for her truly invaluable
assistance with this process and City Attorney Colin McNeil for his good counsel throughout.
The Committee also acknowledges Councilor Meaghan Emery, our Council Liaison.
Attachments:
Pros/Cons document
Charter Committee handout seeking public feedback (attached to Jessie’s May 3
email to the committee)
Dan Albrecht’s one-page handout on Demographics of South Burlington’s 4
Census Districts
Elizabeth Fitzgerald’s letter on behalf of former School Board Directors
Link to synopsis of survey data (including written comments)