Date: Fri 03-Nov-1995
Date: Fri 03-Nov-1995
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
charter-revision-council
Full Text:
Members Sought For Charter Revision Panel
The town still is looking for volunteers to serve on a charter revision
commission.
The Legislative Council voted again unanimously Wednesday night to create a
commission to look at the charter and decide whether it should be amended. The
council had approved the resolution calling for the charter revision
commission at its meeting on October 8. But the vote had to be taken again to
meet state regulations for the timeline required to appoint the commission
members.
Council Vice Chairman Melissa Pilchard said nine persons have volunteered so
far for the commission which, by law, can have between five and fifteen
members. She encouraged more residents to submit resumes before Monday by
mailing or bringing them to the coucil's mailbox near the dispatch center in
the basement of Edmond Town Hall, 45 Main Street.
The charter, which was first adopted in 1961, was last amended in November
1991. Its provision specify that a charter revision commission must be
convened within five years after the last commission submitted its report.
Mrs Pilchard said the council members who are serving on the charter
subcommittee will attempt to meet on Thursday, November 9, to interview the
candidates. The commission must consist of an approximately equal number of
Republicans and Demcrats, she said.
"Neither party can have a majority of more than one," she said. "So if the
commission has nine members, the split must be 4-5."
No more than one third of the commission may hold office as a local official
and no Legislative Council member may serve on the commission.
"With the timeline that we have now, we should be able to get the questions on
the fall ballot in 1997," Mrs Pilchard said. "It's important to have a large
enough percentage of the voters turn out to vote on charter revision because
if the percentage isn't large enough, the vote doesn't count."
Putting the charter revision proposals on the fall election ballot will assure
that enough voters come to the polls, she said.
