HomeMy WebLinkAbout8.2 Discussion on Mayor and City Council Term Limitsr
DUBLIN
CALIFORNIA
STAFF REPORT
CITY COUNCIL
DATE: .Line 6, 2023
TO: Honorable Mayor and City Councilmembers
FROM: Linda Smith, City Manager
Agenda Item 8.2
SU B.ECT: Discussion on Mayor and City Council Term Limits
Prepared by.• John Bakker, City Attorney & John Stefanski, Assistant to the
City Manager
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY:
The City Council will receive a report on Mayor and City Council Term Limits. At the March 11,
2023 City Council Team Building Meeting, the City Council directed Staff to prepare an item for
discussion on Term Limits.
STAFF RECOMMENDATION:
Receive the report, discuss, and provide direction as needed.
FINANCIAL IMPACT:
There is no financial impact associated with a discussion item. Should the City Council request, at
a later date, the inclusion of term limits on the ballot, there would be costs associated with a
consolidated election as described below.
DESCRIPTION:
At the March 11, 2023 City Council meeting, the City Council discussed the upcoming transition to
district -based elections starting in 2024. Specifically, concerns were raised around whether the
total eight -year term limit could impact the ability to recruit Council and Mayoral candidates and
whether the City Council should evaluate changes to the term limits. The Council asked to review
term limits for other local agencies and to hold a future discussion regarding the City's current
term limit policy.
Current Policy
Current regulations governing Mayor and City Council Term Limits were approved by Dublin
voters in November 1996. As a result, the City Council adopted Ordinance 18-96 confirming this
vote and adding Section 2.08.050 to the Dublin Municipal Code. Under this ordinance, the term
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limits are as follows:
"No person shall serve as Councilmember for more than two (2) consecutive terms, nor shall any
person serve as Mayor for more than four (4) consecutive terms. In addition: (A) no person who
has served as a Councilmember for one (1) term shall serve more than two (2) terms as Mayor if
the terms as Councilmember and Mayor are consecutive; (B) no person who has served as
Councilmember for two (2) consecutive terms shall serve a consecutive term as Mayor; (C) no
person who has served as Mayor for three (3) or four (4) consecutive terms shall serve a
consecutive term as a Councilmember; (D) no person who has served as Mayor for two (2)
consecutive terms shall serve more than one (1) succeeding consecutive term as Councilmember;
(E) no person who has served consecutive terms as Mayor and Councilmember shall serve more
than one (1) more consecutive term as Mayor; and (F) no person who has served consecutive
terms as Mayor and Councilmember shall serve another consecutive term as Councilmember. As
used herein, a person shall be considered to have served a term of office as a Councilmember if
such person has served as a Councilmember for two (2) years plus one (1) day and a person shall
be considered to have served a term of office as Mayor if such person has served as Mayor for one
(1) year plus one (1) day"
Term Limits in Neighboring Jurisdictions
Term Limits for the Mayor and City Council vary among the Cities in Alameda County and the Tri-
Valley Region. A summary of these term limits can be found in the table below:
Maximum Consecutive Years Served by Position &
Total Maximum Consecutive Years Served on City Council
Jurisdiction
Danville
Dublin
Fremont
Hayward
Livermore
Newark
Pleasanton
San Leandro
San Ramon
Union City
A sample of the
Mayor
8
8
Councilmember
8
8
8 8
Total
8
16
16
8 8 16
8 8 16
8 8 (Mayor only)
12 12 12
District Based Elections
No
Yes
Yes
No
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
regulations, or lack thereof, for these cities can be found below:
Jurisdiction
Danville
Fremont
Term Limit
None
Mayor —No mayor who has served terms comprising eight (8) consecutive years as
mayor shall be qualified for further service in that office until he or she has a break in
service in that office of at least four (4) years.
City Council —No Councilmember who has served terms comprising eight (8)
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1699
consecutive years as a councilmember shall be qualified for further in that office until
he or she has a break in service in that office of at least four (4) years.
The disqualifications imposed by this section shall not prevent a person who is
disqualified from serving as mayor from serving as a councilmember or a person who
is disqualified from serving as a councilmember from serving as mayor. However, any
person who has served terms comprising sixteen (16) consecutive years in the offices
of mayor and councilmember shall be disqualified from further service in either office
until he or she has a break in service from both offices of at least four (4) years.
Time spent in office while serving less than a full term shall not be counted in
computing consecutive years in any office.
Time spent in office prior to the enactment of this section shall not be counted in
computing consecutive years in any office.
In computing the number of years served, full, four-year (4) terms shall count as four
(4) years of service even though the period encompassed by such terms may not be
exactly four years in duration.
The term of office for the mayor and each councilmember shall be four (4) years.
Fremont Municipal Code 2.05.100; 110
Hayward None
Livermore Mayor —No person who has served terms totaling eight (8) consecutive years as
mayor shall be qualified for further service in that office until he or she has a break in
service in that office of at least two (2) years.
The office of the mayor shall be an elective office, and the term thereof shall be two (2)
years.
City Council —No person who has served terms totaling eight (8) consecutive years as
a Council member shall be qualified for further service in that office until he or she has
a break in service in that office of at least two (2) years.
The disqualifications imposed by this section shall not prevent a person who is
disqualified from serving as mayor from serving as Council member or a person who is
disqualified from serving as a Council member from serving as mayor. However, any
person who has served terms totaling sixteen (16) consecutive years in the offices of
mayor and Council member shall be disqualified from further service in either office
until he or she has a break in service from both offices of at least two (2) years.
As used in this section, a person shall be considered to have served a "term" of office if
such person has served one-half of a full term of office plus one (1) day.
A term of office for a member of the City Council shall be four (4) years.
Livermore Municipal Code Section 2.04.040
Newark None
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Pleasanton Mayor— A mayor shall serve no more than four (4) consecutive terms and a person
who has been appointed or elected to mayor for more than one year shall serve no
more than three additional terms.
San Leandro
The mayor shall hold office for a term of two years from and after the date and time at
which the mayor was declared elected and was installed and shall hold office until his
or her successor is elected and qualified.
Councilmember—A council member (other than mayor) shall serve no more than two
consecutive terms and a person who has been appointed or elected to council for more
than two years shall serve no more than one additional term.
Each such council member shall hold office for a term of four years from and after the
date and time at which he or she was declared elected and was installed and shall hold
office until his or her successor is elected and qualified.
Pleasanton Municipal Code Section 2.04.015
Mayor —No person shall be eligible for the office of Mayor who has served two,
complete four-year terms as Mayor immediately prior to the term for which such
person seeks election or appointment.
Councilmember—No person shall be eligible for the office of Council Member who has
served two, complete four-year terms as Council Member immediately prior to the
term for which such person seeks election or appointment.
Council Members and the Mayor shall hold office for four years. The term of office shall
commence on January 1 following the election.
San Leandro City Charter, Article 11, Sections 235, 365, 270
San Ramon Mayor --The mayor shall be elected for a two-year term on the first Tuesday following
the first Monday of each even -numbered year and shall be limited to such number of
terms as are specified in the Charter of the city. No elected Mayor shall serve for more
than four two-year terms except that a cumulative total of nine years may be served if
one of those terms was lengthened as the result of change the date of the general
municipal election.
Union City
San Ramon City Charter Article 11I. San Ramon Municipal Code Section A4-2.A
Mayor and Councilmember--Neither the Mayor nor any member of the City Council
shall serve in the same office for more than three (3) consecutive terms. For purposes
of this chapter, the office of Mayor and the office of City Councilmember are distinct
offices. At any municipal election after the expiration of two (2) years following said
consecutive elective terms, a former Councilmember or Mayor may again seek election
to City Council or as Mayor.
For purposes of applying this chapter, any time in office served for a partial term,
whether appointed or elective, shall not be considered.
Union City Municipal Code Section 2.07.020-2.07.030
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Ballot Measure Timeline
Any changes to the City's term limits would require a vote of Dublin citizens. Should the City
Council wish to initiate a ballot measure revising or repealing the existing term limits, in the
March 5, 2024, Presidential Primary Election, it must meet Alameda County's December 8. 2023
deadline for filing a resolution requesting consolidation with the Presidential Primary Election
and setting forth the ballot question. To meet that deadline, the City Council would need to adopt
(by a 2/3 vote) a Resolution (1) calling for an election, (2) requesting consolidation with the
Presidential Primary Election, and (3) setting forth the Ballot for the measure. To meet this
deadline, such action would take place at the November 7, 2023, City Council meeting.
The City Council may also consider submitting a ballot measure consolidated with a later election,
like the November 5, 2024 Presidential Election.
Effective Date
If the ballot measure passes, changes to the term limits would be considered adopted upon the
date the vote is declared by the City Council and would go into effect ten (10) days after that date.
Election results are typically certified several weeks after the election, the vote would likely be
declared at an April 2024 City Council meeting.
Costs
According to the Alameda County Registrar of Voters, participation in the Countywide
Consolidated Primary Election costs between $7-$9 per voter. Using the number of registered
voters for the November 2020 Election (34,207), Staff estimates the cost of placing a ballot
measure to be between $239,449 and $307,863.
Alternatives
At this juncture, Staff is seeking feedback from the City Council on any potential changes to the
City's current term limits. The City Council could opt to (1) remove term limits, (2) amend current
term limits, or (3) take no further action and leave the current term limits in place.
When comparing with neighboring jurisdictions, the City's term limit structure is the most
limiting. Should the City Council seek to amend the current term limit structure, staff would
recommend aligning with the term limit structures of these jurisdictions and increasing the total
maximum years served to either 12 (Union City) or 16 (Pleasanton, Livermore).
STRATEGIC PLAN INITIATIVE:
None.
NOTICING REQUIREMENTS/PUBLIC OUTREACH:
The City Council Agenda was posted.
ATTACHMENTS:
None.
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Mayor and City Council
Term Limits
June 6, 2023
V
DUBLIN
CALIFORNIA
Background
• City will be transitioning to District -Based Elections in
2024.
• March Council Team Building
— Discussion around current term limits impacting the ability
to recruit Council Candidates.
• Requested a review of term limits for other agencies and
discussion regarding the current City policy.
Current Policy
• Current regulations governing term limits were
approved by voters in November 1996.
— "No person shall serve as Councilmember for more than two
(2) consecutive terms, nor shall any person serve as Mayor for
more than four (4) consecutive terms..."
• Councilmember Term:2 years plus I day
• MayorTerm: 1 year plus I day
How Does Dublin Compare?
Maximum ConsecutiveYears Served by Position &
Total Maximum ConsecutiveYears Served on City Council
Jurisdiction
Mayor
Councilmember
Total
District Based Elections
Danville
-
-
-
No
Dublin
8
8
8
Yes
Fremont
Hayward
Livermore
Newark
Pleasanton
San Leandro
San Ramon
Union City
CALIFORNIA
8
8
8
8
8
12
8
8
8
8
12
16
I6
16
16
8 (Mayor only)
12
Yes
No
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
1706
Ballot Measure Process
• Changes to term limits requires vote of Dublin citizens.
Key Milestone
Last regular Council Meeting to adopt Resolution that:
( I ) Calls for an election
(2) Requests consolidation with Presidential Primary Election
(3) Sets forth the ballot for the measure
November 7, 2023
County deadline to file resolution requesting consolidation with Presidential December 8, 2023
Primary Election
Presidential Primary Election
March 5, 2024
• November 5, 2024, Presidential Election is an alternative option.
Conclusions
• When comparing with neighboring jurisdictions, the
City's term limit structure is the most limiting.
• Options for the Council to Consider:
— Leave current term limits in place.
— Amend current term limits.
— Remove term limits.
Next Steps
• Staff is seeking feedback on any potential changes to
current term limit structure.
— Should the Council wish to amend the current structure, staff
would recommend aligning with the term limit structures of
neighboring jurisdictions in the Tri-Valley or Union City.
Questions and Comments
VM
DUBLIN
CALIFORNIA
1710
June 6, 2023
SB 343
Senate Bill 343 mandates supplemental materials
that have been received by the City Clerk's office that
relate to an agenda item after the agenda packets
have been distributed to the City Council be available
to the public.
The attached documents were received in the City
Clerk's office after distribution of the June 6, 2023,
Regular City Council meeting agenda packet.
Item 8.2
1711
REVISED — June 6, 2023
1/
STAFF REPORT
DUBLIN CITY COUNCIL
CALIFORNIA
DATE: June 6, 2023
TO: Honorable Mayor and City Councilmembers
FROM: Linda Smith, City Manager
Agenda Item 8.2
SUBJECT: Discussion on Mayor and City Council Term Limits
Prepared by: John Bakker, City Attorney & John Stefanski, Assistant to the City
Manager
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY:
The City Council will receive a report on Mayor and City Council Term Limits. At the March
11, 2023 City Council Team Building Meeting, the City Council directed Staff to prepare an
item for discussion on Term Limits.
STAFF RECOMMENDATION:
Receive the report, discuss, and provide direction as needed.
FINANCIAL IMPACT:
There is no financial impact associated with a discussion item. Should the City Council
request, at a later date, the inclusion of term limits on the ballot, there would be costs
associated with a consolidated election as described below.
DESCRIPTION:
At the March 11, 2023 City Council meeting, the City Council discussed the upcoming
transition to district -based elections starting in 2024. Specifically, concerns were raised
around whether the total eight -year term limit could impact the ability to recruit Council and
Mayoral candidates and whether the City Council should evaluate changes to the term limits.
The Council asked to review term limits for other local agencies and to hold a future
discussion regarding the City's current term limit policy.
Current Policy
Current regulations governing Mayor and City Council Term Limits were approved by Dublin
voters in November 1996. As a result, the City Council adopted Ordinance 18-96 confirming
Page 1 of 6
1712
this vote and adding Section 2.08.050 to the Dublin Municipal Code. Under this ordinance, the
term limits are as follows:
"No person shall serve as Councilmember for more than two (2) consecutive terms, nor shall any
person serve as Mayor for more than four (4) consecutive terms. In addition: (A) no person who has
served as a Councilmember for one (1) term shall serve more than two (2) terms as Mayor if the terms
as Councilmember and Mayor are consecutive; (B) no person who has served as Councilmember for
two (2) consecutive terms shall serve a consecutive term as Mayor; (C) no person who has served as
Mayor for three (3) or four (4) consecutive terms shall serve a consecutive term as a Councilmember;
(D) no person who has served as Mayor for two (2) consecutive terms shall serve more than one (1)
succeeding consecutive term as Councilmember; (E) no person who has served consecutive terms as
Mayor and Councilmember shall serve more than one (1) more consecutive term as Mayor; and (F)
no person who has served consecutive terms as Mayor and Councilmember shall serve another
consecutive term as Councilmember. As used herein, a person shall be considered to have served a
term of office as a Councilmember if such person has served as a Councilmember for two (2) years
plus one (1) day and a person shall be considered to have served a term of office as Mayor if such
person has served as Mayor for one (1) year plus one (1) day."
Term Limits in Neighboring Jurisdictions
Term Limits for the Mayor and City Council vary among the Cities in Alameda County and the
Tri-Valley Region. A summary of these term limits can be found in the table below:
Maximum Consecutive Years Served by Position &
Total Maximum Consecutive Years Served on City Council
Jurisdiction Mayor Councilmember Total District Based Elections
Danville - - - No
Dublin 8 8 8 Yes
Fremont 8 8 16 Yes
Hayward - - No
Livermore 8 8 16 Yes
Newark - No
Pleasanton 8 8 16 Yes
San Leandro 8 8 16 Yes
San Ramon 8 - 8 (Mayor only) Yes
Union City 12 12 12 Yes
A sample of the regulations, or lack thereof, for these cities can be found below:
Jurisdiction Term Limit
Danville None
Fremont Mayor —No mayor who has served terms comprising eight (8) consecutive years as
mayor shall be qualified for further service in that office until he or she has a
break in service in that office of at least four (4) years.
Page 2 of 6
1713
City Council —No Councilmember who has served terms comprising eight (8)
consecutive years as a councilmember shall be qualified for further in that office
until he or she has a break in service in that office of at least four (4) years.
The disqualifications imposed by this section shall not prevent a person who is
disqualified from serving as mayor from serving as a councilmember or a person
who is disqualified from serving as a councilmember from serving as mayor.
However, any person who has served terms comprising sixteen (16) consecutive
years in the offices of mayor and councilmember shall be disqualified from
further service in either office until he or she has a break in service from both
offices of at least four (4) years.
Time spent in office while serving less than a full term shall not be counted in
computing consecutive years in any office.
Time spent in office prior to the enactment of this section shall not be counted in
computing consecutive years in any office.
In computing the number of years served, full, four-year (4) terms shall count as
four (4) years of service even though the period encompassed by such terms may
not be exactly four years in duration.
The term of office for the mayor and each councilmember shall be four (4) years.
Fremont Municipal Code 2.05.100; 110
Hayward None
Livermore Mayor —No person who has served terms totaling eight (8) consecutive years as
mayor shall be qualified for further service in that office until he or she has a
break in service in that office of at least two (2) years.
The office of the mayor shall be an elective office, and the term thereof shall be
two (2) years.
City Council —No person who has served terms totaling eight (8) consecutive years
as a Council member shall be qualified for further service in that office until he or
she has a break in service in that office of at least two (2) years.
The disqualifications imposed by this section shall not prevent a person who is
disqualified from serving as mayor from serving as Council member or a person
who is disqualified from serving as a Council member from serving as mayor.
However, any person who has served terms totaling sixteen (16) consecutive years
in the offices of mayor and Council member shall be disqualified from further
service in either office until he or she has a break in service from both offices of at
least two (2) years.
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1714
As used in this section, a person shall be considered to have served a "term" of
office if such person has served one-half of a full term of office plus one (1) day.
A term of office for a member of the City Council shall be four (4) years.
Livermore Municipal Code Section 2.04.040
Newark None
Pleasanton Mayor— A mayor shall serve no more than four (4) consecutive terms and a person
who has been appointed or elected to mayor for more than one year shall serve no
more than three additional terms.
San Leandro
The mayor shall hold office for a term of two years from and after the date and
time at which the mayor was declared elected and was installed and shall hold
office until his or her successor is elected and qualified.
Councilmember—A council member (other than mayor) shall serve no more than
two consecutive terms and a person who has been appointed or elected to council
for more than two years shall serve no more than one additional term.
Each such council member shall hold office for a term of four years from and after
the date and time at which he or she was declared elected and was installed and
shall hold office until his or her successor is elected and qualified.
Pleasanton Municipal Code Section 2.04.015
Mayor —No person shall be eligible for the office of Mayor who has served two,
complete four-year terms as Mayor immediately prior to the term for which such
person seeks election or appointment.
Councilmember—No person shall be eligible for the office of Council Member
who has served two, complete four-year terms as Council Member immediately
prior to the term for which such person seeks election or appointment.
Council Members and the Mayor shall hold office for four years. The term of office
shall commence on January 1 following the election.
San Leandro City Charter, Article 11, Sections 235, 365, 270
San Ramon Mayor --The mayor shall be elected for a two-year term on the first Tuesday
following the first Monday of each even -numbered year and shall be limited to
such number of terms as are specified in the Charter of the city. No elected Mayor
shall serve for more than four two-year terms except that a cumulative total of
nine years may be served if one of those terms was lengthened as the result of
change the date of the general municipal election.
Union City
San Ramon City Charter Article III. San Ramon Municipal Code Section A4-2.A
Mayor and Councilmember--Neither the Mayor nor any member of the City
Council shall serve in the same office for more than three (3) consecutive terms.
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1715
For purposes of this chapter, the office of Mayor and the office of City
Councilmember are distinct offices. At any municipal election after the expiration
of two (2) years following said consecutive elective terms, a former
Councilmember or Mayor may again seek election to City Council or as Mayor.
For purposes of applying this chapter, any time in office served for a partial term,
whether appointed or elective, shall not be considered.
Union City Municipal Code Section 2.07.020-2.07.030
Ballot Measure Timeline
Any changes to the City's term limits would require a vote of Dublin citizens. Should the City
Council wish to initiate a ballot measure revising or repealing the existing term limits, in the
March 5, 2024, Presidential Primary Election, it must meet Alameda County's December 8,
2023 deadline for filing a resolution requesting consolidation with the Presidential Primary
Election and setting forth the ballot question. To meet that deadline, the City Council would
need to adopt (by a 2/3 vote) a Resolution (1) calling for an election, (2) requesting
consolidation with the Presidential Primary Election, and (3) setting forth the Ballot for the
measure. To meet this deadline, such action would take place at the November 7, 2023, City
Council meeting.
The City Council may also consider submitting a ballot measure consolidated with a later
election, like the November 5, 2024 Presidential Election.
Effective Date
If the ballot measure passes, changes to the term limits would be considered adopted upon
the date the vote is declared by the City Council and would go into effect ten (10) days after
that date. Election results are typically certified several weeks after the election, the vote
would likely be declared at an April 2024 City Council meeting.
Costs
According to the Alameda County Registrar of Voters, participation in the Countywide
Consolidated Primary Election costs between $7-$9 per voter. Using the number of registered
voters for the November 2020 Election (34,207), Staff estimates the cost of placing a ballot
measure to be between $239,449 and $307,863.
Alternatives
At this juncture, Staff is seeking feedback from the City Council on any potential changes to
the City's current term limits. The City Council could opt to (1) remove term limits, (2) amend
current term limits, or (3) take no further action and leave the current term limits in place.
When comparing with neighboring jurisdictions, the City's term limit structure is the most
limiting. Should the City Council seek to amend the current term limit structure, staff would
Page 5 of 6
1716
recommend aligning with the term limit structures of these jurisdictions and increasing the
total maximum years served to either 12 (Union City) or 16 (Pleasanton, Livermore).
STRATEGIC PLAN INITIATIVE:
None.
NOTICING REQUIREMENTS/PUBLIC OUTREACH:
The City Council Agenda was posted.
ATTACHMENTS:
None.
Page 6 of 6
1717
ALAMEDA COUNTY FIREFIGHTERS
369 - 1 Sih Street • Oakland, CA 94612
INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF FIRE FIGHTERS
LOCAL 55
June 6, 2023
Mayor Hernandez
Vice -Mayor McCorriston
Council -member Josey
Council -member Hu
Council -member Qaadri
Sent via Email Only
Dear Mayor Hernandez and Council Members,
I am writing to express support from Local 55 regarding potential changes to the Mayor and City
Council elections. I believe the proposed recommendations in the report will help ensure
transparency, fairness, and accountability in our local government and bring term limits in -line with
other communities in the surrounding areas.
Local 55 would encourage any term limit changes to be presented to the voters during the March
primary elections. This is good governance and would not confuse the electorate during the
November general election cycle.
Thank you for taking the time to consider this matter, and I look forward to positive change moving
forward.
Sincerely,
Sean Burrows
President
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