HomeMy WebLinkAboutCity Clerk - Administration and Management Records - Policy & Procedure Records (3)GLENDALE CITY COUNCIL
COUNCIL MEETING RULES AND PROCEDURES
Amended August 13, 2019
SECTION 1: RULES, PURPOSE AND EFFECT
1.1 The Council’s meetings must be noticed and conducted in accordance with applicable
open meetings statutes and other law.
1.2 These rules and procedures are adopted by the Council of the City of Glendale, under the
Council’s authority provided by the Charter and by law to determine its own rules, order
of business, and to regulate the conduct of its meetings. Where not inconsistent with these
rules and procedures, the current version of Robert’s Rules of Order will be used as a
supplementary guideline and general parliamentary procedure will be observed in the
conduct of the Council’s meetings.
1.3 The Mayor, or a majority of the council, may suspend strict observance of these rules and
procedures and any applicable provision of Robert’s Rules for the timely and orderly
progression of the meeting.
SECTION 2: PRESIDING OFFICER
2.1 As provided by the City Charter, the Mayor, or in the Mayor’s absence, the Vice-Mayor,
is the presiding officer of the Council and will preside at all Council meetings.
2.2 The presiding officer will preserve order and decorum at all meetings of the Council to
allow the orderly conduct of the business of the meeting and to provide persons in
attendance with an interest in all agenda items to have an opportunity to have their item
of interest duly considered by the Council, including a fair opportunity for interested
persons to speak on public hearing items. Any decision by the Mayor on procedural
matters in final, subject only to appeal to the whole Council as provided in Robert’s
Rules.
SECTION 3: ORDER OF BUSINESS
3.1 The order of business at regular meetings of the Council ordinarily will be as follows:
• Call to Order
• Roll Call
• Prayer/Invocation
• Posting of Colors
• Pledge of Allegiance
• Approval of Minutes
• Boards and Commissions
• Proclamations and Awards
• Consent Agenda
• Consent Resolutions
• Public Hearing - Land Development Actions
• Land Development Actions
• Bids and Contracts
• Public Hearing- Ordinances
• Ordinances
• Public Hearing- Resolutions
• Resolutions
• New Business
• Request for Future Workshop and Executive Session
• Council Comments and Suggestions
• Citizen Comments
• Adjournment
3.2 The Mayor, or a majority of the Council, may decide to consider items out of sequence
from the printed agenda for the meeting. The Council cannot act on any items not listed
on the agenda unless an emergency exists.
3.3 The consent agenda matters are of a routine nature or matters which previously have been
studied by the Council at a work session and may be adopted by one motion. Other than
introduction of the items by the City Clerk, there will be no discussion of separate items,
unless members of the Council request that a specific item be discussed and considered
separately.
3.4 Prayer/Invocation at Council Voting Meetings - In order to solemnize proceedings of the
City Council, it is the policy of the City Council to allow for an invocation or prayer to be
offered at its meetings for the benefit of the City Council and the community.
3.5 The following guidelines allow for an invocation, which may include prayer, reflective
moment of silence, or short solemnizing message.
1. No member of the Council, employee of the City, or any other person in
attendance at the meeting shall be required to participate in any prayer or
invocation that is offered.
2. The prayer/invocation shall be voluntarily delivered by any person who has
offered.
3. The speaker shall not receive compensation for his or her service.
4. No speaker shall proselytize or otherwise openly seek to promote certain aspects
of doctrine or faith; openly advocate or campaign for conversion of individuals or
groups; or openly advance any faith, belief, doctrine, or dogma. No prayer/
invocation shall disparage the religious faith or non-religious views of others.
5. It is recommended that the prayer/invocation be no more than two minutes in
length.
The above guidelines are not intended, and shall not be implemented or construed in
anyway, to affiliate the City Council with, nor express the Council’s preference for, any
faith or religious denominations. Rather, these guidelines are intended to acknowledge
and express the City Council’s respect for the diversity of both organized and
unorganized religious denomination, as well as other faiths represented and practiced
among the citizens of the City of Glendale.
3.6 Anyone violating of these guidelines is subject to disqualification from offering future
prayers/invocations.
3.7 As adopted by Council, the City Council Meeting Rules and Guidelines state that the
Mayor is the presiding officer of the meetings and as such:
“SECTION 2 – PRESIDING OFFICER
2.1 As provided by the City Charter, the Mayor, or in the Mayor’s absence,
the Vice-Mayor, is the presiding officer of the Council and will preside at all
Council meetings.
2.2 The presiding officer will preserve order and decorum at all meetings of
the Council to allow the orderly conduct of the business of the meeting and to
provide persons in attendance with an interest in all agenda items to have an
opportunity to have their item of interest duly considered by the Council,
including a fair opportunity for interested persons to speak on public hearing
items. Any decision by the Mayor on procedural matters in final, subject only to
appeal to the whole Council as provided in Robert’s Rules.
Therefore, the Mayor shall advise the speaker that their time is up in order to keep with
the orderly operation of the meeting.
3.8 In no event shall a speaker be scheduled to offer a prayer/invocation at consecutive
meetings of the Council.
3.9 In no event shall a speaker offer the prayer/invocation more than three times in one fiscal
year. Similarly, no speaker from the same denomination, faith or sect shall speak more
times than three in one fiscal year.
3.10 Neither the Council nor staff shall engage in any inquiry, examination, restriction, review
of, or involvement in, the content of any prayer to be offered.
3.11 In the event that there is no scheduled speaker to offer the prayer/invocation, the agenda
shall include a Moment of Silence.
3.12 The following language shall be included on every agenda:
“Any prayer/invocation that may be offered before the start of
regular Council business shall be the voluntary offering of a private
citizen, for the benefit of the Council and the citizens present. The
views or beliefs expressed by the prayer/invocation speaker have
not been previously reviewed or approved by the Council, and the
Council does not endorse the religious beliefs or views of this, or
any other speaker. A list of volunteers is maintained by the
Mayor’s office and interested persons should contact the Mayor’s
office for further information.”
3.13 City officials should not give the impression that they are expressing an official City
religion, are speaking on the City’s behalf or that City residents attending the meeting are
expected to participate in the prayer/invocation.
3.14 Process:
1. The Mayor’s office will maintain a list of volunteers.
2. Volunteers will be able to sign up via the website, a hard copy request form also
available on the website, or submitted in person to a representative of the Mayor’s
Office at 5850 West Glendale Avenue.
3. As the requests are received they will be placed in that order. The speakers will be
contacted in order of date and then time received and requested to speak at a
future meeting of the Council.
4. The Mayor’s office will follow up with letter setting forth the date and time that
the speaker should be prepared to offer the invocation/prayer. Additionally, the
letter will remind the intended speaker that the prayer/invocation being offered
cannot seek to proselytize in favor of one religion or sect or disparage another
region or belief.
3.15 Posting of Colors
1. It is the policy of the Council to allow organizations to post the colors at regular voting
meetings of the council.
2. Organizations seeking to post the colors at a meeting shall contact the mayor’s office,
which shall maintain a list of volunteers and coordinate the scheduling of posting
assignments.
SECTION 4: WORKSHOP MEETINGS
4.1 The Council may conduct workshop meetings or study session on matters which are
expected to come before the Council for formal action at a regular meeting or otherwise
need study by the Council. Items to be considered will be placed on an agenda as required
by the open meetings statutes.
4.2 At workshop meetings the City Clerk will introduce each item and the City Manager will
introduce staff who is presenting. Council will receive information and presentation of
issues from the City Manager and City staff. Council may ask questions and may request
that certain information be provided or issues be addressed when items are considered
further at another workshop meeting or a regular meeting of Council. Council may direct
that matters under consideration be brought forward for formal action at a regular
meeting, that further study be conducted if appropriate, that matters under consideration
not be pursued further (except for matters requiring a public hearing), or that
modifications be made before a matter is considered further.
4.3 Final action on items is not taken at workshop or study sessions. No formal vote of the
Council in favor or against any agenda item may be taken at a workshop or study session.
4.4 Workshops are not public hearings. On public hearing items, public testimony will be
taken before Council action on the item at a regular meeting. No member of the public or
interested party has the right to make a presentation or address the Council on an item
under consideration in a workshop or study session. Questions may be directed by the
Council to a member of the public or another interested party or, in appropriate
circumstances, a brief presentation may be permitted by a member of the public or
another interested party on an agenda item or a particular question related to an agenda
item. The Mayor may limit or end the time for such response to questions or presentation.
SECTION 5: ADDRESSING THE COUNCIL, REGULAR MEETINGS AND PUBLIC
HEARINGS
5.1 Any person wishing to address the Council, on a public hearing item or other agenda
item, must fill out a speaker card and turn it in to the City Clerk, indicating the speaker’s
name, address, and the agenda item on which he or she wishes to speak. Persons wishing
to speak under “Citizen Comments” should designate a subject matter on which they will
speak. On agenda items that are not scheduled for public hearing, brief public comment
may be allowed, time permitting. The time permitted for such public comment by each
speaker will be limited as provided for public hearing items. The Mayor may close the
public comment on non-public hearing agenda items, even if not all interested parties
have spoken, or end the time for comment by a speaker, to allow the meeting to proceed.
5.2 Citizen Comments occur at the beginning of the Council meeting. These are speakers
discussing items that are not on the Council Agenda. These will be limited to three
minutes per speaker.
5.3 Public Hearing Item Comments and Non-public Hearing Item Comments occur
throughout the meeting. These are for items that are on the Council meeting agenda
and are limited to five minutes per speaker.
a. Speakers may be limited to less than five minutes each in consideration of the
number of people wishing to speak, the length of the agenda, the number of public
hearing items, and the timely and orderly progression of the meeting. Applicants
on public hearing items and their attorneys, representatives, experts and
supporting witnesses are not necessarily limited to a total of five minutes, but
must be concise and coordinate their presentations to avoid repetition and
unnecessary length. At the discretion of the Chair, rebuttal comments by the
applicant or applicants’ representative may be allowed. If allowed, rebuttal
comments will address matters and questions raised in the public hearing, answers
to questions by Council, and must be brief. Other than any rebuttal, no person will
be allowed to address the Council after the public hearing is closed or after a
motion is made on a non-public hearing item, without first securing the
permission to do so.
5.4 Speakers on any items, whether a public hearing, other item on the agenda, or Citizen
Comments, should address their comments to matters pertinent to the agenda item or
subject matter at hand and should avoid repetition of the comments of previous speakers
on the item. Simply stating agreement with the points raised by the prior speaker(s) will
help move the meeting along so that all who wish to speak have the opportunity to do so
within a reasonable time. Large groups whose members wish to speak on a matter may
designate a spokesperson.
5.5 The purpose of public comment is to provide information and the speaker’s views for
Council consideration. Any questions raised by the speaker will not be answered by
Council during the public hearing, but will be referred for follow-up by the City Manager
or City staff after the conclusion of the public hearing. It is not appropriate in the public
hearing or public comment period on another agenda item for the speakers to debate the
matter under consideration with other speakers, the audience, or members of the Council.
All comments should be addressed through the Chair. Questions may be posed to the
speakers, any applicant’s representatives, and City staff, by the Council, after being
recognized by the Chair. Except when answering a direct question from a
Councilmember, all remarks will be addressed to the Council as a whole, and not to
individual members.
5.6 Proper decorum must be observed by members of the Council, by speakers in providing
testimony and remarks, and by the audience. The Mayor shall keep control of the meeting
and require the speakers and audience to refrain from abusive or profane remarks,
disruptive outbursts, applause, protests, or other conduct which disrupts or interferes with
the orderly conduct of the business of the meeting. Personal attacks on Councilmembers,
City staff, or members of the public are not allowed. It is inappropriate to utilize the
public hearing or other agenda item for purposes of making political speeches, including
threats of political action. Engaging in such conduct, and failing to cease such conduct
upon request of the Mayor, will be grounds for ending a speaker’s time at the podium or
for removal of any disruptive person from the meeting room, at the direction of the
Mayor.
5.7 Exhibits, letters, petitions and other documentary items presented or shown to the
Council on a public hearing item become part of the records of the public hearing.
Eleven collated sets of written or graphic materials should be provided by the speaker
prior to the commencement of the hearing to allow for distribution to the Mayor and
Council, key City staff, and a copy for the City Clerk to include in the public record of the
hearing, whenever possible. Reduced copies (8 ½ x 11 or 8 ½ x 14) of large graphic
exhibits should be provided as part of the sets of materials for distribution to the Council,
staff, and for the record. This requirement may be waived for signed petitions submitted
by neighborhoods or other citizen groups, although these groups also are encouraged to
provide eleven sets of petitions where possible.