Sunday, May 08, 2011

Home Rule Charter Change: Ballot Language is Confusing. Guest Blog by Vanessa Brito

Norman Braman on Friday in the Miami Herald outlined why he is voting NO on all the Charter Amendments and Vanessa Brito of Miami Voice is saying the same for different reasons (see below). Eye on Miami is NOT necessarily in agreement with Vanessa or Norman. I probably will vote for 3 (Charter Review Task Force), 4 (Inspector General) and 6 (delete the Notarization requirement from petitions). However, I can see the dilemma of people trying to parse out what to vote for. Is it easier to tell people to vote NO on everything rather than see people make a big mistake and vote yes on the Strong Mayor question giving the commission more power? - Geniusofdespair
I will vote "no" on all the items - mostly because the items do not reflect the will of the people... - Vanessa Brito - Miami Voice
When we urged the Board of County Commissioners to push for significant charter reform, we expected REAL reform - reform that would be understood and embraced by the voters. A majority of the reform items (4 of the 6) are an aberration of what the voters have been asking for in the last decade. Though polls are not tell-all tools, they do give us an idea of what voters want to see and what needs to be done in order to subdue the voter apathy and cynicism toward the County Commission. The voters, before and after the march 15th recall election, have pushed for two eight-year term limits for County commissioners. Yet, the Commission agreed to place three four-year terms on the May 24th ballot instead. If that were not enough, the commission bundled term-limits with a salary based on state formula and a restriction on outside employment. These 3 points should have been placed on the ballot as separate amendments. However, our County Commissioners probably anticipated that if these items were placed separately, voters would vote in favor of term limits and oppose salary increase - not something the Commission would want. If the current rules are independent of one another in the Home Rule charter, then changes to them should be placed independently on the ballot. It makes "cents." In any case, I don't think this packaged item will pass, but we must be weary of the repercussions if it does. A $92,000 salary that is not fixed and based on the state formula and is likely to change every year does not sit well with me. Three four-year terms effective after 2012 would allow current County Commissioners to be re-elected until 2024. The packaged item should be bubbled wrapped and returned to dais.

As far as language for some of the other items, it's difficult to tell - mostly because legal jargon is not my forte and isn't for most of us. We asked for the removal of the notary statement, but also asked that the BCC review the municipal ordinance which, for starters, is mis-numbered, and requires one signature per page. One signature per page means thousands more forms must be printed and paid for - making it impossible for an average citizen to participate in the civic process.

Attempting to change government functions or policies by petitions epitomizes a true grassroots movement - one that is almost rarely financed by big money. This amendment item does not address these deep-rooted issues. On the surface, it all sounds great, but the ballot language doesn't reflect the real needs, meaning, this will not lead to real reform. Voting yes on the "...Amendment Regarding Petitions" means that the forms will not require notarization but will still require circulators (paid and not paid) to collect ONLY one signature per page.

The discussion at the BCC meeting prior to placing these six items on the ballot specifically noted that the changes would yield countywide petitions to mimic the format required by the state. Where is that in the ballot language on this amendment? And why is the state referenced on County Commission salaries but not on Petition restrictions? Beyond that, the ballot language does not reference the notarization component directly; although, it is implied - for me, that's not enough.

Let's go one step further. While these are not the only two amendments I deem are flawed, the intentions are clear. Let's pretend to give the voters what they want, leaving some room for our own self-serving changes in the future. This rings a bell - "Half Cent Tax for Transportation." The voters have a chance to avoid the same thing from happening on May 24th. The loopholes are there, we just have to read between the lines. Oh wait, we can't, because the language is so complex, most of us can't figure out what any of this really means - let alone what will happen when we vote.

By the by, has anyone looked back at the ballot language for the January 23, 2007 Special Election (yes, that's when Carlos Alvarez became Strong Mayor). Check out the ballot item title in 2007: "Charter Amendment Expanding the Mayor’s Responsibilities and Restricting the Responsibilities of the County Manager." This year, the item is titled: "Charter Amendment Pertaining to Powers of County Commission, County Mayor and County Manager." For those who voted in 2007, the ballot title should be relatively similar - instead, the ballot language is completely different. The words "Strong Mayor" were not used in 2007 (but it is now) and it seems that back then, the 75 word limit was used more wisely to explain the differences between forms of government. The language on the Spanish ballot is even worse, but I cannot locate the official sample from 2007. For those of you who speak Spanish, you know that "Alcalde Poderoso" is not THE widely used term.

For the record, I strongly support an Inspector General, but if the inspector general is to be appointed by the Commission, then we run into the same problem of having self-serving friends controlling the County at all levels. An elected position would be best. Omitting this from the language is critical and compels me to be overly cautious.

While I was glad to see SOME of these items get on the ballot, I was not hopeful that the language would lead us anywhere different than we are today. I will vote "no" on all the items - mostly because the items do not reflect the will of the people, not clearly anyway. This is exactly what happens when there is an extreme loss of trust in elected officials. I hope the message sent on March 15th was saved for later review because it seems we'll be replaying it in the next couple of months.

18 comments:

Will said...

State petitions are only ONE per page.

Anonymous said...

Isn't this throwing the baby out with the bathwater? Shouldn't we try to take advantage of small victories and approve some?

Anonymous said...

Just a small point here regarding the petition process... It was my understanding from watching the meeting that the one signature per page was being removed with this amendment as well as the notiary for each page. Also, it was clear form the discussion that the numbering was worng but that could be fixed as a scrivener's error and did not need to be an amendment.

Geniusofdespair said...

You are wrong last Anon here is the language:

Shall the Charter be amended to provide
that petitions for charter amendment, initiative, referendum and recall shall no longer require a sworn affidavit of a circulator and shall instead only require the name and address of a circulator?

Geniusofdespair said...

ballot Questions:
Home Rule Charter Amendment Relating to Creation, Appointment and Power of Charter Review Task Force

Shall the Charter be amended to provide for creation of a Charter Review Task Force who shall meet on presidential election years to propose Charter revisions; to prohibit elected County Charter Officer from serving as member of the task force; and to submit those revisions approved by two-thirds majority of the task force directly to the electorate on the same ballot as the presidential elections?

Geniusofdespair said...

Home Rule Charter Amendment Establishing Independent Inspector General

Shall the Charter be amended to create the Office of Inspector General who shall be independent and shall, at a minimum, be empowered to perform investigations, audits, reviews and oversight of County contracts, programs, projects, abuse, waste and mismanagement as well as County funded contracts, programs and projects and provide Inspector General services to other governmental entities with such office’s appointment, term, powers, duties and responsibilities to be
further established by ordinance?

AND:

Charter Amendment Pertaining to Powers of County Commission, County Mayor and County Manager

Shall the Charter be amended to undo the “Strong Mayor” form of government approved by the voters in 2007 by returning the powers and responsibilities of administering County government from a “Strong Mayor” to an appointed County Manager who may be removed by the Commission or the Mayor with
Commission approval?

Geniusofdespair said...

Home Rule Charter Amendment Relating to Salaries, Service, and Term Limits of County Commissioners

Shall the Charter be amended to provide that County Commissioners shall:

Devote full-time service to the Office of County Commissioner and hold no other employment;

No longer receive the $6,000 annual salary established in 1957, but receive instead the salary provided by state statutory formula, adjusted annually by the County’s population (currently approximately $92,097); and

Serve no more than three consecutive four-year terms in office excluding all terms prior to 2012?

And

Home Rule Charter Amendment Prohibiting Lobbying by Elected County Charter Officer After Leaving Office

Shall the Charter be amended to provide that elected County Charter Officers shall be prohibited from lobbying the County for compensation for a period of
two (2) years after leaving office?

Anonymous said...

Please vote yes to the Charter Review Taskforce. Otherwise, the gatekeepers to put charter items on the ballot remain the Commissioners. And here's how the debate will go "the voters were loud and clear that they did not want term limits..." just because we didn't vote for their crazy 3 term limit plan.
Personally, I'm voting yes for everything except getting rid of the strong mayor. The amendments may not be perfect, but they are a start. When the Charter Review Committee meets, they will fix it.

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Anonymous said...

You're all acting like kindergarteners who don't get EVERYTHING you want. Kinda like Braman.

Many of these amendments are good, but because they aren't perfect, you're going to pout and say you weren't told enough about them.

Wasn't this the same person who said that the recalls were about more than just those two politicians but also about change - now - right now - and not a moment later.

Typical.

Geniusofdespair said...

Comment that was deleted, when you commented it said:

'Please refrain from posting your personal vendettas here. And: one rule on this blog: Do not attack the bloggers!'

Vanessa Brito is the blogger. You attacked her, thus you were deleted and I also suspect you have a personal vendetta.

Anonymous said...

Again, on Charter Review Task Force - here is my issue. An elected board by BCC and Mayor will create an entity that may or may not be subject to same stringent ethics laws. Think of MDX. Good idea? Maybe. Not enough guidelines? Definitely. Convince me. I am listening.

Anonymous said...

while none of these go far enough, all are a good start. I will vote yes for all of them.

Geniusofdespair said...

Do not vote to repeal the strong mayor. You are just making the commission stronger. Is that what you want to do, give them more control?

confused said...

So now I'm really confused as to what to vote yes or no on.
We wanted charter reform and so they're gonna make some changes.
But it doesn't go far enough so we're supposed to reject it completely?
We want to keep the strong mayor, but we just had a recall because we didn't like the person who was the strong mayor? Even though he was termed out in a year and half?
And we're debating format of recall petitions? Why don't we just vote the idiots out at the next election? Or approve term limits?
I'm so confused.... and to think I read the news and this and other political blogs; what do all the dumbo voters out there do?
Or is that why we're in this mess to begin with - dumb uninformed voters?

Milly Herrera, hialeah said...

I am voting NO on ALL of them!

Voters in various districts should get even - vote every single commissioner currently seated out of office!

We can try getting the reform we need in about 4 years time...

Anonymous said...

Seriously, who cares how Vanessa Brito is going to vote.

less confused said...

Still confused, but a little less so, after re-reading everything.

But is it definitley the Commission who would appoint the Charter review task force?

And what about the Inspector General? I know it says Independent. But is it an appointed position?

And if these revisions don't pass, what's the next step?
Other than to (hopefully) vote all the current commissioners out?