Bill Text: MS HB26 | 2015 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: City councils in cities with populations of 60,000 or more; authorize to hire additional staff.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)
Status: (Failed) 2015-02-03 - Died In Committee [HB26 Detail]
Download: Mississippi-2015-HB26-Introduced.html
MISSISSIPPI LEGISLATURE
2015 Regular Session
To: Municipalities
By: Representative DeLano
House Bill 26
AN ACT TO AMEND SECTION 21-8-13, MISSISSIPPI CODE OF 1972, TO AUTHORIZE ANY CITY COUNCIL WITH A POPULATION OF 60,000 OR MORE TO HIRE ADDITIONAL STAFF TO ASSIST IN CARRYING OUT THE DUTIES OF THE COUNCIL; TO AMEND SECTION 21-8-7, MISSISSIPPI CODE OF 1972, IN CONFORMITY THERETO; AND FOR RELATED PURPOSES.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI:
SECTION 1. Section 21-8-13, Mississippi Code of 1972, is amended as follows:
21-8-13. (1) (a) The council shall appoint a clerk of the council and deputy clerks, as necessary, who shall compile the minutes and records of its proceedings, its ordinances and resolutions as this chapter requires, and perform such duties as may be required by law.
(b) Any council in a municipality having a population of sixty thousand (60,000) or more, according to the latest federal decennial census, may appoint other staff as necessary to assist the council in carrying out its functions.
(2) At the end of each
fiscal year, the council shall cause a full and complete examination of all the
books, accounts and vouchers of the municipality to be made by a competent,
independent accountant or accountants who shall be appointed by the council,
and the report of said examination shall be typed or printed in pamphlet form.
The council shall make available a copy of * * * the pamphlet to all persons who
shall apply therefor at the office of the municipal clerk and shall cause three
(3) of the printed copies of * * * such pamphlet for each fiscal year
to be substantially bound in three (3) volumes which shall be kept and
preserved as a record of the clerk's office. * * * The pamphlets shall be published
as * * *
provided by law.
(3) If, at the beginning of the first term of office of the first city council elected by any municipality under the provisions of this chapter, the appropriations for the expenditures for the municipal government for the current fiscal year shall have been made, the council shall have power by ordinance, to revise, repeal or change said appropriations and to make additional appropriations.
(4) The authority of the
council is otherwise legislative and is executed by a vote within a legally
called meeting. No member of the council shall give orders to any employee or
subordinate of a municipality other than the council's * * * staff. With the exception
of the council's staff, the council shall deal with the municipal
departments and personnel solely through the mayor.
SECTION 2. Section 21-8-7, Mississippi Code of 1972, is amended as follows:
21-8-7. (1) Each municipality operating under the mayor-council form of government shall be governed by an elected council and an elected mayor. Other officers and employees shall be duly appointed pursuant to this chapter, general law or ordinance.
(2) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (4) of this section, the mayor and council members shall be elected by the voters of the municipality at a regular municipal election held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in June as provided in Section 21-11-7, and shall serve for a term of four (4) years beginning on the first day of July next following the election that is not on a weekend.
(3) The terms of the initial mayor and council members shall commence at the expiration of the terms of office of the elected officials of the municipality serving at the time of adoption of the mayor-council form of government.
(4) (a) The council shall consist of five (5), seven (7) or nine (9) members. In the event there are five (5) council members, the municipality shall be divided into either five (5) or four (4) wards. In the event there are seven (7) council members, the municipality shall be divided into either seven (7), six (6) or five (5) wards. In the event there are nine (9) council members, the municipality shall be divided into seven (7) or nine (9) wards. If the municipality is divided into fewer wards than it has council members, the other council member or members shall be elected from the municipality at large. The total number of council members and the number of council members elected from wards shall be established by the petition or petitions presented pursuant to Section 21-8-3. One (1) council member shall be elected from each ward by the voters of that ward. Council members elected to represent wards must be residents of their wards at the time of qualification for election, and any council member who removes the member's residence from the municipality or from the ward from which elected shall vacate that office. However, any candidate for council member who is properly qualified as a candidate under applicable law shall be deemed to be qualified as a candidate in whatever ward the member resides if the ward has changed after the council has redistricted the municipality as provided in paragraph (c)(ii) of this subsection (4), and if the wards have been so changed, any person may qualify as a candidate for council member, using the person's existing residence or by changing the person's residence, not less than fifteen (15) days before the first party primary or special party primary, as the case may be, notwithstanding any other residency or qualification requirements to the contrary.
(b) The council or board existing at the time of the adoption of the mayor-council form of government shall designate the geographical boundaries of the wards within one hundred twenty (120) days after the election in which the mayor-council form of government is selected. In designating the geographical boundaries of the wards, each ward shall contain, as nearly as possible, the population factor obtained by dividing the municipality's population as shown by the most recent decennial census by the number of wards into which the municipality is to be divided.
(c) (i) It shall be the mandatory duty of the council to redistrict the municipality by ordinance, which ordinance may not be vetoed by the mayor, within six (6) months after the official publication by the United States of the population of the municipality as enumerated in each decennial census, and within six (6) months after the effective date of any expansion of municipal boundaries; however, if the publication of the most recent decennial census or effective date of an expansion of the municipal boundaries occurs six (6) months or more before the first party primary of a general municipal election, then the council shall redistrict the municipality by ordinance not less than sixty (60) days before the first party primary.
(ii) If the publication of the most recent decennial census occurs less than six (6) months before the first primary of a general municipal election, the election shall be held with regard to the existing defined wards; reapportioned wards based on the census shall not serve as the basis for representation until the next regularly scheduled election in which council members shall be elected.
(d) If annexation of additional territory into the municipal corporate limits of the municipality occurs less than six (6) months before the first party primary of a general municipal election, the council shall, by ordinance adopted within three (3) days of the effective date of the annexation, assign the annexed territory to an adjacent ward or wards so as to maintain as nearly as possible substantial equality of population between wards; any subsequent redistricting of the municipality by ordinance, as required by this chapter, shall not serve as the basis for representation until the next regularly scheduled election for municipal council members.
(5) Vacancies occurring in the council shall be filled as provided in Section 23-15-857.
(6) (a) The mayor shall maintain an office at the city hall. The council members shall not maintain individual offices at the city hall; however, in a municipality having a population of one hundred thousand (100,000) and above according to the latest federal decennial census, council members may have individual offices in the city hall. Except as otherwise provided in this subsection for a municipality with a population of sixty thousand (60,000) or more, clerical work of council members in the performance of the duties of their office shall be performed by municipal employees or at municipal expense, and council members shall be reimbursed for the reasonable expenses incurred in the performance of the duties of their office.
(b) In a municipality having a population of sixty thousand (60,000) or more, according to the latest federal decennial census, the council shall appoint their own clerical staff, who shall be solely directed by the council.
SECTION 3. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after July 1, 2015.