About this meeting
- Government Body
- City Council
- Meeting Type
- City Council
- Location
- Cleveland Heights, OH
- Meeting Date
- April 28, 2026
Transcript
58 sections
Welcome, welcome, welcome everyone to a special committee of the whole meeting. It's Tuesday, April 28th at 6:55. Eddie, would you call the role? Cob here. Larson here. Posh here. Here. Colland here. Huda here. Stone here. All right. So, what we're doing today is finishing up our fiveh hour meeting from April 19th. Um, we have one item left. Uh, and well, really two because you know the wrap up which we'll do and um uh I think we were on I'm going to move this up a little. Procedures. Yeah, we were on council policies, procedures, and rules. Um our law director is here with us to keep us focused and on the right side of everything. Um I'll just quickly recap what we've done already. So we talked about uh the role of city council and we kind of divided that into formal and informal roles. formal being what you would find in the in the charter and informal just what council people generally do outside of their um charter responsibilities. We shared our personal vision statements with each other which helped us get an idea of where we're all coming from so that you know when we're coming up with ideas and and talking we have a kind of an understanding of what's behind that. And I think I have a little bit of Add's thing going on. I stay away. Don't play. No, no, no. It's it's it's um we talked about um our kind of overview of u what we thought the administration was working on for 2026. Craig C put together a very extensive
um almost almost unabbridged list of um what the administration is working on and that was good for us to know. And then we talked about our legislative goals. Um, Councilman uh Posh suggested that we kind of grabbed uh or at least elevated our two most important u legislative initiatives. I'm assuming from that part of the conversation that we all agree that we're going to be the ones responsible individually for our legislative initiatives. And um we also decided that we would experiment maybe that's yeah with a a new form of committee uh structure next month and perhaps beyond where we just need committee the whole which can I just clarify for my own sake. Um so before we had you know the second Tuesday was you know three different comm or Monday was three different committees the fourth was another three committees and then planning development was on Tuesday. I I guess what I'm wondering is are we sticking with those three on those specific dates or is it just going to be if you have something for your committee I can put it on any of those particular like say like you know on the on the first Monday I'm like hey we're having a meeting next week anyone have any topics for your specific Yeah I mean I think before the end of the month we should see you know everybody's still going to be responsible for their agendas obviously or their topics But if like if three committees aren't going to meet, I don't think we need to meet four, you know, four Mondays in a month. Well, that's what I'm saying. But but we may want to just, you know, do as much as we can on on say the second Monday. I'm just throwing this out there, but um so like for example, we've got our May first May meeting on
the 4th, which would mean that our first committee of the whole is on the 11th of May. Um ordinarily who would be on ordinarily that would be housing and building uh community relations community relations and finance I believe. No no no that's the other way around municipal municipal services. So do we want to stick to those or if there are things that come out of this meeting on Monday that we need to address sooner rather than later we can put that on. I mean it's helpful to have to know you have a slot um especially if you're inviting people to come in and speak. um or prepare presentations to have that uh you know of sort of a beach head to know that that's your time but be flexible also. I I agree with that and I think we've had a nice cadence the last couple months of just having a month between to work on things et like knowing that we have that space. I want to raise that I think the one issue is the planning and development committee. So I mean I would suggest on that if maybe we can just insert that like if we can check the agenda right on the second Monday like if we could do the landmarks commission if we have time you know we're we're planning essentially like a two to three hour committee of the whole meeting right like you could tell me for either one like if you So that's what I was thinking right um because we will have with the zoning code update I just feel like we're going to have a a regular cadence and it would be easier to slot in when there's extra time or create some time as we go along as aside from so for the time being let's just keep it stick to the three and three you can slot in where you need to okay can can we talk a little bit about about some logistics I mean so these really aren't committees in a committee it is really just committee as a whole with agenda items with agenda items who with the chair expected to run the discussion the discussion yeah What who
are the voting members then? Everyone committed because it's committee of the whole. Okay. Although typically you don't do a lot of voting in committee. Consensus contributors. But everyone is a member of of the committee of the whole. So instead of So now we do vote in committee of the whole. I mean you know to move something out of committee. So would we just do something by motion if we're like if you want legislation brought like if you're saying Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. By motion. Yeah. That's I mean I guess I guess that's what we're doing. Yeah. I I don't we have to have a vehicle that we have already in our committees where we move legislation forward. So for betting to loss, we'd still need to do that at that level, right? But we're just taking out that that other step, you know, which is not then you'd have to, you know, if it was just three people and sometimes the committees don't vote technically or formally. Um, and I think that that is available to the committee of the whole and it's easier to follow in the committee of the whole than in a committee I a different committee as well. Okay. Gotcha. All right. So um, does that answer your question? It does. But then we also have this trial that I think we want to try to do for the parks and wreck and how we incorporate them into that meeting as well, those late those lay members. Do we still want to try to do that or would we still have a distinct council parks and recck committee and then a distinct lay group? I mean I thought the pilot project was to do it with that committee and then see how that goes and then we'll but
we do that inside the yes the council meeting as a whole. No reason to separate the I mean unless somebody else has Um, so we were talking about uh rules, practices, procedures. Um, Joe, you were the last person that spoke. Is that true? Yeah. And what was your main topic? I'm sorry. Uh, I think it was committees, right? Yeah, that's right. It was really it was the well actually it was the committee structure that you know that we decided to move um towards committee of the whole and then also the committee and um resident advisory group. Um so those those two and did you have anything else on on your list of you know for discussion? No, I think those those were the Yeah, those were my issues. All right, then let's move on to Sarah and we'll just about Sorry. Everybody else get ready for your turn. Did I have my turn already? I can't remember. No, you didn't. Actually, you literally wrote down one thing on your processes and procedures, which is anything that will make us have less committee meetings, which I think we accomplished. So, done. Moving on. Craig doesn't have to go now. I would just say that the um and maybe this will naturally happen if we're in the committee of the whole, but finding ways to align the work of the committees across the committees. I mean the the example I keep using is is our our two studies the housing and zoning um code studies but that um you know I mean that's where I think really collaborative work comes from is when the committees are saying well you're doing this
you're doing this they're you know we need to plan together in some way and u it may be that we have naturally created it in the committee of the whole I think we have um and maybe using that time to to continually check back and say what are the main things what are the three main things that we're working on together. Um, and they those can change over one thing, you know, but preserving that time um to to have those discussions I think is really important because these are very diligent commu uh committees but we don't always know that we're you know so that's really all I had. Jessica. So, actually, that's a great segue to want to I think my frustration or something that I want to figure out how we do this better is that I feel like each of us, it's it's complicated because each of us are doing our own work to move things forward. We're also all answering constituent emails and directing that into city staff as we see appropriate, but we don't always know like what is happening. And so I think I brought this up the last but just a few examples. We all get a constituent email. It's should be going let's say to director clingcale, right? I email her, but I don't know that there's six other council members that email her and I don't know. Okay. Wait, wait. And I don't know if director clings scale has gotten back to the resident to me. So like there's all this a little bit of like not knowing what's going on. So that's on a resident email. But also, you know, for example, and I'm not singling you out, but just, you know, you said, "Oh, I'm meeting with the chief about a few different things." or you know for example when I met with the administration to talk about the potential legislation on flock like how do we update each other as we're doing like working in our channels and you know one of the just I'll the one thing I
thought might help is kind of like an FYI email to everyone and I Jim you suggested maybe BCCing everyone just an update so there's there's that but also there's also the the question of how we get information back from the administ ration if somebody's work you know for like director cling scale right if she's responded but how do we know everybody knows director any thoughts yeah that's you um where are we at on with with that kind of a thing well I mean an email that includes everybody isn't a violation in and of itself um until somebody responds um and that's where we're at right now yeah so I mean I I I don't love the the BCCing everybody um method, but I understand the the point that you're making. I'm not sure whether there's a a mechanism to work through the clerk. Um and I think one of your suggestions in your comments was also um some updates from council leadership related to their didn't get to that yet, but yeah. Well, I mean, so by the same token, I think, you know, it may be that there's a way to accomplish that with some um formalized emails that everybody knows are informational only and not to be replied to with some of the language maybe pumped up a little bit that you had suggested. Um, I think the BCC is just a little dangerous because it's so easy for somebody to um, reply or just share a thought and they, you know, suddenly are replying to everybody and um, and you have a a pre-arranged discussion of the council's business by a majority of the members. Oh, sorry. Go ahead. But at BCC, you're not replying to everybody. You're replying just to that one person that sent it. Yeah. Yeah. But what I'm hearing is the main thing is like we can sendformational emails. For example, dear council colleagues, I'm working on this piece of legislation. Here was what landmark here's what
was shared by the landmark commission. You know, I'm letting you know that I'm working on this. Do not respond. Do not respond. And and and to that point and to the point of that you only respond, that's true. But if we're if you're using a mechanism where you're bcccing everybody so everybody's aware, now you have a conversation going. Um, so, uh, I I think you're going to find that the committee of the whole meeting structure is going to alleviate a lot of the concerns about sort of knowing where people are. Maybe not each um, example that you provided in your in your comments like the constituent communications are a little bit trickier. I'm not sure what the answer is there. Um, but I think that a lot of the other um a lot of those other concerns and understanding where the committees are, understanding what other council members are doing with u staff members and the administration, I think a lot of that will start to to be updated on a natural regular basis when you're having your committee to hold meetings. Go ahead. So, one of my suggestions on that with constituent emails, um, is currently if they're emailing. Okay, so here's the here's the kind of hard part. If they're emailing you guys individually, that's kind of the harder issue. If they're emailing that council email address that we could include, say Todd and Mac on that like list so he would get those emails and if it's something like like you said with public works, he can input 90% of the time and then you don't even have to bother. But I Yeah, but that's only for when they email the council as a whole. So I don't know about the other question. Go ahead. Okay. So I think it's okay. So we all we all earlier in this meeting a couple days ago outlined our roles. You know, one of what I believe my role as a council person, my perspective is if someone reaches out to us, even if they have seven council members, I will always,
if not always, just about 99% of the time, reply just back to the constituents, show some empathy, try to help them as an individual, and just sometimes I have to remind them, you know, we we're a body, we're an individual. I'm not part of the administration. And generally about half of those emails are emails that really should be directed to the administration and I and I send them to Todd. More than half but okay. Okay. Well, I mean the issue here is people expect you to do something and so maybe they're going to get seven responses that all go to Todd and I don't have a problem with that. And I will know by when Todd responds back he will say, "Yeah, already working on this." Which is great. But sometimes he doesn't respond because I, you know, people, yeah, he's he's one of the well to me, but he's one of the people that I have found to be very reliable in this administration. Um, and sometimes it's like there was one that came in regarding the neighbor that we all got yesterday, I believe. I Kim, I believe her name was possibly. You're brilliant. Yeah. And it's like, well, you know, I see the mayor is not located listed on this and he is our safety director, but we let's but you know, I'm very sorry you're going through all this. Let's see if the mayor's action center can take care of it because this is an administrative issue and not a legislator. And my point was not to say that we all shouldn't be responding to the resident. My point was to avoid having city staff receive seven emails from us. So for the same matter, right? And and again, I don't know if I'm concerned about that. Maybe Todd's okay with it. Maybe, you know, I don't know. Well, I'll tell you what. I think Todd's giving us a report on Monday. Okay. Oh, that's right. We did say let's, you know, let's see what he says. And and then back to the council, you know,
council work. I think your point is well taken. Like what does it look like to have a regular cadence and how does that increase, you know, the regular sharing of communication? I guess the only thing I would push on is if we could like if we are and I think Craig did this and I I've done this, but if we are like requesting legislation to the legislation email, I would love to have us all CCD on that so we know like those requests have gone through. Um, and maybe like similar if there are other matters and I know like I'm just using my best judgment like if I'm emailing the administration to get their like to ask a question of the mayor or the law department and I'm ceing all counsel because I'd like you all to see the response, you know, just have that in mind as well. That makes sense. Um, I don't know I don't know if this exists and Addie might have a better handle on it, but I'm wondering for both of those scenarios, um, the constituent communications and, um, say legislation request from council members, if there's a way to auto populate some sort of um, universally accessible document that would indicate what those are, like when the requests were submitted. you know, it could just be real simple or or it might link to an email. Um, I don't know what may exist to automate that, but that way you could have access to that information essentially in real time without communicating on an ongoing basis to all of council, which is where I think, you know, some of the risk. You know what the solution is? It's laser fish, but I've said that for three years now. What is that? Laserfish is a like project like workflow management and like repository system that like tracks you know where something is in a pro like so if it's contract or legislation or whatever if you have a login you can see where
something is in the system where it's you know butus which is sort of yeah they do the same there's a lot of different there's other ways yeah monday.com is another one that comms currently uses I personally am not a fan of monday.com I think it's very complicated and convoluted I don't think it's very user friendly. Um, which I think would kind of blame. So, I guess to just to to that. So, I'm thinking like maybe exploring something like that would um help to address those concerns and the need for information and awareness without, you know, creating legal risks or OMA problems. since Addie's leaving. Um, you know, I I I on my list I'm only reading this because she's going and is there anything anybody I put, you know, clerk of council issues like and by that not with her. That's why I changed the wording. I was like talk to you offline. But anything that anybody wanted to say like things about you know the processes that we use which anything anything of that the other thing well I just want to say this because I talked to um Nick down in it who does our um applications now he's fantastic and um just I talked to him a little bit about how I don't think civic clerk clerking software is being utilized as much as I think it can be to help us in this process. Now, I would love to be a trainer to you guys. I don't know how to train people. I've like in terms of like using the software. Now, they have great webinars online and everything like that, but he's going to explore it to himself. Take a look and see what he can find out in terms of what's like a good method that you guys could learn to not and not just you also department heads as well because a lot of that request kind of stuff can also go through that. There's like a a great system they have. So, are you saying you know you you you know how to use it but you don't know how to teach it? But yeah, it's
a little Yeah, it's But but he does but he should like he's going to like take a look at the actual system, but he's he's familiar with systems like it and has done. So maybe we set something up with him. Well, yeah. So I'm going to let him explore it for a little bit first and I will get back to you on that in terms of how that is used because I we have it. You pay for it and I don't think it's being utilized as much as it could be. Um, and then there are certain things that like you guys like our you have there's a board portal that you guys can access that has all of the, you know, documents for all the agendas and minutes. You can take your notes um, in there and it, you know, if there's anything confidential that only council is privy to that's not going to be public, it'll be on the forward portal as well as so it's not on the public portal, but it's on yours. Just that's, you know, Oh, go ahead. One of the things before Addie goes really quickly that I would like her input on if we get a chance to talk about this in the future is the application process when there's a council vacancy. Yeah. It's on my list and so I really feel we need to have the clerk involved with that. Yeah. And HR is of course when we get an HR director on board. Yeah. Uh thank you. One other thing was just and and Bill alluded to it, but I would love a regular update to council from the leadership meetings to the extent that that can be shared in email. I'm not sure, you know, like what's discussed. Um I think a a slightly a bridged version of that could be a memo. Not even a memo, just I was no not like an entire transcript, but just a sense of so we can like one if we had asked for something to be discussed, we could know if you got to it, but also
we can know what your you know what the priorities are, what came up. Yeah, I think we can do that. Anything else? The the only other thing is the calendars. I I spoke with Addie and um Gail and I am going to just I I haven't sent the email to director Proser yet, but I just want to see if there's a way for the city calendars on the website, but it doesn't get populated on our Outlook calendars and we don't connect our Outlook calendars with our personal Gmail. There's just a lot of calendars and there's a lot of meetings and I just want to explore with the IT folks if there's a way to get us more streamlined on calendars. That's not our processes or anything. That's just a tech. I Jim asked if we should if they should give us all VPN access because I think if we all had VPN access, we'd be able to access our calendars would then be able to sync with the city outlook, our city outlook calendars. But I mean it is very problematic for me because I've got all my work calendars with a couple positions, personal calendars all in one system. Okay? And then I have to manually right type in everything for city cam when all these calendar systems, Outlook, Apple, they're all designed to talk to each other. Why don't we throw that switch in our exchange server to make that happen? And it's probably in the same thing. Well, why don't we have two-factor authorization authentication and stuff right now, which we've been dinged on year after year after year. I just think it's just I have it on mine to factor. Yeah. Really? Yeah. I was told to get it done. See, Nick down in it or give back out. I don't know where it stands,
but how many else? Yeah, I had there's a way to disable it. like not disable it, but there's a way to like be if you're on this computer. Oh, yeah. You don't have to log in on this computer, but if you log in on a different device, no, I have it. That's right. The authenticator. For the record, I'm not disabling multifactor authentic. No, I'm just saying you don't need it once you're I have to do that. Uh yeah, that was just one the number authenticator do you have initiate present but not a two-actor authentication? Well, that's that's good enough. It's probably better actually. So someone from it lets me know. We got a few more and mine's a little bit long so brace yourselves. But go ahead, Craig. Oh, I thought we covered mine. We're done with anything that sticks. Oh yeah, they cut down on the number of committee meetings. I think going to this committee of the whole is a great idea if uh if no one really has anything on their agenda that evening. Um and we're just able to move on and and condense the time rather than showing since all of us are now coming to all of these committee meetings. And the other thing about keeping a keeping everyone a breast of what's going on is I think these committee of the holes are also an opportunity to um talk about uh what we may have done in the prior week or there may be some events coming up to fill other council members in. You know, for example, um you know, Noble Neighbors is coming up this week or we were there or there's an event at one of the parks or something like that. Uh and I and um you know I think not to you know denigrate about what happened in the past I think that some council members weren't sharing a lot of things beforehand because they were worried
someone else was going to take credit for their legislation or they wanted to have an event all to themselves. And I my sense is that no one really you know we don't have that kind of sense of secrecy or ownership or whatever going on there's some people are competitive you know that's I'm very competitive but you all could be on the legislation. Um can we I think that's a can we put that as like standing agenda items just like coun a council update and events like so we just Yeah. I'm going to write to Annie. Um, and if we don't have anything, we don't have anything an opportunity to share, you know, also what what what's on your mind. Um, so I'm I'm really looking forward to this right now. That's how we're doing things. Yeah. But we won't I don't also feel that we will be as rushed as it seems that we are when we're just having that committee of the whole meeting right before the city council meeting. And I think it has been a bad move when we've run over and we keep the public waiting now. So hopefully we won't have to We'll be pretty good about that. What I want to do when if I see a big bus coming, I I I'm going to have Eddie email you and say, "Could we start at 5:30?" I because I really don't want I mean, if if it's like everything's got to be on there and it's got to be it's got to be now. I think we we we have the half hour unless somebody has a an objection to that. I I would never use it for no reason, but it has happened where we've just been loaded. Had a question maybe. Um at the meeting two Sundays ago, council um sort of agreed to uh do a two-month trial on the committee the whole and I'm listening to all these questions about how this might be operated and how it's going to be structured. And I'm just
wondering if with two short months coming up, July and August, where you're going to have um reduced meeting schedules, would people be open to trying this through September or something like that? Because I feel like it might take you a little while to get it rolling. Well, guess that would align with our plan to have a another council workshop in September. So, we could use that council workshop to evaluate how it worked. Another workshop. you. Yeah, we discuss. Sure. That was I I think I think that's wise. Um my my I know you hate to preempt these things, but my sense is this is going to work out. Um Gail, thank you. Um I really feel that we need to work on council rules. I don't expect it to happen this evening, but I would like to list off some of the factors that I'd like to see incorporated or at least that we discuss amongst ourselves. See if we need it or not as a rule. The adoption of the rules would include professional conduct including respect and civility, respect for and appropriate response to public input in meetings and on social media, appropriate council comments, ethical standards, conflict of interest, compliance with legislative processes, communication and accessibility, responsible use of resources and administration staff time, collaboration and teamwork, continued professional development, rules regarding campaign during council meetings and adherence to council procedures and subsequent consequences have not followed and attendance requirements. Um a lot of these have developed as of what we experienced over the last four years. It has nothing to do with the con the makeup of this council. It is what we experienced over last four years. So let me so where I think
this could go and probably I would say should go and not just that but what in these disc in this particular discussion on this particular topic of rules procedures and practices um I think this is going to be an administrative services um endeavor you know obviously in committee of the where I still think the people on the committee and you are on that committee should do well we all are not for the moment right right but but I don't but but the distinction I want to make here is is that the three of us should be doing the work and presenting it to the four of them I don't think because I wouldn't want you know I wouldn't want just because I'm on well on the planning and development committee to just all of a sudden have to be doing what you're doing or even you doing. You know what I'm saying? So that's that's what I think we should do with this exercise is is say does everybody agree we should have these rules about conduct and so forth and if the answer is yes then we put it together maybe we make it part of 111 maybe we make it um you know what we did what we what council did standing rules some kind of standing rules um but that's decided um you know the author is so to speak or the person whose idea it is puts it together for a meeting where we go into it um you know more deeply there's been a lot of work done already where we collected different cities rules and um we start and the standing rules that used to exist so um I have a lot of that here already so that would be my first request
secondly we need to review the council vacancy the application process. It should include a revised application and a request for assistance from HR, especially requesting background checks upfront or from applicants so they know that that's what we're proposing to do. And then I also is there any comment on that? Yeah, I think it's uh Oh, go ahead. Well, I think a couple hands shot up in the air. So, um, yes, but also lay out kind of what our expectations are. Yes. Which I don't think is really, um, been out. I mean, there's there's discussions within the community that this I use representation matters. Okay? We we've heard this over and over, okay? But it's it's representation, but it's also the quality of the candidate. It is what the candidate brings to the table. Um, and it's it's almost online where it's like it doesn't matter. They don't have to know anything. They don't have to understand finance. And I look at we had an administration that was led by someone that didn't have that operational experience that could come in and we all voted for that individual and look at where it left the city and we're sort of little microcosms of that here. I mean you need to have when you sit at this table you need to have some qualifications and you know you know maybe it's good to have a lawyer. It's good to have an accountant. It's good to have someone that maybe understands marketing. You need some operational diversity, but also diversity. I think when it comes to where you live, I think there's a racial diversity that's necessary. I think there's
a sex diversity that is necessary. I mean, it's it it's great that we have another woman on council. um that you know I think was was needed in this last um but I think we also had a huge whis wish wish list and those we we didn't necessarily get the kind of candidates we wanted which is we we kept on asking for for more people to to show up. So so what I'm hearing is uh and we should write write this down. So, we want to look at the application. We want to come up with a list of what we consider to be qualifications. Um, and um, and then on the interview process, you know, we So, here's the thing. We could put all this stuff out there. We could put the roles and responsibilities up there and somebody could drop this into AI and come up with a a uh well they wouldn't be coming up with it but AI could come up with something that would just blow us away. I mean, the fact is moving forward for every city council in the world, not just the United States, th this is going to be the great leveler and and and and this is going to make interviews. I think this is going to elevate, if anything, the interviews. I I mean, I think it's great that people have access to information, but that isn't at the end of the day what makes you qualify. So I think we need to talk about whether we want to keep the interviews in executive session. Um and and and I think that's another you know category of things. But that's if since this was something you brought up, why don't you just put together this this list of not just what needs to
be reformed, but what you'd like to see as a as an outcome. Well, I think that I'm sorry I'm going to push back a little bit. I think that needs to be a table discussion. Obviously, I'm talking about But we need a we need a a starting point. That's okay. A framework. A framework. Yeah, that's what we need from I I just want to suggest a couple other things is that I I think this is what you like a job description, right? Like it's not just qualifications like people need to understand what this commitment is, what the commitment is. Um I don't think people really understand what the commitment is. Um you're getting a good dose of Yeah. I you had an applicant come in a couple years ago and essentially object because they didn't realize everything that would be involved, right? Like once they know, maybe they're not going to apply. I mean, and again, we don't want to discourage folks, but we also want it to be a realistic expectation, right, on both sides. Um the other thing um is a rubric for the selection process. I think and obviously I I I guess that's a question you know there's rubrics we use for like evaluating consulting you know RFP responses and things like that if we're doing a rubric with an executive session is that subjected to public disclosure I mean I wouldn't want something like that to be public but I but I also feel like we need a way to level set our own to asssure that applicants will have it's not just our you how we feel in that moment. There's actually something that we're using. If you're creating records that memorialize your decision-making process, they're going to be public record regardless of having been generated in executive session. Okay. So maybe that that's something I think we should discuss a little bit. Like what does it mean? Like do we need uh maybe it's not a rubric that we fill out. Maybe it's something that we put on and say this is what you'll be evaluated
by, you know, and to keep that in mind as we go through the discussion. But that was something, you know, again, I just want more transparency. Well, Craig's making a face, so go ahead. No, to me, keep in mind these are political appointments. Yeah. Um and part of that also is um our opportunity to select someone that we want to serve with and it's different from when candidates are running for office and we don't have any you know say in that. So to me, I think we just need to keep that in in mind and and and and that also involves some to a degree some subjective evaluation of everyone that comes in. Is this someone that that you know that that you can see yourself working with? And I don't want us to lose, you know, sight of that. Just like, you know, the the committee appointments, you know, it's um that that we make, there's a multitude of factors that that go into that and and you know, just someone may look great on paper and not necessarily they're not going to fit in with the committee or um and so we haven't appointed people because of that. And and I agree and I don't know how we memorialize it but I I want to Jim said something to this extent right like wherever the appointee is has to fit in with our expertise. So if we were six lawyers, probably not looking for a seventh lawyer just as a, you know, kind of like a blazing and Bill definitely doesn't want seven lawyers, you know, on council, but but that would be, you know, and also what committee they're going to chair, right? Like what is the chairmanship that's open for that person or what expertise are they? So all of that has to be in there. And then the last thing I would say is do we want to consider making a like
we have a residency requirement in the charter. Do we want to consider saying things that we are that would we would consider disqualifying whether it's delin tax delinquencies? We can't do that. I I don't know. So I'm just raising the question. I don't I don't think I have a phone position on either. So I I would say this that the the charter um prescribed qualifications are really the only technical qualifications for council office um which is residency for 12 months and elector status. Um, so beyond that, council could come up with um, and you, as you said, it may be something that you don't fill out, but it could be like a list of qualities that would be important to council or that council believes would be useful. But I would just caution that um the more uh strict you try to make the application of that kind of a framework, the more opportunities you're providing for somebody after the fact to say, "Well, you said all of this sounds great, looks great on paper, and then you picked this guy, right?" Um, and I think there there's risk in um, limiting yourselves. Um, because you have the opportunity to have this conversation at any time in connection with an appointment to fill a vacancy. And as as Councilman Cobb said, you know, it's there's a lot that goes into it. There's a lot of subjectivity. Um, you can decide that certain things are more important, less important, but I would just be a little bit I would be careful about limiting yourselves too much. Um, I do think the job description doesn't limit you, um, and probably is beneficial for applicants and for for council in the city. Um, and then on the background checks, um, that's not something that people running for office are subjected to. I'm not I don't think that means that it couldn't be utilized. Um, but there are some legal consequences in the employment context. I'm not sure, frankly, how they play out in this specific,
you know, unique role. Um, but you know, you have to look at the Fair Credit Reporting Act and and you're subject to um some pretty strict requirements if somebody doesn't get a job because of a negative um background check. I I would just, you know, anyone that's applying for city council, we shouldn't have to tell them you should know what happens at a city council meeting. We shouldn't have to tell them that, you know, you should have a a um uh that your public life should be above reproach that your you know that your your financial tax affairs are taken care of. You shouldn't have and I'm not suggesting this this is covers any of the applicants. I'm just throwing things out there that to me are common sense that if I'm that if I'm applying for um to serve on a city council a body that you should have a a pretty pristine um record. Do you work that into the expectations? Mhm. rather than doing a background check. I I mean I I don't know. And I would also submit this, but were it not for our last appointment, I don't, you know, think that none of this would have become an issue or it hadn't been an issue over all of the prior appointments that had been made to city council. And because this appointment didn't meet the expectations of of some people that all of a sudden it it's it's it's our fault um that that we didn't make things clear enough to people. I I don't know. Well, I just can I just say something as an applicant? Um and this this is goes back to the idea of of um really spelling out the expectations. There's no mechanism as a candidate here to ask questions if you're thinking
about I mean there there was a statement saying go ahead and call any councilman and they'll talk to you. Well, if you're if you don't know a council person you're going to and your candidate, you'd be less likely to do that. So, I think it's important that we provide that ability for a candidate to connect with maybe it's the clerk, maybe it's members of council so that they can have that kind of conversation and and hear from a person in addition to reading it on paper and answer their questions because it might prevent a lot of of the some of the issues that may come forward here. Did anyone have to tell you that you needed to prepare for this like a job interview to show up professionally? Well, no, but I will I will say work that you did. No, no, no. To the not so much that, but understanding the workload, understanding the committee chairmanships, understanding all of those pieces of what would you actually do and how your week would go. Those are questions people who work, they need to have those answers. And uh so that I think that's a great point and I also think Bill's point was really I mean the way you said it and and focused it. I mean we do not want to put ourselves in a position. I'm going to say I do not want to put myself in a position where somebody's going to say I checked all these boxes. What's up cuda? You know I don't need that. Go ahead. So, if anybody's listening, I mean, one of the things I listen for when we're talking to a candidate is asking what the job is about. I mean, you know, what is the responsibility? What what do you expect of me? I think you're the only person that you asked that when you when we were sitting around this table. And I will also tell you, I was also through an appointment process surprised I got on. I was surprised I was picked. But I will tell you I
was put through the ringer in a nice way. I can't tell you how many council members reached out to me and they wanted to talk. They wanted to get a lot more information. And I think that is and I reached out too. I mean not that I was trying I mean I knew two of you I think reasonably well you know Craig and Tony because our paths had crossed. Um, and you know, I had I learned an airfall, but that may be us and there may be those people who will feel intimidated by the idea of having that who, you know, would be good candidates. So, I'm just saying there if there's some way that it could be understood as a candidate that you have the right to and you're encouraged to have those conversations, not just because you happen to know somebody. That's a point well taken. And I the opposite side of what Craig's saying is when I applied and this must have been close to 15 years ago or 10 years ago, they reopened the process after they had gotten all the applications. There were no um transparent interviews, which is why I initially was pushing for League of Women Voter interviews and there was no transparency about the process. So I think that for like I would like to nobody told me how I should prepare but I would like to know what the process entails and so I think having that clear from the outset is also very helpful to know like how the decision would be ultimately made and I would push forward and we'll discuss it more but I would like to see some sort of I I like the executive session interviews but it would be good to have some sort of public the application is is I think poor. Yeah. um hasn't been updated in ever. The executive session interview was very valuable to know that that we were in this confidential space to be able to ask the questions. Second interviews, but we Okay. Yeah. You know, we we
can't do this with every issue, but go ahead. If I I would like to go back to since this is Gail's time and comment about the civility piece. Can Can I do that? Yeah. Yeah. Gale Gail still got the floor. I think you're looking for feedback on that. I would love to see that. And you did provide some examples. Um I think that helps set a tone for this council and for the community that basically specifies we're sort of memorializing how we're operating this year thus far. And I think that's I think that's important. Um I wouldn't necessarily count call them rules per se, but it is sort of like what our expectations are for each other. Um and the civility piece is huge. Guidelines. Well, I think we come up with with words on that. But I I I would love to see that not for something that we can actually just act on, which we do anyways, but so the community really understands really what we stand for, what we stand for working together. Well said. Um I still want to have an open meetings act 101 class. I would really like to see that get scheduled with either staff or Mr. Funk, I'd love to have him teach that class cuz he was really good at ML. So, um, can we get CL credit? I mean, if you want to, I'll take it, but if not, I'm just kidding. And I do want to open up the request to the Civil Service Commission to review the salaries of the mayor and council. I'm sorry. You want to do what now? Open up the Civil Service Commission review process so that they will look at salaries for mayor and counsel.
And I just have one, this is not on topic, but it came across my email this morning and I it's from a neighbor and it's something that's affecting all of the senior citizens in this community that own houses. And what she's wanting help with and I don't know where to begin is she gets a lot of unsolicited calls as do I mail sent to her as do I asking to buy our homes and it's she's starting to feel harassed excessively harassed. So what she's asking is is there a possibility of passing legislation to prohibit this type of unsolicited contacts? Is there something in place at the state level that we could refer people to when they get a call like that? We could just do a PSA and the e-news that this is a number you call if you're being harassed by overs solicitation. I'm nodding because I understand the question. I don't know the answer, but we can certainly take a look at that. All right. Thank you. I'll send you an email to ask. Sure. All right. Thank you. That's all I have. Very good. Thank you for all the detail. Appreciate it. My turn. So my my my single most important thing is the committees and I've only I think talked about half of it and that is where we're working with the you know hopefully maybe as a pilot the um oh the um recreation parks the parks and recreation advisor board. Thank you. Um I almost think that our committees need to sort of follow a model where they start with get some expectations that's a standing committee. It's a standing item. It's kind of like what what happens in finance. You get your finance reports. You look at the data. I think we need to start looking
more at data and we need to be working with the administration. I would love to be able to see if this is a successful pilot to actually have our committee staffed with admin with with people in the administration. So this is sort of like we're sitting on our own when we're doing legislation. The administration does their stuff during the day, but the committees are when we all kind of come together and we collaborate. and I think would answer a lot of the questions that have been brought forward especially some of yours Jessica about well I want updates about what's going on now trying to do that in the committee meeting of a whole might be difficult but you know let's I mean I'm I I'm it seems like it's a solution let's let's try some solutions if the solutions don't work throw it out and find another one but you know I am going to be meeting with the mayor about this about seeing if if there's any way that in some of these things that well especially the finance committee I mean technically finance committee doesn't have to be at our meetings but they're there I mean I think the issue here is the expectation needs to be that they need to be part of this committee structure that that we're in and they have a role in coming up with the agenda as we do. So it's really a collaboration between the administration and us. Well, the charter now addresses that in article three. It says, you know, administration shall I mean I I don't I don't know the words memorized. Um deliver proper director to a meeting by request of council. you want it to be automatic, but we don't I don't know that we want people there when
we don't need them there. I think that's the whole reason why we don't have that. I I don't know if that's where you're going, but who wants to waste anybody's time, right? Well, you know, if they're not needed, they shouldn't there there shouldn't be a need for them. But if you look at the parks and wreck, I mean, it really seems to me that members of the parks and wrecks administration administration piece, whether it's the director or assistant director, needs to be staffed to that committee. So that's how I mean the committee is useless if it's not advising. It's an advisory committee. Okay? There is no advising that's happening. Nobody's reaching out to the parks and wreck advisory board for anything. And these people feel kind of lost. I mean, and I'm and I and I hate to be picking on this one one particular committee, but it would be like having a finance committee meeting without having any financial reports or a financial director. I mean, it there there needs to be some kind of um I'm going to use the word expectation. So, I'm just what I'm not understanding is why isn't the council person who's assigned to that committee asking for the administration an administr a representative from the administration to be there and is I mean you got to have a problem before you go we need to fix this and to me if if a if a council person was getting denied that's a problem and now we have a charter provision that says you can't do that. So I still don't know exact I the pro if the problem is that people aren't getting asked that's a different problem then we can't get anybody to come. But I just like to pick up on that because I think this is a it's a step beyond that. If if if we're going to be effective, we really need to be walking handinhand with the staff that's
going to implement the legislation we pass and we need to and I believe they will benefit and we by working together in a concerted continuous way. Now maybe they don't have to come to the meetings, but that committee that that staff person whoever it is that's assigned to the committee is is a guide to this to this committee. We need to know what the administration's priorities are. Their our priorities may be different, but I think that ought to be part of their job to be able to have regular planning communication with the with the chair of the committee so that we're not just off there doing whatever it is that we're thinking, you know, should be done without uh that kind of consultation. We're in complete agreement. I'll just say I thought that's how we were supposed to be operating. So that's how I'm operating with I don't necessarily have that in my committee just yet and and I think maybe it's also you know me being on planning commission this was a very natural move and I've worked with the staff for so many years. Um but I but I I guess I just didn't realize that this might be an issue and I I have been concrete. Yeah. Still it still is. Yeah. I I think what's working for us for on the planning and development side is co-creating the agendas. We have I don't have like formal update meetings, but we do touch base and we schedule calls if we want to talk through, you know, and I'll have a list of things. So, um anyway, yeah, I think it's a good point. Well, I think two things could happen. One is that this we could bring this up with the mayor at a leadership meeting and ask him to put it on the agenda for the staff meeting that these are our expectations. I mean and maybe even pull out the charter provision. I I mean not to you know just say we're just following the law to make
their lives easier too. Then they have a direct line to counsel you know codified ordinance books and you could they don't exist. I I know people in Lakewood that that just wave them. They wave them at the meetings. They have like printed printouts and they go, "No, no, no. Right here." Um, but if there's another method to do this, tell me what you like us to do. Well, I think between, you know, I think there's certain meetings that we all um committees that we control. Okay. if we're still having committees if it's not but I mean we certainly have have responsibilities. Okay. And you know I'm going to try to find ways in the next couple months to try to formalize this with with the administration and you know and and and treat this as a pilot. Okay. I mean can we have you know dedicated people come to the public safety committee meetings on a regular basis and help and help us staff those? And the same thing with the parks and wreck and just sort of see I think municipal services I mean I think there's a particular director that probably should be at every single one of your meetings. I'll just say for my committee it hasn't been an issue anytime I've asked for someone to attend. Um both director Gonzalez and director shots have have always been amendable and I know that that is different from years past but um moving you know this year has been no issues. You know I don't think that there's any um there there's no staff member that works for this city that has been um you know this year not wanting to meet with us. I think everybody has been very open and understanding and I think they're Yeah. I'm not suggesting this because because I'm seeing bad behavior. I mean I I don't want to wave that piece
of paper. Yeah. Because I don't think Yeah. We we sort of have a hammer which has oversight on it, but I don't think we need to use the hammer. Um, Bill, can can we use the section 111 in the administrative code to to kind of put some meat on the bones of what's in the uh what's in the charter? Yeah. Yeah, I mean you could I don't know specifically what you're thinking, but you don't have any wording, but you can elaborate upon, you know, a charter command or grant of authority in an ordinance so long as you're not trying to do something with an ordinance that's contrary to the charter provision. You know what I'm saying? Now, so in 111, we could put something in there that's how how that charter provision that says that we can summon Yeah. administration officials to our meetings and actually put how that happens and you know just put a little meat on the bones you know cuz that's I mean your typical charter provisions are a little bit on the general side you know I mean I I guess the question is whether you want to codify that in an ordinance or you just want to set kind of an administrative policy I think the running the gamut here yeah so I I just happen to have have it pulled up and it's a council may by ordinance or resolution require that all directors and chiefs or their designates attend all council meetings and or council committee of the whole meetings and there's also provision there earlier but again I I cannot imagine that under this current administration that if you ask and I'm really surprised if anyone's having trouble that's but to me that's not the issue. The issue is we're trying I think what well I I'd like to think what
we're trying to do is is we're finished. There's this transition from the government we had to this government has not happened. Not it's incomplete. You mean a city manager? I would give it an I, you know, and I'm just trying to I think we're we should be trying to figure out how future councils as well as us I I I really think that that issue is irrelevant, you know, that we're we're not having a problem. I mean, the question is how can we finally set up this government to function under, you know, pretty much any circumstances. We've kind of seen what happens when um there's no guide guide guard rails up and I think we we want to put them in place. I just wanted to Oh, I'm sorry. I just wanted to say that on the um and and you certainly could look at putting something in chapter 111, but in addition to the ability of council to um require that all directors, uh chiefs, etc., attend council meetings and council committee the whole meetings. The same section um just a little above that says that the council president or council committee chair may request that a director or chief or designate attend specified meetings of council or of such committee respectively. When such uh request has been made, the director or chief requested to be in attendance or designate shall attend the meeting and shall answer or respond in good faith to questions asked by the council member or council committee member respectively related to the powers and duties of the director, chief or designate. So I think it's relatively well detailed and I went I went to look at that because I remember looking at this last summer but I like it. I see I I think this has to be uh more collaborative if it's going to work, right? And I
think that is what with with some expectations on both sides. Yeah. Um and some efficiencies because right now we've got administrative committees and we have we have we have council committees that sort of have the same mission. And so trying to do all that from an administrative perspective is not efficient. It'd be better if there was like one spot and we were all at the table. I mean that's I mean I do see we have two separate Yeah. We we we have we have two we have two separate branches of governments and I think what happens sort of in the center the the the intersections is is really can be at the committee level where you know we sit at this table with our administrative peers listening to what they're doing passing legislation that that they're that they're asking us to pass giving them the money so they can do what they have to do. In return, we are getting some oversight and we are getting some say in what gets done, which hasn't really happened a whole lot, right? It I mean, there's some of it's there. I mean, I I I've got some good examples of of where some of it's it it it's been there. Um, and I think if you get that culture going when we leave these seats and other people step in and we have a new mayor, no, this is sort of the process. This is this is what we always do. This is, you know, Joyce uses this term, what's the shaker way? And it's like, okay, shaker. I've heard that term many times. Yeah. Well, we don't want the Shaker way. We want the Cleveland Heights way. Okay. Which is going to be different. But that but we wanted to transcend what's going on now. I think that is absolutely right. if it can be um presented to mayor and clear state administrator Ree that it
is a collaborative experience but we need the expertise of those directors and I understand it's in the evening you know our meetings are in the evenings beyond their work day that issue has come up before you know what alternative do we have well here what we know is is that 95% may be higher of city council have the directors at every regular meeting Mr. H. true or false I'm at every meeting. Yeah. Um no I think I'm talking about the regular generally correct and they don't come to our regular meetings. So I to me I mean I I mean I just look at here in public service if you're a director this is not like just a total nineto-fr you know. So I I have no I mean it's not sympathy. It's just this to me this is part of the job. Directors have to work nights once in a while. Howard Meer would say that's was part of his job of course. And the thing is there's example after example. Tune tune in to anybody else's council. Tune in to they're they're lined up like Mount Rushmore. You know they're they're I mean that's the way it is. So anytime we say, "Hey, could you come to one meeting at night in a month?" No tears. Is that the shaker way? Um, it is, you know, and I'm also assuming that council members if they're if if would accommodate them if they needed to participate by Zoom. I mean, Steve is here, so getting the equipment up and running shouldn't be a problem. Yeah. if a if a director lives a county over. We had Todd join the public safety committee meeting because it was the last meeting and that worked out quite well.
So I I was just saying here are our options, you know. Um but I would like everybody to think about don't think about this circumstance. What what is the best practice for city council now and in the future? You're going to get a different mayor with a different I mean I can tell you Beachwood, you know, one person was just like it is now. The next person and they've had they've have they have a much longer history with elected mayors than we do. Well, every city does except for maybe what is it? Bedford. I can't remember. There's one other anomaly in Kyoga County. Um, and another mayor came in and said, "Nobody talks to anybody in my administration without going through me." I mean, you know, that's and I'm not talking about like ancient history in Beach. So, anyway, um, anything else? No, I think that's good. Thanks for listening to me. Sure. Um, all right. Is everybody satisfied with what we are calling our legislative process? We all understand it. We all believe like it works for us. No. Um, so I think on council initiated legislation and I put something that's what I'm talking about. Yes. So that's I put something together and I'm happy to bring it up at the appropriate time, but I the one that was done last administration to me when I read it trying to figure out what I was supposed to be doing, it read very confusingly. And I don't think it even reflects like the way that we could effectively do this. So I'd like to propose like a effort to revamp that if we could that would simplify it but also we could except we in a sense we've revamped it by making the committee process the committee of the whole
and that's the place now where instead of having the alter an alternative be you know to generate it in the committee and then bring it to committee the whole I I wasn't speaking about that actually I was speaking of how we circulate legislation. What the time how determines the timelines when how what is the expectation of the law department among competing priorities of Well, that wasn't even mentioned in the process, right? Yeah. Okay. No, but I was thinking about that was confusing. I want to change it and then you're talking about things that aren't in it, right? Well, because because I don't think it reflects some of the the realities of trying to move legislation through with or without our committee structure. We have staff on the administration side. We have a law department. We have maybe like we have a landmark commission like an outside group or we have outside council that have worked on something or with the flock legislation. We have constituent feedback. So all of those things need to somehow be um part of the overall process. So that's that's what I wanted to. So um how and when do you want to bring that up? I have it already drafted. I sent it to you too after Sunday and I asked you permission if I could talk to Bill about it and I was just waiting on because I what I'd like to do is kind of co-create it with Bill and get his perspective on if this works for the law department and then see if we can merge like what would work for council and what works with the capacity of the law department. I think um that's in the collaborative spirit which is Jim just brought up if that's okay fine with me. I did I did just want to throw in because I looked earlier thinking about what might be discussed
tonight. Um I know there's discussion at times about like the log jam in the Cleveland Heights legislative process and how slow everything is, but I think if you look at other city websites, you'll find that you guys pass two to three times as much legislation as any other city in the county. Probably not Cleveland. Um Lakewood, for example, is an easy one. They did 116 pieces of legislation in 2024 and 115 in 2025. Very consistent. Cleveland Heights did well this was consistent also 268 and 272. Um so I just throw that out there um because there's a yeah for context and perspective on you know the amount of legislation that successfully um works its way through the process and uh Wow. and gets before you question and I know you're busy but ho how much of that is really substantive legislation? I mean we're generating a lot of what I would consider routine things like these appointments to the boards and commissions. I bet you we do 50 to 100 of those and sometimes those are separate pieces of legislation. Right. So I think you know a lot of that may account for that or you say although I would suggest that other cities have kind of the same thing going on with and repeating legislation but yeah that's a fair point. I'm not rejecting the notion that there is room for improvement. Excuse me. Thank you. Um all right uh council community engagement. Um, by that I mean, uh, I want to make sure that, uh, and I I've brought this up before, that we can go out and have community meetings. I I I strongly believe that council people should be able to do this. We should be able to advertise if we're going to meet with people in the community that uh, that something that the, you know,
we're inviting people through, you know, using city resources. I think it's really important. I don't think everybody has to do it. I, you know, I would strongly always suggest that the council people do it, but um I'm not for I want to make this clear. I am not for taking the show on the road and putting some kind of unbelievably huge burden on staff to do something like that. But I do like the idea that we can go and have meetings in neighborhoods um as individuals or you know you can obviously do it with one or two other people. I mean you know you want to of course avoid you know any open meetings act violations we talked about that's very easy to do um if everybody understands the rules. So yeah, I think the concern um with that is when do when do um those activities particularly in in the election year sort of cross over into it becoming um a political event because we sort of we've had these issues come up in the past. it and so that's I think my only caveat is that we have to be cognizant of that for the and particularly the perception of it. Yeah. I mean, it's absolutely forbidden to do anything like that, but Well, that's my I mean, that's part of my concern with your suggestion that we use city resources to host or advertise meetings for just one or two council people at a time because thinking about future councils, we may not expect any of us to abuse that, but I could very well see that being a process that gets abused. And I would also argue that we're always running for reelection whether it's an election
year or it's not. And then my other concern about only having meetings, public meetings or listening sessions or whatever with one or two um council members, and I think I've said this before, is that you know, if I were a resident and I'm struggling to make it out of the house at night to go to some sort of council event, I want to see everybody there. And if you're telling me that only two of you are here tonight and I got to wait until the other people come before you guys could answer my question because that's not your area, that's their area or you know if I want to talk to everybody I have to go to a council meeting. I would be frustrated with that and I you you can do that anytime as a as a resident. You can come and see all seven of us you know regularly. Now you can do it every Monday. Well, can you get out at night if you work at night or if you have kids and you don't have the money for a babysitter? You don't know where the babysitter is or you I mean there's a mill mobility reasons. I mean I just think there's a multitude of reasons that I'm just thinking having done it. It serves a purpose that we could never replicate at a council meeting. And it is it is a it is sitting down with people in their neighborhood and giving them the floor and there's no you know clock ticking or you know what have you. And to be clear I have zero problem with the idea of it. My issue is when we're using city resources to to allow one or two council members to create their own that's not an official event, right? Because I think the impreature of the city putting it in the newsletter makes it a council event and then you will have questions of why is this not videotaped? Why is only why are only two people there and not all seven? What are the public because there are minutes? I mean, these are questions that people will ask, and
I think we've complicated it by the only reason it's complicated is because you would like city resources to be used in setting them up. Well, nobody's ever asked, first of all, and second of all, and I'm not saying Well, because you haven't used city resources to do it before, right? No, we have. It was in the news. I think you did with But um I'm sorry. You were going to say something. Well, I I guess I was going to ask and this conversation doesn't have to happen tonight. Um, but I'm I guess I'm curious as to the benefits of doing it as a formal event other than getting publicity out through the city's channel versus doing it just as a council person having a meeting. And the distinction in my mind that I would still want to work through further is um is is based upon council's authority to act as a group of seven people um which is the only way that council can actually act um through voting and a single council person doesn't have authority um really to do to make any official actions on behalf of the city or to undertake those actions. And I think that it's and we I think you've seen this in the past here in Cleveland Heights that that's sometimes confusing to people who go to these meetings and they really don't know what's been committed to whether the city is now going back on a promise that they thought they heard um in a meeting with an individual council person um and so forth. The OMA issues are also there, but I think those are are more easily managed. I think they have to. You can't conduct city business when you when you're doing this and certainly that wouldn't be the purpose. The other thing is if we can all do it, there is no imbalance with using city resources. We we all have the opportunity to do it. So I mean that doesn't address my authority issue. That doesn't address my authority. No, no,
no. I was I was addressing what you said. I mean it's just you're not saying you can use city resources and somebody else can't. Everybody can. Um, but I I just want to hear from other people. I don't feel strongly either way. I'm a little uncomfortable with it. I could live with it, but I'm a little uncomfortable with it. We're as a whole, we should all be together. If we do something completely separate, it really needs to be maybe done on an individual basis as opposed to with one of our peers. Unless we're running for office and we're a slate. Yeah. But if you're running for office, you would use your campaign. You use Yeah. I mean, I don't Yeah, I then do it individually. Anybody else? Now, I I spoke earlier just my concerns about when does this have the potential to cross and over to be politicking and Jessica said about in the sense you're you're always running, but it I it becomes more of a concern really during an election year. Well, and that's what's happened when one of our previous colleagues held a meeting and kept out essentially the mayor and another colleague and it just got messy. So I hear what councelor Posh is saying and I respect that greatly and I I therefore I'm vacasillating right now. Yeah. I mean it's I mean anytime people out there it's open for abuse. I just you know I just think it's kind of um it would be an odd thing to have a meeting where you don't advertise it and like you're not letting people know that you're doing it. I don't know what exactly that is supposed to
be or why you would. I can tell you I would I wouldn't want to do it. I you know if I didn't think people would know about it, why would I don't even know why I would do that. Yeah. So and the um I think you and Devita had a couple of events previously. Were those well attended? Yeah. Okay. Pretty pretty good attendance. Like 40 50 people had maybe we did maybe three or four probably four of them. I you know and I'm just tossing this out that you know to the extent that community engagement if every council member had an opportunity to to hold an event maybe in the community center where they were just there and it got advertised. here's an opportunity to come to get to know this council member like we there's a police have meet your police officers down in there and everybody and everyone has the opportunity to to do that. Uh that's just a suggestion. We've come up with some slots and sign up for it. I also thought you know in terms of community engagement I think I commented on this. I think it's part of our job that we go out and we are accessible and we're seen and visible and I think we do a good job of trying to get out to events. Uh I would like to see us um sign up for a shift at the uh at you know at the King Park Art Festival. We get a lot of people through the city has a tent there and a city council member sit at the sit at a table or desk. Yeah. Um, I like that idea of the community center or I mean it doesn't have to be there but just you know use the libraries what have you and you know that way you could do you could do things in different parts of the town. You know the Noble
Road library for example is you know maybe we look at getting a room set up there and everybody will have you know set up a night. So, how about because I really I think I'd like to move, but how about if I just kind of come up with a framework of like, you know, here's, you know, like uh you know, limit it to the topics and kind of things and the dos and don'ts so that that it's kind of clear. We got some rules and just I'll present it at the you know, the next uh committee of the whole meeting. Okay. Yeah. Um don't worry. Um, no. I I was just thinking that as you go through that exercise and and as um some of the vice president's um rule um uh development is occurring, you know, you might move forward some guidelines or process, you know, constraints on something like this and and embody that into a rule or an ordinance because then you would have something that has the the city's official approval. you would have a structure that's defined and understood and it might make some of the issues easier to sort out. Yeah, I like that. Um, council responding to AI generated anonymous emails. This this came up, you know, kind of recently. I I don't know that we were going to talk about this as a rule or a practice, but um I thought it was ironic that we got a an AI generated email that well was it I mean the content was generated. It was obviously somewhere. Um, and the the accusation was that we were being
asked to do things and remain anonymous and the email was anonymous. So, I mean, do we want to have a practice about that or we do we want to formally let people know that we um because I could see this just blowing up, you know, is this I think it goes into rules. I mean or was say like council members should not feel obligated to respond to abusive anonymous you know we can I think I mean whether it's AI generated or not right I mean we also we also get abusive emails too that's part of civility as well um uh council members responding on social media to things that happen at council meetings. We have had problems with that um in the past. Um is that's something we want to work into rules. I I can tell you that when somebody something happens at a meeting and the next thing you know there it is by one council person um it's I think it gets into a civility issue or camp um and I'm concerned about that. I mean there's enough abusive stuff on social media you need to get in and you know feed into that stuff. So I think without naming names you know where where that has happened on this particular council. I mean I think the community really saw through all that and and thankfully they did and I think that was shown in the ball
ballot box in the end. Um, I mean, I think we need I mean, we can't be censored. I mean, whoever whoever gets the seat, you you could you could go on social media and you could theoretically say anything you want to say. I think if we follow Gail's path where we sort of have this sort of expectation of civility, you know, that's, you know, we're I mean, we can't censor we can't censor someone. I mean, well, I guess I suppose you could. I mean, I I I have that. Thank you. Well, that's that's what I was getting at cuz you know, if you violate I mean, I don't know where you're going with these rules, but at the end of the day, No, no. And I I meant I meant I meant the first draft. The first draft. No, I will share it with you. Let me explain. When I say I don't know where it's going, what I mean is are these rules going to be the kind of things that where you, you know, if you violate them, there's actually some kind of penalty or is it just an expectation? Because we never we didn't talk about that, guidelines. Okay, point. Yeah, I I can't see us acting having any kind of pu punitive ramification. I mean, we're free people. We we've got elected here individually. We we have we have to behave well. But I think I love the word guidelines. I use the word expectations, but I think guidelines is a much more appropriate word to use. Um, and then people can make up their mind. I mean, I mean, the whole issue here is giving us the ability to do our work. And there's times where you could not have a conversation amongst council members at this table without
some fight going on. Yeah. I mean, censuring and enforcing rules is not unheard of in councils. I'm not promoting it. I'm just I was just asking. So, okay. Do we have a censure? Like, is there a way to do that in our rules? because there's a there's a removal um you know section of the charter but is there anything Robert's rules has in Robert's rules it would kick in because we don't because we're silent on it. Yeah. So, so the answer I guess is yes. I'm sort of of the mindset that we we leave it as broad as possible. And if this body feels like they need to center or remove, there are avenues to do that versus spelling out individual circumstances where that may or may not apply. I wonder if you could just just I think take the standards of civil conduct um and just say this also applies to social media and I think that would take care of that that that it's not just your your what happens in the council room but it happens in your written communication and and social media. Yeah, email too, right? That's good advice. and then email email too because I have received as a resident I received very abusive emails from council members and that way it's just an expectation of civility and that's I think where your problem might have emails from council member I would I there was at least twice that I emailed previous council not this team and I got a very nasty response very upsetting maybe that would that would cover a lot of maybe what was inflammatory on social media. Yeah, that's a good idea. All right, let me try to wrap this up.
I got I do have a a few more things. Um this next one is more of just it's about our practices. It's more of a comment than anything but along I think it is very important for council to obtain its uh council its appointment authority to committees and commissions for a number of reasons. I just want to put this out there. One is that the seven of us will always have a deeper reach into the community than any one person because there's you know there are there are uh governments that have the mayoral more more mayor more mayoral authority on appointments and I would also argue that sometimes mayors are very busy and this kind of thing becomes very low priority is something that that this council does well. I think it's something that every council could do well as long as you have a clerk of council and a and a good administrative services committee chair. Um, he's looking at you, sir. And um, and I think it you're always in danger of when you leave it to one person of having a much shallower reach into the community and um, and a longer wait time and so forth depending on on their workload. I if anybody wants to comment on that but that that is my very firm position. Um and two more. So on that on that there there are some where there's mayoral appointees. So are you saying where we are now is where you want it? I mean I'm I'm okay where things are at now. I understand why the mayor appoints the civil service commission. I think that is that state law chart. Charter. Yeah. Okay. And it's three people and I think
they serve for six years. A long time. Yeah. Yeah. Very infrequent appointees unless you know resignation. Um anything else about that? I mean I'm not No, I mean there are there are boards and or there are boards where the mayor shares in that, right? And you're saying you're I was never for it. It's It's Yeah, here we are. So, yeah. Are you Are you proposing to change that and No. Or just leave it as is? I I I'm just saying as we move forward, I think I think I'm just letting you know where I'm at on that issue. It might come up again because sometimes a new committee's formed or they we want to change the number of people or some circumstance changes. Um, I'm just letting you know how important I think it is for council to not just retain the authority we have, but you know, also going forward, I think it's a better fit for council to be doing that that work. Um, the city council holiday policy. So, we had one instance where, you know, PUM was we moved it. I mean, do we want to be doing that? That that's my question. I think we should discuss this because um there's the city calendar with the holidays on it and people could come and go on city council that have other religious holidays. Do we want to do we want to be doing that or do we want to just follow the city count the city calendar with the holidays that are there and then you know I don't think anybody would look down on my view I don't think anybody would look down on anybody who missed a meeting because they you know had a religious purpose uh to not be there but yeah
I I'm not sure we should make it a policy but I think specifically and I'm I'm I'm going to direct this mostly for for you, Jessica. I mean, I think we keep our meeting schedules exactly the way they are today, but if there's a conflict and if there's important items on that agenda, um, you ask for it to be postponed, which is what you've done in the past and we found a way to be agreeable uh to that. Um, I mean, there's a lot of inner working parts sometimes in in order to to reschedule a meeting and I don't think you're going to see a lot of conflicts. I mean, I'm just talking about regular meetings. I'm sorry. I should have probably said that up front. Well, I think as someone who asked to do this is that it it's not a question of whether or not I'll be one a council member would be negatively viewed for missing the meeting. It's about losing the opportunity to vote on whatever is or have an opinion on whatever is being discussed at that meeting because of a religious observance. And I would be happy to do that for whoever has a religious conflict. Now, if I was asking all of council to move it because I'm going on vacation, that's a different story. But we're talking I mean I I have to say that nobody would expect us to schedule any sort of meetings on Christmas or Easter. And while Peru may be one of the not you know there's a lot of Jewish holidays and I acknowledge that I mean to me I would view it in the same vein. I mean if we have a conflict with Russia Shana and your suggestion is that we continue on with that meeting that to me is very offensive. I'm not I'm not suggesting anything. I'm suggesting do we want I'm talking about as a policy. Do we want to move regular meetings based on religious I'm not talking about your religion. I I I'm just talking about religion and I I'm I'm what I am saying is that I think what we have now is that we don't have
a requirement that it must be moved. We have that if it comes up with members of council, they can make that request and council can entertain that request. We all in the same let's remain flexible follow the current practice but I think there needs to be some understanding amongst ourselves you know may see this is where we're all different and there there I guess there's different flavors different degrees of of how you celebrate a holiday you know in my mind there's major Jewish holidays and those are frankly non-negotiable okay I and and and I think we should as as a body respect that. But there's also a lot of holidays out there and and some of them uh if there's not an important voting item, I would think that we that we be flexible. I think we we we've shown that and I think if it turns out to be problematic, then I think maybe we could, you know, take take it to the next step and find a way of codifying some of this stuff. do not go to fine. Um I would like to say that I I would like to follow the city's calendar. I think that's really important. It also is in the charter when our meeting regular meetings are. So in this case with prim and it doesn't always fall on a on the first or third Monday of the month. Um, I was willing to do that, but then when I look at all the other different instances where we should, and I also add what councelor Posh commented on, if there's something coming up on that agenda that the person who is thinking about, well, I've got a a holiday on when that agenda is going to be presented. Is it possible to be adaptable on our agenda and move it to the following meeting? I'll just say that that this is also about can the res I mean you all the council previous
councils have changed meeting times based on whether residents can attend and I think to to Jim's point about major Jewish holidays I would be shocked if we continued with a meeting on Russia shana yung kipper that would be like putting a meeting on Christmas I mean in the view of the Jewish community and that's a widespread you know widely observed holiday schools are closed Right. So that so I I I guess that you know back to flexibility. I think you know the problem with the Jewish calendar is that it moves around because it's a lunar calendar and not the solar calendar. So it's a different day of the week, it's a different day of the month, it's a different month sometimes depending on the year. So that's what makes it a little bit more complicated. But I I think the sensitivity of understanding who is able to engage and not will if we have flexibility then we can make those decisions in real time with enough advanced notice. I appreciate that. We we never talked about it and I think we needed to at least you know with with all of us here uh talk about that. All right. And I'm fine by the way with with uh you know in a sense playing it by ear. I'm only using that term because like you said that calendar moves. Um, and lastly, I just want to make a comment about the process for amending the charter. And this is not specifically about rank choice voting, although it it it certainly applies. um that their the the charge to the Charter Review Commission was to come up with charter amendments that they felt were in the best interests of the community. That was their charge. Their charge wasn't to go, I don't have a I don't have a an opinion on this. Just let the voters, you know, that's not the charge and that's not our charge either. Okay? Now, I just want to make this clear.
When in our oath and in the charter, it says that if we move something forward, a charter amendment that we're saying this is in the best interest of the community and that's why we're putting it on the on the uh uh on the ballot. And I I I just want to make sure this kind of goes back to like uh you know our roles and so forth, although it does apply to our practices as well. And I want to make sure that we're all clear on that. Um you know, there's three I mean I'm not saying you don't know stuff. I'm just saying there's three new people. There's four of us that that you know from varying degrees that have been through this before. As a matter of fact, I think the first thing I did was put a charter amendment on the ballot. It was Am I wrong? I don't even know. It was early. It was early on. Yeah. And um and and with the understanding most charter amendments pass. So So for that reason and the c and our oath and what's in the charter, I I I would like us I don't care where we fall on a given charter issue. I mean, that's up to you. You But we all we should be all approaching it with what I just said in mind. Everybody agree with that. Okay. Just want to make sure it takes five, by the way, um to send a charter amendment to the voters. Five votes. I mean, we don't have to agree with that. I mean, it would could depend on the issue, right? I mean, I don't think that I mean, our oath doesn't change. No, not that. I just Yeah. I mean, it's just I mean I mean, what goes on in people's heads I I'm just saying that it's nice to when
we're approaching an important issue that we understand, you know, there's a big difference between going, I don't care, just let them, you know, them the voters. I mean, I think that's way different than saying this is a good idea for Cleveland Heights and we ought to do this. Go ahead. So, I think when it comes to rank choice voting, I mean, I would be very surprised if we're going to have unanimous decision on sending it to the voters or not. And that's okay. Of course, that's okay because I think I mean I think we all have different opinions of where that is. And I think I still have I from my perspective since you brought I haven't decided. We we have a hearing tomorrow night. I'm interested to to to see what happens. I think we need I need more data, but we'll see. I think it does constitute an endorsement if a majority of council decide that they're going to vote to submit something to the electors. I mean, in a sense, that's kind of what I'm saying. Well, that that I think that's you know I I'm saying that that you know because when you again our oath what's in the charter we're saying this is a good idea let's give it to the voters. There's the exercise that this council not you three but the rest of us went through last year. The charter review commission was charged with coming up with charter amendments that are in the best interest of the community. They passed them along to us. We rejected some. We, even though they said it was in the best interest of the community, the people who were on council said some of these should not be on the ballot. Why? Because they're not in the best interest of the community. Number two, some of us decided that's not a bad idea, but we're going to need
to change it. And we did that several times. And then there were some that we just cut and pasted because as is we thought they were good ideas. But I don't remember anybody saying and I certainly would have objected if anybody did, you know, I don't really care about this. Just go ahead with it. It's like that's not an answer. Not in my view. But can I get something off my chest real real quick? So have to do with this there. No, no. There's a lot of chitchat um about uh ward-based council members and we need to have a count we need to have a a charter review commission to take that up. Well, we just had one that took it up and they decided not to and they decided not to do it and I think that gets forgotten. Okay. And then I think we at times look like creeps because, you know, maybe we we didn't take something seriously. That's overstating. But I mean, come on. We just had a charter review commission that did this. This is the second time that a charter review commission has chosen not to because the charter review commission that I was the vice chair on similarly chose and that was the one of the two major questions that we were asked to consider. And by the same token, two councils decided because we did I left out something. We did come up with a few charter amendments that weren't recommended or reject, you know. So, we had yet another chance to say, "Here's another great idea that we think people ought to vote on." And we didn't do it. There were a lot of changes of different magnitude, right? Some bigger, some smaller. Yeah, I did just want to throw out that uh it's worth keeping in mind as you think about this entire issue that in the case of an initiated charter amendment um if there are sufficient signatures, council has no authority to not send it to the voters. So, it's a little bit different twist u versus the council initiated charter amendment, but for what that's worth. Well, as a matter of fact, we have to put if they
if once we get the signatures and the board of elections, we have to put it. Go ahead. I I think it would be interesting to see the history of the ch of of of major um of pieces of legislation that have gone up for a referendum and whether those were initiated by signature for those issues that are such of such broad public interest. something like this that's going to affect the voting in our city and um um it it's would seem to me that that would be the logical way to do this. It's an important it's an important issue if it was going to be considered. I mean that's what citizens for an elected mayor did but um you know then there were um Cedarly Malbrook that was that was I just went back and looked at them and it looked like you know you had that's been the history they have been they've come up with was a charter it wasn't a yeah it was a charter stuff it's all been it's all except for issue 21 changing the form of government the other And there was only what one or two other charter by signatures, right? Right. In the last council of the clerk, and and we also changed um oh gosh, the the the the time and the manner of appointment when we had a vacancy on city council and that was kind of rushed through and Yeah, that was a a misop a mistake. Yes. Are we taking July off? So, we're going mid July to mid Well, actually, if if we I don't know. We didn't really exactly draw a line of demarcation, but we have a regular meeting. We're going to have a regular meeting the first Monday in July, and then I guess we're going to have the committee of the whole meeting or the second. The second. And then we're going
to break until mid uh a uh August. He's smiling already. He's like thinking they're both really nice months. So, we got a little bit of We need a piece of legislation for that. Does Addy need to create piece of legislation so that or we formally announce it again or how do we make people aware? I think it's usually done by motion, but we it's sometimes done by Yeah, we haven't done a motion like all the staff to know that that's what we're doing. Yeah. Can Can I I I don't know. It just it it just rubs me the wrong way. I mean I mean I think there's times where if we're on vacation in July, it's okay to take it's okay to miss a meeting. I mean it's not great, but it's okay to miss a meeting. And we have more vehicles that we with Zoom that that lets us attend a meeting. So you're saying no. Yeah, I'm I'm not a fan of it. But okay, but here here's the but issue. I mean, I think that you could cancel the meeting. I mean, plan on cancelling, keep the meetings out there, but sort of, you know, pencil it in, I suppose, and cancel it at the last minute. You know, this is a very common practice. I mean, it's almost every single city council. I'm going to push back because I think we could use a break. And then also staff could use a break from staffing our council. I can I can't tell you how much staff. Fast forward to us being I mean, no. I mean, It's They love it. They love it. I mean, but you know, I listen, there was another council person that that had the same uh feeling you did about this, but um the rest of us didn't share it, but that's that's okay. Okay. I think what the thing for me is when we're taking a break, my brain takes a break. when we're taking a break, the staff gets to take a break from prepping and
being on call and the things that go on outside of these meetings and it's just really important. Um I respect that and I spend time with my family during that time. So then but we do need to um make a motion next month. Okay. So, I'll make sure that Eddie brings All right. Um, is there are there any topics like I know we we had six or seven topics, you know, like categories. Anything we didn't I don't I don't want to cover anything else, but I mean is there anything that gez you know I wish the agenda would have included? Good. That's good. That's really good because that's rare to get seven people to go. Now that about covers it. All the screens are shut on the lap. Well, I didn't mean that. I didn't mean reopen anything. I meant more like our tummies are growling. Look down the road, you know, if we were going to do like September or whatever, you know. All right. Um I guess we're we all know what we're supposed to do from here. Can Can I say one Thank you. Thank you very much. This is This is Thank you. This is This is great. I'm glad that we were able to have these seven hours. Actually, seven and a half hours. Right back at you. You pushed for it and you you you you made a framework for it and really appreciate it and I appreciate I mean we talked very frankly and openly to each other. It's a very collabor I feel really great about the way this is all working. So before anything goes wrong at 8:47
This transcript was automatically generated from the official public meeting video and is presented unedited. It reflects remarks made on the public record by elected officials, staff, and public commenters. Transcript accuracy may vary; view the original recording for reference.