About this meeting
- Government Body
- Charter Review Advisory Board
- Meeting Type
- Charter Review Advisory Board
- Location
- Panama City, FL
- Meeting Date
- January 8, 2026
Transcript
75 sections
All right. Good morning. Good morning. All right. We'll call this meeting to order and we'll start with opening prayer and pledge of allegiance. Please stand. Let's pray. Sorry. Heavenly Father, we just thank you so much for this opportunity to come and and just handle the business of our city. We thank you for the men and women uh on this advisory board that have selfishly given of their selflessly given of their time uh just to help uh serve and give back to their their city and their community. Father, we just pray for uh all that we uh address here today. We pray that uh we would have wisdom and discernment. We do pray for uh Chairman Berg. We pray for safe travel for him and his family. And uh we again just ask that you bless our time together today. Father, give us wisdom and give us courage in all that we think, do, and say for your honor and your glory. In Christ's name we pray. Amen. Amen. Amen. That was a good one. I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America and to the republic for which it stands. One nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all. All right, clerk call the roll. Uh, Mr. Ferrer here, Miss Skoon here, Mr. Banzy Y. And vice chair Henderson Jansenius here. You have quorum. All right. Okay. Has the board had an opportunity to review the minutes from the last meeting? Yes. Yes. Any discussion items? I move to approve. Can I put the two different months together? The October minutes and the December minutes. We're very good. I second that. Okay. All in favor? I All right. Do we have any staff reports?
Uh I don't have anything. Do you have I have none. I mean there was my the ask that I had recently I believe that I addressed all of the uh data and information request via the two memorandums that I circulated about five weeks ago. So and there hasn't been any emails or anything come in. So the only one I did I did forward an email from Chairman Berg uh about two hours ago. Um he asked me to pass along one uh one item. Uh you were copied on it as well, Madame Clerk. Um in regards to just his perspective on some of the uh some of the discussion today. So did everybody get that email? Yeah. Okay. We'll probably review that during section 8. Yep. I'm happy to read it officially on his behalf if y'all would like. Okay. During that time. Okay. Work. All right. We'll move to audience participation. two audience members. Good to see everybody. Happy New Year. Hope everybody had a good holiday. Um once again, um I'm here to speak about election timing and process. Oh, Daniel Schil 330 Mercedes Avenue. You know, I haven't missed that in a while. So that's You're slipping. I'm been out of it for a little while. There you go. But um um once again over the holiday I had quite a bit of time to speak with um people in my district and my ward um about what the potential could look like for changing the dates of the collection um regardless of what the logistics of it looks like. The overwhelming um response that I heard was that yes, we would like it to be aligned with the general in November. Um this committee is tasked with a you know a huge task taking up a uh document that hasn't been reviewed in what 60 years. Um there are big changes in here that can be made and that should be made. Um if we're considering adding things like uh time onto terms, but we
don't want to look at the alternatives for how do we increase participation at the same time. I think it could send a wrong message to voters. So I think for me um one of the most important things to come out of this board uh could be and should be the changing of the elections. That's all I got discussion. I appreciate our chairman sending his opinion and his recommendation but I strongly agree with the audience um information statement and we had discussion I think we are here to take action we spent a lot of time discussion on it kicking it down the road doesn't make me feel very good whichever way we voted up or down I think we should take action we're here charter has not been changed for for over 60 odd years. This is our time. This is our effort. And you know, there's good and bad on both sides of it. To be honest, I lean in favor of changing it because I think audience I mean citizen participation is huge. I think there are a lot of things happening in the world. There are a lot of things happening in the nation. And I hear people saying in response, I just I'm overwhelmed. I can't get involved. I don't know this. I don't know that. what's happening. This this person said we need to protect ourselves locally and we need engagement locally. Not only is it good for the city, it's good for our nation. And every locality, I think, should be working at getting people to feel comfortable to participate. And the evidence presented by Mr. Hayes and basically it increases significantly in November. And I think this is a really critical issue that I'm hopeful that we go in that direction. Again,
I understand democracy in our vote and however it comes out, I will abide by that. Hopefully not grumble too much. If it doesn't go the way I've recommended, but I don't think we should kick it down the road. I'd just like to point out that the deputy supervisor of elections, Mr. Cow, has joined the call. If you have something to share, perhaps Mr. chairman. Okay. Yeah. Uh Jonathan, well, actually just move straight into the next one into the election discussion. If you do you want to read the email from Brandenburg this morning? I will. Give me one second. Um for the Charter Review Advisory Board, uh my main, this is coming from Chairman Brandon Bird, who's unable to be here today. My main substantive point that you can share is that I'd like to leave out the election timing and process. I still think the alignment with the general election is the way to go. But given the really good debate over the topic, I think it's just too challenging of an issue to include in the charter at this time. I think it's something the commission should be encouraged to address either during their review of the charter or via an ordinance. Again, chairman Brandon Burke. All right, JP Ron, any feedback of you able to speak. What has happened? No, I I mean I've made my position on this clear. I I'm still of the position and sort of echoing what Chairman Bird says that I don't think we should do it. But I understand there's popular support for it. I think it's better suited for the commission to take up with their ordinance. I just want to make the point that I think last meeting we sort of had a agreement at least with maybe three to move the general to to the general. So that's kind
of I think where we are now. Um but I my position still is that we should either leave it as it is or again leave it to the commission to make that change. Um, I know Ron was the one who was kind of in the middle, but that's a question about if the three of you agree to move it to to the to the general, so that's not to put all the pressure on you, but Well, I think that's where we were. And I think we this is a good time to remind us that these are all going to be recommendations to the commission and they could thumbs up or thumbs down any of it. So, yes. Um, and I I still am sitting the fence a little bit um quite honestly, but I believe that the uh what I hear in the community is that it makes more sense to move it to November um than it does to keep it separate um as far as the date goes. Have a primary in August um if you have to. Um, somebody gets 50 plus one, they're elected or you go to November for runoff. Um, so I'm I'm okay with recommending to November. And and just a s a suggestion because I know last time there was some debate about how to do the general. So maybe we can have a vote on moving it align with the general and then have a second vote or a second discussion how exactly the details would work out there. I said I'm sorry. Sorry. I apologize. I wasn't here for the last meeting, but you guys got my note. I I watched the video. Thank you guys for including me. Um I watched the the video and you know I did pull the way I there's a lot of emotions behind this and there's a lot of emotions in the community. I think objectively at this table our emotions are probably a little bit more invested and a little bit higher, right? because the burden that we've signed up for to carry this and we have a collection of
shared experiences here that kind of elevate us to be have this conversation. We go to city meetings, right? We're actively involved in the community. We all have different areas. So, we carry that emotion a little bit differently. But when I look at the purpose and the burden that elected officials carry in representing all the people, it's important to say what does the majority of the people say and that's where I did that poll. You know, 100 people said the experience was important to them, the election experience, right? And if we kind of just kind of simplify it, homecoming is the same time every single year. Prom is the same time every single year. graduations at the same time. Like that was the feel that I got a lot of feedback I got from voters was election season should be an experience too and it should be the same time, right? Um whether there's voter apathy or participation like there's all those different dynamics that we take into consideration. Are we over complicating it or are we listening to the people and saying maybe like what you're saying everybody said November general election. We're stuck. I think we have pretty much consensus and we want to move it to the everybody wants us to move it to the general election. We're stuck on the dynamics of what that look like now. I think so. So, do we do we have a motion to or should we wait until I mean this is a big one for now? We've got months where we can come back, but if you want to take an action, I move that we move the election to November as stated by um Mr. Dy. Okay. And then we have and Mr. JP said we can the second motion could be particulars. Yeah. Because I don't know there was agreement about the particulars of the model. So Jonathan now that we have a a movement a motion on the table. Is there let's talk about that. Can the can we align the foundation that the the structure of the election can align with the
general election, but then by ordinance the the board can change the dynamics of what that would look like from there? That's probably more of a question for the city attorney, I think. Um, was there a second for that motion? I was second. So, we can go ahead and have discussion. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Um I you know I I do believe the uh our charter specifically speaks to the um you know to the runoff procedures you know and having you know the election is generally in April of the year and that if there are more than two candidates and no one achieves 50% plus one then there's a shall be a runoff within 30 days. you know, this would need to be altered because you're talking about August and November, which are obviously more than a month apart. Um, and you're also I don't believe it speaks to like April or or or May, but it does talk to there being 30 days apart. I think you would have to address that part in the charter to align with, you know, basically with state and federal. That's probably the right wording would be with state and federal elections which are even years and are then August and November as a suggestion. Um if this vote were to pass then um you could also say hey we'd like at the next meeting to look at the different options on how to implement it and then we can come back and then just address it and we wouldn't have we could talk about it while we're at this meeting but we could then pick it up at the next meeting. We could give you when I say we, Caroline and all of us staff could give you something specifically to look at which is one I believe there is a sentiment to have the primary or the first election in August and the final election in September. I mean November that
maybe but that would be something that would come back to you. So what's one decision is okay how do we do this and do we have a runoff or is it a plurality but then we can give you something specific and then hopefully that would shorten the you know the discussion and so probably it's not a plurality probably still want 50 plus one and probably um but then do you decide well if only two people are running do you then just have the election in November rather than so those are I think we could do up couldn't we Caroline Caroline can do up a menu for us that that will make hopefully that decision you know methodical and we can go through it second issue which I do think is is is purely well all of these decisions are city commission do you shorten or lengthen the terms of the existing commissioners that's you could legally You can do it either way. Uh it's we're you can either lengthen them by 18 months or shorten them by 6 months. So I think that's something and and there you may decide at the end of the day. Hey commissioners, we've given you language for either shortening them or lengthening them. You decide, you know, what you want, you know, if that's what you want to do. But we could give that to you at the next meeting, too. Does that help? U Brandon, I have a question. So, is the manner of elections governed by the charter or can they alter that by ordinance? I mean the the plurality majority that only is ordinance or I mean only charter is charter. Only charter. So the city commission can't alter the well today. They can alter my question is they can alter the dates but the commission
can't alter the manner of the election in the sense with a primary and then a potential runoff the plurality and the what unless the charter's changed. That's what I'm saying. The commission can by ordinance change that. No, I mean you I mean yes, you're correct. They cannot they cannot they can only change the date. just the dates apparently but we couldn't just work or should we I don't I don't think so I think the way that and the timing of their own election should be kept in the charter so they can't decide their own so in my mind Mr. Chairman and board members and Mr. Zimmerman, I think there's kind of three items. There's moving them to align with the state and federal elections, yes or no. And then kind of dealing with the specifics of how to handle August versus November with the percentages and runoffs and all of that. And then the third one is is the terms of the elected officials. Do you shorten or do you lengthen it? You're going to have to do one of those. Correct. Yeah. I think those are the three. transitional terms. Yeah, transitional terms. So, to my my opinion, there's kind of three decisions in front of this board. Okay, the chair. Any further discussion on this one before we take vote? And this is only to move them to align with Yeah. state and federal elections. I think are you okay with that amendment? align the state and federal regulations in November. I mean, yeah, that in August the general. Yeah, there's I mean, if the motion passes, I would like I I don't know how quickly you guys could pull that, would you call it? the
menu menu together um to help me take back to the community on my side to provide clarity like I'm getting the same question I'm coming to ask you kind of the different options or varying options but the consistency in communication would be important as we gather our thoughts on it right and then we take it to the public and we ask questions and we get feedback from them on what are our preferences because it's it's almost like it's a menu preference now I think couple weeks We've done a fair amount already. Yeah, we've already said quite a bit. Now, if this motion passes and you and if and if you're ready to say something about the next two issues, I think uh Jonathan did a good job summarizing it. If you're ready to say how you want to handle the August and November election plurality majority, you could adopt another motion and then if you're ready. But I was really I don't know that you're ever going to be ready to say to the existing commissioners whether they ought to shorten or lengthen their terms. You know, that's a tough one for you all to weigh in on. So you might just leave that. But you're saying that would be a consequence of moving the dates anyhow. You would have to do one or the other. So to add that I that would be a commission issue as opposed to the charter issue because um they are allowed to move the elections and then whatever is necessary to implement moving it which hence would be uh they either need to choose to shorten their terms by 6 months or extend it by 18 years. So they don't have to weigh in at all. Not really. So take that one. Yeah. decide on that one together. Okay. I said I guess there's only two. There's only two. All right. Want to take the
role? Mr. Ferrer. No. Miss. Yes. Mr. Danzy. Yes. Chair. Vice Chair Brandon Henderson Jansenius. Yes. Motion passes 3 to two. 3 to one. 3 to one. Y. Okay. Anything else to discuss in the elections article? As as far as the number two, as far as the timing, it makes sense to me that we mirror as close as we can what's in existing with the state and federal, not not try to create our own thing. Make it be August, make it be November, whatever those dates are. And not a September runoff. I know. and and try not to do anything just for us since we contract with the supervisor of elections anyway. Yeah, that that may be another moot point. Let them let them do it. Yeah, since this was before the Thanksgiving holiday, if I may, Mr. Chair, just kind of re recess my uh my memo. So again, Tallahassee changed their elections to align with the state and federal elections in or state and national elections in the year 2000. And um originally, if only two candidates qualified, the election was settled in the August primary. However, the charter was later amended to move the election to November if only two candidates qualified. So they're basically they they bypassed the the August primary which is very similar in a partisan primary. You know if only one Democrat or only one Republican were to qualify for a specific office there is no August primary. They go straight to the general election in November. Same principle, same concept. Additionally, if three or more qualified, the August primary advanced the top two vote getters to November.
Regardless of the percentage um received, and I know this might be a sticking point, but it's only because if you look at the turnout percentages in August, you're still looking at, you know, it's more of a partisan nominating election is in August for a myriad of different offices, local, state, and federal. And so the the thought was is to ensure that whoever was elected at the local office that that decision was made in November with the highest amount of percentage turnout. And just for some of those uh percentage reminders. Um so even even looking at like Panama City um and andor Bay County. So for example, the most recent one August of 2024 turnout was 24.8%. November of 2024, 71.9. So if you did have say one person out of three get 51.3% in August, that would be 51.3% of only 24.8% of the overall turnout as opposed to that. So that's why uh Tallahassee made the change. Again, this ensured that the elected official at the local level was always chosen in November of either a gubanatorial or a presidential election year. So, and I will say again, I I hardily disagree with that. Well, I'm just I know I know that's what I'm sharing. I'm just sharing the numbers. Um, having done that, if if I work hard and I get my voters out in August and I get 52%, I win. I don't have to run again. This way, I work really hard and I get 60% of the vote, but somebody else gets the the top two. That's just not I'm not going to ever be satisfied with that. People that show up to vote, that's not my
problem. I hate to say it that way, but that's not, you know, so I just I think I would add and I did have conversations with the Lyon County SOE and the Tallahassee city manager and and I think the way they were I think the way they looked at it is that it kind of really was a primary in the sense that it was the August election is not going to determine who's going to hold office. the August election is to determine who will stand in the in the uh general election in November. That's I think maybe that's the way that they differentiate. That's probably a better way that I've communicated it before. So the August election, same thing. It's even if say US Congress or or you know um superintendent of schools you know the the purpose of the August election is to maybe superintendent school is probably a good example but in August even if nobody else qualifies for US Congress you still have to stand in the November election. So that is I think that is the difference there. And so that's why if only two people qualify, you don't need to have the August primary to determine who the two candidates are that are going to stand in the November election because only two people qualified. So that's why if you have more than three, sorry, more than two, you okay, how do we determine who those two are that will stand in the general election in November? That's how you that's why they have the primary at that point. And again, it does get to the point so that the purpose of the November election is to select your elected official who will then, you know, serve in that capacity. So, I think maybe that was a better way to explain why they made that modification and why I think a lot of other cities did do that as well. I think so. I see it a little bit differently than Ron does. I see the elected official and we'll talk about this one once we get down to the city manager position. The elected officials, how do you gauge how successful they are? Because our our current structure success
comes from the city manager. The city manager executes, right? The board doesn't execute. The board makes decisions. But the way I measure how successful an elected official is by how many votes they bring to the table, how much trust do they build with the people and how many people do they get to the polls, right? And in the powers of our commission, the mayor and the commissioners who have no autonomy to make decisions, the only thing that they can be good at is communication, right? And they have to be great at communication. If they're not, they're probably not a good fit for our structure. It takes time to build that trust. And I'm okay with the time frame from August through November. If it takes a little bit longer for us to gather more votes, that's their only job cuz they have no job that is action focused. They can't make decisions. They can influence, but they communicate and that's the most effective form of what they're elected to do. Does that make sense? Got something else? Yeah. I just wanted to say Jonathan, you know, last um meeting you had made a good point which is that for most elections apart from the city election, we're kind of in the minority of that most elections you do have somewhat of a nominating period where you shorten the amount of contenders that you have such as an August primary then moving on to a general election in November. More concise. Exactly. So, in terms of um if we're looking to increase turnout, which is I believe the goal with your vote um just a few moments ago, uh a winner take all system in August would be the exact same as the system that we have now, but more political partisan elections. The most partisan elections that you have are primaries in August. And the amount of turnout that Jonathan just read, which I believe was 24, is around the same turnout that we had in my election in April, just last year, which was around 25. So if we're
looking to increase turnout, sacrifices will have to be made at the expense of the Canada at the for the people. And I truly think that um I'm I'm like I said, we're in the minority of not having to have a nom nominating period or you know weaning out candidates whereas uh you know just about every other election has got some kind of a you know period like that. So you would be comfortable in a threeperson election in August and the winner gets 80% the next one gets I would call hypothetical gets 5% but the guy that got 80% has to run again. how many we pulled previous election but we pulled previous elections to look at what the turnout was in those elections to see if that had ever happened and I don't believe there's ever been a time where someone got 80% and use that as an example but it but we're making choices in in reality not in hypothetical and that's a hypothetical so I would just I'll just add Mr. chairman that um the what what I have noticed looking at all I'm a bit of a political data geek nerd my comment I'm about to make is is anecdotal so it's not like a a true like going in and really systematic looking at data but I I do agree that I 80% is probably unlikely you most likely would see would be someone would barely creep past the 50% mark and get something in the low 50s in a potential August primary if there were three candidates. Are there examples where someone hit or exceeded 60? Probably. But I think that would probably be it would be the exception. And then the you know the other advantage and and again these are just anecdotal comments I've heard you
know over the last you know five or six years is it is tough because you know you have if you have a race with three or more people man like 30 days as we do it now is I mean like really before you've had time to come down from the first I I don't even think the election's really necessarily certified yet and you're already like it's time to start sending out the mailin ballots. So having more of that nine weeks. In fact, I think a lot of states kind of do stuff more in, you know, March, April, and June. And we, you know, we do ours in at kind of the end of August, which is tough. And and I had to do that many moons ago in a congressional race. It was like, you know, we we won and it was a pretty fierce primary and then we had a nine-week sprint, you know, to to the general and it was so it's I think having a little extra time in there is is nice if there is one. But I I do I I mean I see Mr. Danzy's point, you know, as far as how you do work hard and do it. But I think the way a political minded person be like, "Wow, this guy has if you do that well, then you have all the momentum on your side going into the November election and having to reschedu that uh runoff like a month after when when I had it. The number one problem I had was that people didn't remember the new election date. it was uh oh is it you know uh uh they did not understand the runoff process as well whereas here it would always be in a November there would be no question about it you would if you had to have that which uh if you had to have a runoff this would be the runoff and then it would always be the same date so you wouldn't have that problem just like Jonathan said of when's the election and then you don't have as much time and you know all those issues yeah I think if I had experienced what Ron has experienced and I was there at 60% I would want to be done had I experienced that. But then from a voter perspective, that additional time,
it is election season. I'm already in the spirit of educating myself on what I'm looking for. Right. From a elect like an official perspective, I'm completely agree with Ron. But from a voter perspective, having the two the August versus the November, but we can discuss that at the next meeting, our menu of choices. All right. Ready to move on to the article 7 city manager. All right. Where do we want to start with this one? I have a question. So at the last meeting JP, you asked I heard you asked for like a communication flowchart. what communication look like from the city commission, the city manager to the agenda? There's a lot of agenda discuss agenda discussion. Do we do we Jonathan, do we have like an org chart for the city like a visual for what it truly looks like as far as where autonomy rolls up? What you're talking about specifically for like an agenda? No, not necessarily for agenda. For the organizational structure of our city. Yeah, sure. Yeah, we do have one. Yeah, I have an organizational chart. We have wine does one every month. Yeah. Favorite thing to do. You did say was I would love to see it. Tell us give us a cliffnotes version of what is your job as a city manager. Okay. So yeah. So as the city manager, I'm the chief administrative official for the city. So, you know, all of the pretty much all of the departments and divisions with the exception of, you know, accounting and payroll um and in the clerk's duties, you know, fall to to the city manager. So, that would be uh you know, public works, uh fire, police, housing
and community services, uh parks, culture and recreation, logistics, and uh and that's it. So, in community the community redevelopment um uh agency and so um and in that role I also serve as uh as the executive director of the CRA so I have the responsibility for the again for the day-to-day operations of the city um with the exception of the collections of the monies that's under the clerk and treasurer I have control over the budget and then the clerk treasurer has control over the finances the checkbook so um that's That's really it. So through, you know, um, senior staff, you know, two assistant city managers and then a number of department heads or directors and chiefs, uh, they they, you know, they run their respective departments. And so, um, you know, typically most of my interactions during the week would be either with the two assistant city managers or one of the directors, okay? Or slash chiefs. define control as far as accountability versus responsibility. Oh wow. Um so you know this job is obviously bigger than any one person. Uh you know you can't you can't be out in the weeds on every single thing. So you have to have a high level of confidence in your senior staff. And so you know you you have the responsibility to uh you know to to make sure that they're doing their job. uh in accordance with obviously the charter of the city, but also uh you know our all of the ordinances that the city has uh our purchasing uh and procurement policy that the city has uh any other policies that we put forward. And so the expectation is that you know those respective directors and chiefs you know execute those over their
respective department and they're accountable to to the city manager who is then accountable to uh to the elected official to the commission. And so you know you you kind of have that you have that that you know that control over it but but you know you're not going to be able to manage every little thing that happens out in the field. you know, a very a very defined chain of command has to exist out in the field. I'll give you an example, very practical. So, I would never, you know, reach down and give direction to like a lieutenant or a sergeant out in the field. I would deal with either the chief or the deputy chief or maybe in very limited circumstances one of the captains, but typically it's going to be the chief or the deputy chief. Same thing with public works. I would mostly deal with the director or perhaps the city engineer and in certain limited cases with the superintendent who is, you know, kind of managing things out the field. Did I answer your question? Yeah. What in regards to finances, because I know we've got the city clerk, I'll talk about that. We got the attorney. You're not accountable for the things that she's necessarily responsible for. Correct. Our duties are specifically spelled out in the charter. Okay. So accountability is the department operations basically. You make sure that the city operates. That is correct. From a financial perspective, you build the budget. We build the budget with input from all of the, you know, all of the department heads, you know, because they're the ones that have the responsibility to know what they need in order to meet the objectives, uh, and, you know, and needs of the city. And then you know we we put together the budget and and then once the budget is adopted and and you know so then the finances which is the the actual spending of that money and the in the cutting of the checks or the wiring of the funds that's under the clerk treasury the administrative flow of yes performing against that budget. Yeah. That's how we have checks and balances but that shifts responsibility as far as or flow through her
department. you're still ultimately accountable to the execution of that management plan. The budget, correct? So, if we try to do something outside of the budget, we know that it's not contained in the it's not budgeted, then we have to we have to do a budget amendment and show where that money's coming from. And then the board, the commission has to they have to sign off on that after the budget's already adopted. Correct. Okay. Even if it's one penny. What? Well, I mean, I'm just trying to make the point with some exceptions. With some exceptions, but yeah, they don't make pennies anymore. They don't That's right. Albert Lincoln. So, I have a question about the removal sort of of officers cuz in article 5, you're the administrative sort of person over all the officers. We're in another one, but it ties in kind of my question about city officers. Okay. So, you're administrative only on those departments that you listed, not the ones that would fall under the city clerk or do you also have removal administrative power over the people who work in the city clerk's uh art? How does that work? That area does get a little fuzzy. So, I mean, I am the personnel director for the city. Um, but from a dayto-day, like I don't pick our employees. Um, you know, if if I think the only thing that could really be a problem is if one of her employees did something that I felt they should be terminated and she wanted to give them a second chance that might cause tension. But most of the time, I'm just going to defer to her specifically for accounting, payroll, and customer service. They fall under her. But when it comes to uh, you know, the the signing off on their, you know, she signs off on their time, but again, I'm the personnel director. I don't know there's ever really been a gray area. It is a gray area. I am the personnel director, but for her particular divisions, I just completely because I only have four direct reports. So, my direct reports are above the accounting and utility billing departments. So,
and those departments fall under the city manager? Well, no, those are my those are under my control, but my direct reports are only four. So, everybody underneath there reports to them. But ultimately it would be his decision. Right? So ultimately your decision the only people you cannot remove would be the two of them. The two of them. That is correct. But you could in theory remove everyone else. I could have a very I'm not saying I'm not saying that you would I'm just trying to understand how I think the way it's written that would be myation. That's the way we understand it. Now I could terminate every employee with the exception of the two of those two. Correct. Okay. That's what I wanted to make sure I was in the right direction. So I would never do that without talking to you again. So we're starting it is a little bit of a gray area when it comes to that. I mean and and I think from a practical standpoint, it it works because I mean if I go to any of her employees and just, you know, ask for information, their response is yes, sir. They recognize me as a city manager. But if I would go in there and try to like modify schedules, that's the kind of stuff that would cost because she's the one that's operationally responsible for those teams. Um, and so that would kind of fall more towards just like the director. Like I wouldn't go to another director and say, "Hey, I think you need to check." Like that's just kind of it's just counterproductive. Just even if I have the authority, it's just counterproductive to the operation. So, it's a different kind of relationship than what um the the um chair was talking about with the whole deal with issue with the commissioners addressing the staff, right? That doesn't apply to them. That doesn't apply to, right? Yeah. So, that level of gray area is kind of what I would hope that we can work through as a board to close the gap on some of that. that gray area 60 years ago is totally different administratively today. Does that make
sense? So when I ask for like an org chart and the current org chart, understanding that there's an opportunity for us as a board to review making some adjustments to that and really streamlining the workflow. Um I'll share this with you guys. So last spring, I forget what we called it, but there was a um we got to meet all the departments in the ratunda downstairs. They all set up. So, police chief, fire chief, HR, strategic planning. I think it was a strategic planning session, which was great. Open house. Yeah, it was turned into an open house. Y um and I went around and I got to meet everybody. I got to talk to the finance department, the water ladies. Um and they love Dana to death. They say they do love. There's actually there's actually one man in there now, not just water ladies. Good. So, uh, my point is I had made it a point to ask questions like structure and organization. The fire department has a phenomenal structure, right? The police department has a phenomenal structure. Um, the HR team, when I asked her, I said, you know, what does, if I'm a city employee and I want to advance inside the city, what does that look like? What does an opportunity for growth look like? And she said, well, we don't have anything written out. We don't have like a process for that. Um, if they're interested, you know, we would ask them and talk to them. And I said, "Okay, well, what does if I'm not performing at my job well, what does that look like?" And she said, "Well, you know, we have conversations. We maybe find you another spot, another department, and see if there's a better fit somewhere." Um, and my offspring go to we start moving props like and we start to throw people at problems instead of Yeah. instead of having a process in place, right? And the process being, do we have a phenomenal organizational chart that's clear, right? He's about to put it on the screen. Okay. And understanding what does the or chart look like? Is there if I'm a if I'm not doing my job well, do I
have clarity on what I need to do to move forward and do my job well? And I look at this from your seat from a department head perspective, right? You're accountable to a lot of things. We have a city manager government. I do see our current charter blurs policy versus administration, right? And I hear the board asking for autonomy and I hear them asking for more power. What is more in regards to that? And is that really the right thing when you're ultimately accountable to execution of that power? Right? And I've seen being in Panama City all these years, I've seen different boards and different commissions, different city managers in the role, right? And everybody operates differently and there's a level of autonomy that's great that empowers that but that's not scalable as we continue to grow and our city's growing. So what level of or organization do we need as a foundation inside the charter? Make sense? Yeah, makes sense. But I don't believe that comes underneath the charter. If we hire a city manager, that is up to the city manager to get into the weeds and put together a team. That's not I think that's great. That is not the part of the charter. Could that level of expectation be part of the charter that the city manager is accountable to having a strate strategic plan that's executed and implemented once a year, signed off by the board, but it has to be clear. It has to be intentional. And then the people have to know what the plan is for the city. It can't be in the city manager's head. Does that make sense? Yeah, that makes sense. But do we have a process in place? And same way for you on the finance side. Jen might not be here tomorrow. J might not be here for 20 years. But the foundation of how we report and how we present all lines back to there's a standard way for communicating this one to Jonathan who's ultimately accountable from Jonathan to the board and then our phenomenal
communicators which is our elected officials to the people that make sense so we look at this city manager this is the city it would be the city manager structure correct and of course as you note. So, Mr. Zimmerman, Miss Smith, and I all equally report directly to the commission. But under this structure, it looks like the city clerk and treasurer is accountable to the finances for the city, not the city manager. The city manager is only accountable to the assistant city managers, public city affairs, the assistants, the budget managers down to the department heads. Well, if if you want to open that and talk about the city clerk's position at the same time, I'm of the opinion that the city clerk should be hired and done by the city manager, not by the commission. Then that changes the um chart. somewhat and but I don't know how many cities do it this way versus that way. I'm just know what's we do in business and um you know city manager should my opinion everything should flow in and out of the city manager's office and just to piggyback on that question the question what's the reason for the separation there I understand it's the actual writing of the check and that part of it to make sure that you're not writing a bunch of checks you know I is that the purpose or What is the purpose of that separation of those duties with the city clerk and the manager when it comes to the financial aspect? My understanding is that it's a system of checks and balances. Right. So what can you give me in like what's so give me
just so I understand it fully. But the checks and balances if the city clerk's office made a blunder, they're going to go to the city manager. They're not going to go to the commission. Well, they I mean, if something happened, if something happened bad and they get the budget and or see something that we can't afford or whatever, they're going to go to the city man and say, "Jonathan, how did you let this happen?" That's why I think the the Well, the CFO, if you will, ought to be under the Well, I think the the thought, Mr. chairman would be that if one of my directors is doesn't follow the purchasing policy, I mean any any charge has to go through both purchasing and through the the clerk treasurer's office. Exactly. And so you know if one of the directors or one of their direct reports is you know made a purchase without following you know the purchasing policy correctly which happens and you know they have to be counseledled potentially written up um it falls to both the purchasing division which falls under Mr. myself as logistics director andor Miss Smith and her team to bring that to my attention. And I can assure you both of them do that when it happens. But if if if something is spent incorrectly and it gets through both purchasing and the clerk's office in this current environment, then I think myself, Mr. Self, and Miss Smith would all have some questions to answer. That's correct. I think the I think the key distinction is the the separation of duties that the the manager doesn't have control of all of the moving parts. If some if the manager does if the if something happens uh and the manager
wants to spend more money than he's allowed to, there's no there's nowhere for the clerk to go except to the manager. There's no there's no third opinion to to apprise the commission that something untoward is going on here, right? There's no because the attorney doesn't get involved in any of that kind of stuff. So, it's a it's like it like you said, it's a check and balance that if the manager had holds all the cards, he can tell the commission whatever story he wants to tell, right? Whether it's true or not. Um, similar to I guess what happened at the TBC, the guy made up the story and nobody followed up to check on his story and Sure. Go ahead. Yeah. Um, and and it and it has it has happened. I know because I've worked under um through several city managers and um I'm sorry. Would you just say your name? Just so people know who you are, who are Terry Lillard. I live at 1016 West 9th Street and um and you I'm a former city clerk treasurer and I had been in the finance department for many years before that and um I I have experienced times that the city manager has wanted expenditures to go through that hadn't gone through the proper authorizations. Usually they should have something that should have gone through the city commission and I didn't pay it. So, you know, and that was totally within our realm to do that. So, I think that's what the checks and balances are about. We're still blending. We're blending accountability with responsibility though. Because he's accountable to that doesn't mean that he's accepts responsibility. He's got department heads. There's old saying, I got to do your job for you. What I need you for, right? So if our COO or administrative operations manager for the city
has to do department heads jobs, what do we need them for? Cut the budget. Let them do it. Let them own it. But like that's not how we're structured. Are we structured for growth? The city is growing. And look at I ask you, Jan, when's the last time you had a performance review? We're going through it right now. Okay. And is it clear and objective and you know exactly what the areas are you need to improve on? Everybody has opinions about that, right? No comment. And figuring it out. So like right now there's no framework for evaluations or performance reviews. And I'm with wrong on this. When you look at a business structure because our city operates as a business, right? And you look from a a people lens, what's the one thing everybody goes to complain about? Well, that too. Money. We're broke. We ain't got no money. It's always goes back to finances. Our one person who's accountable to that is the city manager. He develops the budget, right? He's not responsible. Each of the department heads have department head accountability to perform to their individual budgets. It's like every department has an assigned line item on their financial plan for execution that rolls up to the enterprise to the whole city budget. When you look at levels of business structure, our structure is currently not clear. I feel like we're tasked to provide that clarity and streamlining what does our structure what does it need to look like for now and for the future currently it's not as scalable as it should be does that make sense not that Jan would be accountable to the city manager but there should be some sort of hierarchy and shared responsibility shared accountability as they both report I think the the what is the it says You both of these positions all of these positions including the city attorney serve
at the pleasure of the board. Heard Jonathan say that a million times except for right. What is the pleasure? Whatever they feel, right? That means that means they can be removed whatever just because they want to see a change. They don't like the color of my shirt. Yeah, they can they can well there's there's provisions for removes for city managers after post six months and that's still not clear. Well, that yeah and correct me if I'm wrong that is that a requirement of a procedural due process part there that removed that special removal revision is that or is that just something happened there? they decided to do it for just there. For example, uh both the city manager and city clerk and city attorney, we all have contracts and so removal, things like that are all spelled out in the contract. So, it doesn't need to be there. But inside the charter, it does say something about 10 days and city manager. Yes, I disagree with that. I mean, I've seen a lot of organizations. It just takes one rogue person. And frankly, I think we're seeing it nationally. A lot of things were understood. This was the job of Congress. This is the job of the president. Congress can declare war. If you have someone who doesn't want to follow traditions when things aren't written down, it's hell to pay to stop it. So I like having guidelines, you know, and a process to check and that keeping them separate is one way. That's very important. But when you say that the process of removal doesn't have to be there in our charter, excuse me, the heebie-jebies because it just takes one rogue person and everybody's running because this person can fire everybody in the room who wants to complain. Well,
talk about whistleblower. This is an area that I'm very knowledgeable of. Talk about whistleblasters. So, there needs to be check and balance. And I think that's our job to put it there and not rely on the gentile ladies and men to do the right thing because we have examples locally. We have examples statewide and we certainly have some examples nationally where written documents are being challenged and you have to sue to make you do exactly what it says you have to do and in the areas where there's nothing written down. It's just very corrosive. It makes people feel like there's nothing they say is going to matter. Back to getting civic engagement and getting people to believe in the process. I think we need to look around and see what can happen when gentle men and gentle ladies attitudes about protocol and due process and fairness differ greatly. And if that person who has that viewpoint of the world might makes right, forget about other groups that we've long done and things we've long done. That's a problem. What? Just to clarify my statement, back it up. No, no. Legally, you don't have to put anything in the charter because, for example, there is something in the charter, some due process stuff for the city manager. There isn't anything about city attorney or city clerk that deals with that topic. Don't know why they they wrote it that way, but you could certainly as a matter of policy recommend to the city commission to put to put all that in the charter. It's not there now except for the city manager. I noticed that and I think that's Yeah, we that's a not good one one potential option, Mr. Chairman,
board members and I'm just kind of listening to your comments. I mean, as a suggestion to channel my inner Mr. Zimmerman. I mean, if your if your concern potentially is, you know, that that people get, you know, willy-nilly removed or whatever, you could require, okay, simple majority to be hired, but maybe a super majority to be fired so that you don't just have like political winds potentially having influence. And I think that would be a step that I mean, that's just one potential option. So, I don't think you would ever want to completely tie the hands of the elected body from removing a charter official, but if you wanted to try to make it, you know, a little bit harder to fire someone so that it's not willy-nilly to, you know, that's one potential thing that the board could consider. I feel like there's got to be clear objectives to if somebody's going to lose their job, one, they should see exchange and be surprised. And then two is like we find out after the fact how we performed against our budget, right? We get little updates throughout the year and we get a lot of reporting on cash flow. Um, from a people perspective and people go crazy because they think we're broke. Like I see it from a different lens because we're reporting on cash flow versus the long-term integrity of the budget. Ultimately, you're accountable for the budget, but like did you redeem your budget last year? So, I think maybe that's the I think maybe that's the the perspective that you're missing. He's only accountable for the budget, which is one year. I've got to keep the city going forever. Solvent is her job. I've got to keep it going forever. And it also it also goes back to the deal with issue. If I'm if the clerk is working for the manager, then that's another person the commission can't reach out to and direct. they might want to have direct control over their their finance director,
right? And not just the budget director. Um, just another another issue to keep in mind. Y'all ever heard the phrase, how do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time. One bite at a time, right? So, if Jonathan is accountable to a one bite at a time budget year over year, small habits compound like the bigger picture initiative where we raise a red flag, which you're accountable to, right? The long-term integrity of the city. He is responsible for that. But you have accountability. That's where you answer directly to the commission. The commission changes every two years. Like and operationally, you're accountable year over year to redeeming the budget. Did we win or did we lose? If the budget came in according to you did your job, you can't get fired, right? Those levels of conversations aren't clear here at city hall. They're definitely not clear out to the public. I think there's more uh more at stake if he doesn't make his budget then he gets fired. That's against state statutes. We have to have a balanced budget. So there's not it's not a choice. We don't have a choice. We have to present a balanced budget and then that's what the commission adopts and it's even like the timeline like you know we have to have two budget hearings in September of every year and this is by statute. Correct. Yes ma'am. But you look at policy versus administration. Why does the commission feel that they are accountable to the budget? Why do they feel like the people hold them accountable to the city funds? If you guys are the ones that are signing off on what gets spent, you build it. They have to approve the budget. They do. They approve it. Yeah. And ultimately they top, right? But they don't get to play around with the money no more than you get to play around with performance reviews for Bry's logistics director. Anything that changes they have any any significant changes they get they control. So if there's a if there's an increase in any budgetary line item within re within specifications they have to approve it.
So that that gives them the additional level of control and accountability. I was being a little facicious with one penny but in all seriousness so our directors can spend up to 20,000 assists city managers can spend up to 50 and I can spend up to a hundred. Anything over that has to go to the commission for their approval. However, however, even if we have a $7,000 budget amendment under police, which happened at the last meeting, that's well under Mark Smith's, you know, level of spending authority, but that $7,000 budget amendment or maybe it was 9,000 had to go to the commission for their approval. It depends on if the overall budget is increasing, right? you can move money inside the budget. Um, and you'll get your little finance 101 um class. I guess maybe we're here, so maybe the next meeting I'll I'll put that on the agenda. Um, so you can move money in in between like the police has a line item for for uh uh operating supplies. Well, they don't need they don't really need the whole 20,000 for operating supplies. So they want to move 5,000 over for repairs and maintenance. They need it there. They can do that kind of stuff inside it. Nothing's increasing. They're decreasing one line, they're increasing another. But if the overall budget is increasing, the commission has to approve that and they're accountable for that, those increases. Okay. All right. So getting back on track, some things that I had wrote down. I said clarify at the pleasure versus due process. And I think this is what Cecil was asking. Should that be a charter item? Yes. So, do we want to instruct staff to help provide some language that brings clarity to at the pleasure versus due process, especially in these roles that do roll up to the commission? I think all three of them are at the pleasure as the current stands. Now, correct me if I'm wrong. I don't see language about the city attorney
serving at the pleasure. I don't think it's in there. I think I think that's just a mistake when they were drafting that they just didn't include that in there cuz I think that is the perception. I I mean I don't I don't see why that would have to change because I I think that those I think those three positions again considering the limited scope of what the city commission has and the powers that they have that is one of their big powers, right? That that is that's the whole point. That's what they're doing. They're setting the high level and I think that's part of it, right? Their power comes from the fact that they can appoint and remove those three main officers or however we want to. So I I think it should stay as at the pleasure. Again, whether or not we want to change how you know the vote, maybe it's four instead of three. Yeah, I had in my notes super majority for removal. You know, that might be that might be something we can consider, but I think it needs to stay at the at the pleasure. And I also wrote in my notes the word stability because you look at other cities around and they have new managers every season. That's not good for a city. So somehow we have to get maybe it's a super majority, maybe it's but some stability that office. though a new election happens and you have new three new commissioners and we are right and they get rid of the the a great city manager. We should not somehow we need to I won't say not let that happen but there ought to be a check and balance in the in the charter that just a political whim does not happen. um especially for a a good run city, even a bad run city. But you know, it's um stability matters in in
government. I don't It does. You know, it does. It does. And I remember so Jonathan got hired, the last commission, the last mayor said, "I want a performance structure." And had no clue. Neither was it the board's job to develop a performance structure. We should already have one in place, right? that was fair, consistent, and promoted stability for the city manager role. But if I look at what that structure looks like today, I don't know what it looks like. And the people won't be privy to his job performing in his job, right? That's an HR thing. But there's got to be a guide for that protects the city, protects the manager position as well that says, "Hey, he's been here for 10 years. Here's the last 10 reviews. He's been a great like all of a sudden now we've got a mayor that doesn't like him and he wants him gone. Like we these are real life examples that we just recently I'm not I'm not trying to be difficult but I I have trouble squaring the conversation that we had about the necessity for turnout and the voice of the people versus this conversation now. So the whole point is that we want to have more turnout because we want the people to be heard. If the if they elect some if they elect a group of three people and let's say they campaign on I'm going to remove the city manager. That person gets elected. I I don't understand how we're going to square this whole thing that people need to be involved but then we're not going to allow them to then follow through on what the voice of the I it doesn't have to be an extreme in any way, shape or form. There could be bully guard rails on all the processes because we are literally observing today where different states are crashing down guard rails that were assumed 10 years ago assumed. So we're just I'm observing what's going on and what can happen. And frankly, I'm thrilled that our little community doesn't seem from my eyes and others may have a different
opinion to be doing that kind of we don't care about the rules. We just want this point of view to and someone from the top said this so I'm going to agree even though internally they don't. I don't see that happening here. But I still feel like let's have our guard rails reasonable on all this. But but but in terms of what though I'm I'm I'm not understanding how that connects. But well, I'm responding to your your point. We want to give voice to the people and you are assuming you know unadulterated. Listen to the people un with unadulterated listen to what they want. And if they chose bad commissioners who are also in um want to harm an innocent city manager is doing a great job just because the political winds changed. I think we need to protect in all areas reasonably. If I look at it I I see from and I see from yours if a elected official is campaigning on removing people Yeah. then they're not educated. They need to be campaigning on I'm adjusting the process. That's just hypothetical. And I look at Len Haven for example years ago. Like she managed to a budget. She did her job. So why did she lose her job? And it's because the expectations changed. Expectations shifted and they didn't close the gap on clarity providing clarity out either for her or in her role or with the elected officials. Right? And that's that's where we have to be objective. Did they do their job? There's a core value per there's a purpose. Y then there's performance. The two have to meet. I I I agree to an extent except for the fact that these are political positions in government. Yeah. And I think it's different. I you know if we were if this was just purely a business then yes. But here we're talking about
a government position with political appointments that are being made. So and I think that's part of it right. That's part of it. This is where again the the accountability is going to flow down back from the public. That's the only way that they have to reach into it. So let me speak from the point of view of a civil rights lawyer who's been practicing this area for about 35 years. I sued the city of Pensacola where the fire chiefs had black babies with nooes in their around their necks as a joke in their drawers and testified to that. nooses were in the fire trucks for black firemen when they didn't like them. When you have a community and tradition of racism, intentional bias, think it's a joke, whatever, and the community that's been oppressed, has fears and experiences where we have living people whose relatives were killed in this area, it's not documented. The fear is there, the oppression is there, the sense of being out of the loop is there. So when you say give full reign to citizens in areas like this where they're you know two or 30 hund years of in this whole area of oppression and up into people's live lived experiences who are still living now I don't take any comfort from just let the people have their will because there is the effect of oppression which makes people disbelieve not trust not want to participate and I'm talking about primarily black people and a lot of times poor people regardless of race. So, it's comforting to them. It's comforting to me as a direct observer. I should write a book of the different statements that have been made by bad actors who thought it was a joke or who did not connect the dots. So having seen and heard and dealt with these kinds of things, it is helpful and brings confidence to the entire community when you have guard rails because there
are lived people living now who have seen what could happen without the garden. So I'm just speaking you know it's not just you know purely uh you know intellectual we have to deal with the residue of being mistreated. I would speak to the same thing with women. There are so many women, myself included, coming up, I'm 66, who are propositioned improperly as we're coming up by active duty officers who are great men, but there because there were no guidelines and rules against it. And when I talked to most women my age and younger, most of us have experienced that, you know. So that's why guidelines and rules to that community are important because it encourages me to feel strong in my viewpoints and not to feel threatened if I speak against my manager who is appear has appearance of white male power you know even today. So there's a lot going on. You sound like you've been you know coming from a world of insulation. people generally who look like you don't generally have a historical experience of being mistreated or treated differently just because of what you look like. So there's a lot happening here and I think for us in our environment and the reality of it to put these guidelines in encourages people to get over their community trauma encourages people to participate and encourages people hopefully to run for office from different segments of society because they trust the process when they've been taught by their elders it's not going to work for you. you have to leave Bay County. I've heard that so many times for professionals of color or people wanting to move up in the government. You
got to leave. You can't get that fair treatment here. We need to turn that away. And so the what we're talking about is not just for everybody, but it's acknowledging and the historical facts of how people were treated differently. So that's all I need. I think I need to say on that. So I'm coming from it from from that perspective in addition to I don't care who you are, what you look like, you should be if you have a job is my humble opinion and you should be given reason why you're fired. There should be a way to protect your job. Whether it's a simple administrative hearing of three people, there should always, in my opinion, be a way for a person to feel they were heard. That's we're Americans, you know, we're not we consider the Russians to be off with your head, you're out of here, you know. So employment is considered one of the fundamental rights and a lot of our constitution is written around that. And again, when you get into areas where there's historical factual mistreatment and different treatment for communities, it's important to just have those garments. I don't think removal should be easy or hard, but it should be quick. May I say something? Sure. What's your name? Name and address, please. What's your name? My name JP Ferrer. Okay. Brenda Lewis Williams, 2748 Oak Hammock Drive, Panama City, Florida. fundamentally what you're saying is is legitimate but at the same time I don't see where you can make a delineation between government and corporate world because a government entity is basically a corporation. If you lay side by side the city manager and a corporate structure,
you have city manager and you have the CEO or the president. Your board is the commission and then whatever the board of directors is and then you come all the way down. I I believe we need to get out of the habit of separating those when we look at evaluations, hiring and firing because essentially it's the same that they corporate managers, corporate presidents, CEOs are fired all the time for whatever the reason, but it must be justified. Now, I will say that, but I think you have to stop thinking that political and corporate are separate because if anytime you lay one side by side, you're going to get a a clear picture of what a corporation is. And I I suggest that your city is a corporation. It is a business. It functions as you have all the components of a business within that. So you if you structure evaluations and that's what I'm referring to. If you structure evaluations, hiring and firing aside from any nepotism that may take place, then you need to look at it as a corporation because that's what it is. Simply put, um I I kind of want us to get us back on track. Um if we are looking at article about the city manager, we kind of need to go section by section and just deal with it in instead of um what we're doing now. Well, I would say this. I think for all important issues, we've had a generalized conversation just to flesh it out. This is where Cecil's at. this is where JP's at to sort of put the flag in the ground and then we go as you're saying
it's probably time right now as you're saying to go to specifics that's really what we have and and analism but I think I would hope I appreciate hearing everybody's perspective and their point of view you as a candidate and feeling I've carried the ball I don't I've gotten to my 52% I don't that's really important to me I may not be persuaded but I now understand your thinking so Those generalized comments are helpful. Now we need to get to specifics. Okay. So section 100. Do we want to make any adjustments to this? How important is it by the members of the committee that the city manager live in the city? Is it important or is it not critical? because we've had both and it really doesn't influence their produ um I don't think at the time of appointment I don't think it matters I think it matters afterwards well that's not stated here either right I don't know if it really matters I mean I may per perform very well be the best city manager ever and live in Bonaf yeah for that matter yeah I I my observations is and I've seen that certainly the school board when school board members would have their kids totally in private schools financially making decisions in the public school to me that just gives me the creeps. You need to you need to eat what you do and be in that environment because you have different u inputs of information because your wife, your child is experiencing whatever you don't put in the budget. And I just think that reality check is helpful. And and the other thing in this paragraph about not holding any other offices or I understand the budget, but did this
um reference I don't know how the League of City does it, but do they have city managers that are part of this board or whatever of the League of Cities? Would that paragraph permit you from joining a city? Section 100. It says you can't hold another position other than engage on behalf of the city government. Would that include a well no consort a consortium of other cities? Could you be a member of that or not? Right. I see what you're saying. No. So I I think what that is is like I couldn't go and be say you know say the congressman's chief of staff at the same time that I'm the city manager. That would obviously be a conflict. However, I am an elder in my church. I am I have been involved on the American Public Works Association's national committee uh or sorry state committee and I believe my contract speaks to certain civic organizations and other organizations that benefit the city of Panama City. My understanding is that's dealing with like full-time employment that might pull my efforts and focus away from the city. I don't know, Mr. Zimmerman, Miss Smith, is that your understanding? That would be my understanding, but we can clarify it. I I'm I'm all for being involved with the Florida League of Cities, being involved with the um you know, with the Florida City County Management Association, being involved with the public works association has value for the city, just like Jan's part of the GPO. Uh G I'm not officer. Well, but but you're a part of it though. Um GFOA G did I get it right? G GFO, Government Finance Officers Association officials say. So, there are certain organizations that bring value, but it's not a it's not a full-time job that is pulling me and my efforts and focus away from the and maybe that's something for Nevin's office to look at y'all's contract to make
sure that it's in line with the charter and vice versa. Yeah, maybe removing some of the language from here and saying referring to employment contracts. Employment contracts can change because I did write that down. I said the ban on any other business is strict but vague. Like it doesn't mention what is any other business. Is that conflicts of interests? Is it outside employment like teaching and writing? Do you have a second job you sell at the farmers market? Like I don't sign for a second. I know that's true. But if you did, it would be there's no restriction. Should there be a restriction here or should it be tied directly to your employment contract? And maybe you do come. Well, I've got a a secondary business that I do with my kids where we paint rocks for a living and we blow them out all over the world. Who knows, right? But like that shouldn't be in question as far as a charter perspective. That should be something that's negotiated on the front side and you're clear from an employment perspective because what happens? I've hired people into my companies and they have two jobs. You can't serve two masters. That's ultimately what this is coming down to is this is your primary job, but what is any other business? So, should we have that removed and replaced with per your employment contract? No. Again, employment contracts, they vary greatly by the skill and experience of your city uh attorney. I mean, you I've seen employment crimes are ridiculous and then some go too far. I mean, that's again too much of a variable. I think we're setting guidelines, basic guidelines everywhere. and the contract wants to lean over the fence in some way because there's some particular thing that the city manager potential city manager has got going whether it's a not for profofit or whatever that can be addressed with the contract but I don't think it should be whole hog whatever the city
attorney and commission come up with because their level of experience knowledge exposure to laws which are constantly changing in the employment area the um Americans with Disabilities Act is relative relatively new. In the past, you couldn't walk up the steps. You're out of a job. You didn't have to have a job. So, it I don't I don't think the charter needs that be that specific. No, no, no. Absolutely not that specific. But to just say take it out alto together and let the let the let it all be contracted I think is dangerous. Maybe a suggestion would be let us look at how others have dealt with this issue in the charter. And I believe Ron, you've you're right. It's not crystal clear. What what you've heard is how it's been interpreted in practice. But let us look and we can give you some ideas how others have to concept. So we can bring back section 100. Yes, that's acceptable. But I but I do know y'all talked about the at time of appointment. I do think that needs to be clarified because the beach, just as an aside, theirs is a little bit more clear because it says at time of appointment, you don't have to be a resident of the city because they may hire someone from Cincinnati, but within 6 months of signing the employment contract, he or she must be a resident of the city of Panama City Beach. So I think either we need to have that requirement or we need to provide clarity reasonable to give the new candidate an opportunity to get settled and and I think that's an opportunity for commitment you know they live in Bonaf and they want to serve here hey this it's important to us that you are you're here and you're available you're not an hour or two hours away point good point and if that's not important to you that's okay we'll look for the next person that it is important
Okay, the second part compensation. So this is something I want to talk about. I know we talked just you want to see a draft with that 6 months within six months. Thank you. And then review the right any other business portion. Okay. Go ahead. Compensation. This is something we could probably close the gap on. I know there was discussion at the last one about compensation for city commissioners. Did we close the gap on that side? And is there is there Jonathan right now compensation is subjective? It's not objective. My my initial salary uh as city manager was set by the commission, but then I'm eligible for anything else that a a regular full-time employee is. Uh as is Miss Smith. Mr. Zimmerman is not. So based on because we are paid for by the we are paid for by the city. Uh so we like like we get our step increases based on seniority. If there's any cost of living adjustment um we get the same thing as all the employees get. So okay so I say this from from two things. Let me get this out before I get the was it the last commission meeting. How not unprofessional was it that a citizen came to the board and said wanted to scream out your salary, which we all are privy to it anyhow in that moment at a decision-based meeting, not an appropriate discussion. But then two, if I look from my experience and specifically in following the Linhaven experience, I've heard that their city manager was hired in at a lower than salary than the previous one and then she was fired and eliminated for that. A lot of discussion, a lot of hears, a lot of subjectiveness, right? Do we need to be objective with salaries, commission
or compensation and pay raises across the Panama City Enterprise all the way to the board to the commission? I don't know what their pay looks like. Who signs off on a commissioner getting a salary increase? Is it standardized to how much commissioners make across the state? Is there an equation for your position, your position, for all the positions that removes that subjectiveness and provides objectiveness like a standard? Yeah. So, I think a lot of people do it differently. I think some cities do what you just talked about. They kind of look at there's some formula driven by the state as far as the elected officials. Ours is basically the our commissioners make the same amount as the lowest grade uh full-time position and then there's the mayor gets a little bit more. I don't know if that's a percentage or a flat fee 5%. Yeah, I think it's five I think Miss Smith is right. It's like 5% more as mayor. Um and so as far as city manager concerned, I mean there's a lot of different factors um you know I think that go into that. you know the population of your city uh you know you have a fire department and a police department you know u what what you know for example Mr. Cook and Callaway, you know, they use the sheriff's department for all law enforcement. He doesn't have a police chief and a police department that he's directly responsible for. Um, the years of experience that you have. So, I mean, I think I think you need to give my opinion you you need to leave flexibility for uh, you know, for your elected body. Um, obviously, they can't violate federal law uh, in in any type of employment situation. That goes without being said. hopefully to some degree, but I think, you know, I don't know how you would I mean, I think you see a myriad of issues. I mean, you know, you got some city managers that make, you
know, 300k a year. It's almost double what I make, you know, but again, it's probably a city with, you know, 700,000 people, you know, and so that's a lot that's a lot different than Panama City. So, how how's it determined in the private sector? Yeah. Is there It's usually revenue based well a lot of for employees. Well the hourly I think so like the C executive like I would consider if we're looking at this from a business perspective everybody at this level is like an executive type position. Your position whatever you're a little different you're subcontracted right? You're not a city employee. Um, so it's a little bit different, but it all comes back to a revenue mix and what that allocation revenue looks like. You know, in his defense, that plays into a fire department, a police department, you know, and as we grow, we're going to add another fire. So, if if you if you had a s if you had a business that had a $400 million annual budget, it's probably woefully underpaid compared to the private market. Absolutely. I think we all are, man. Well, I mean, what what most what most governmental entities do that I've observed and also not for profofits, they do a survey. They do a state survey. They do possibly looking at what's national and then they look at cities that are about the same size nationally as Panama City but with particular interest in Tallahassee, Orlando, you know, Bonaf the low end of what executives or governmental executives are making with the high end. Same thing with attorney's fees. When I win a case and JP knows what we got to do is we I just can't walk up $600 an hour, which is low probably to a
California civil rights lawyer with 40 years experience. I have to establish what is the going rate in my 2 or 3 hour range and that's just reasonable because it it's some somehow connected. So, I mean that's something we could consider giving some guidelines, not the end of what the number is, but we look to these areas of information to make your determination. So, it's not just I like this guy. He's nice. He goes to my men's club with me. Here, here's your money. It's based on your experience, what the local does, and then they come up with something. Hopefully, it's connected with reality. Yeah. Mr. Chairman, board. So obviously in the process you you the Florida League of Cities and the Florida City County Management Association has resources, salary studies that they could share with the commission during and typically what would happen is uh if it's if it's my position, you know, the city manager's position, they might task the clerk and the attorney to work together to provide information to Exactly. sort the the resumeumés, working with HR, that kind of stuff. If it was the clerk's position, they might ask the city manager and city attorney to do it, that kind of stuff. So, there are resources out there to help provide information to kind of get to some type of of potential number. So, perfect. And then who does it for the commissioners? So, right now it's locked in with the charter. I think the charter specifically says the lowest full-time paid employee is the salary of the commission. We have an ordinance. It's not charter driven. Oh, it's not. Okay. But but it's clear. It's a or Well, I say it's clear. We Yeah. But but anyway, it says it's the lowest full-time paid salary
position for the commissioners and then the mayor gets a little bit bonus for extra duties. And so, our commissioners make as much as the lowest paid full-time employees. And what is that number? Uh, it's a grade four position. Uh, yeah, it's around 16 bucks an hour. Like 34ishk a year, I think. Yeah, I think that's right. Yeah. 37 30s 37 37 37,000. Can you Can you pull us a report so that one we can review that? Maybe not the ordinance, but whether or not it needs to be a charter item, but can you pull us something that says what the rest of the state is doing for their city commissioners from a salary perspective? Is there a baseline? Do some cities do it from a baseline? I remember that was uh Commissioner Street's suggestion to us in that email he sent us last meeting or the meeting before where he laid out those proposals about changing the I just know listening listening to the commissioners and being privy to their chief communication officers right their board they get a lot of communication but this is not their full-time job they all have other jobs right but wouldn't it be awesome if there was if they could maybe not operationally because they can't get involved in administration work communication wise they get paid full-time salary just for the grade four yeah so just an observation Mr. Chairman and board so you know it's you know I I keep asking you know why do people feel like you know they you know they they have to go to the elected officials when you know and they'll wait and come to a public meeting when if they just emailed staff two weeks ago it already been handled. It's it's very simple. It's because they just feel like it's easier to get to the person that they voted for or that they recognize as their elected official versus some bureaucrat of city hall. And I may not like that, but I'm okay with it and I understand it. That's why. And so I think that's why naturally people
go to, you know, to them. Plus, in my role, like they may be, you know, they may be getting ready to vote on something and they can go out and state this. I and my communications team can't really do that because I would be then putting pressure on them in advance of a meeting to vote a particular certain way. So, you know, I think, you know, I I think that that's why there's this even though even though it's counterintuitive because like literally like, you know, we had someone come to someone came to a town hall meeting to raise a code compliance concern and I was like, well, have you did you reach out to code compliance? She goes, no. So, and a part of me I kind of felt bad because she, you know, she said, "I gave up my Saturday morning. I needed to come deal with this." It's like, "If you'd have just emailed us like a month ago, this had already been handled." But for whatever reason, she she didn't know or she felt that she wanted to come talk to her elected officials that that represent her in that end. And I mean, people have the right to. So, I think they just feel like they they feel a deeper connection to an elected official at all levels versus just just the staff. So, sounds like a area for improvement for our city manager. Well, we're very intimidating. Yes. So, I and I'll write this down. Listening to the last thing, the agenda discussion from last time. I'm sorry I'm getting off track a little bit. um having giving flexibility to commissioners to put things on the agenda which they already have right they do the purpose of that commission meeting is to make decisions and to take action right talking we now have an opportunity that's outside of that what do you call the workshops right uh yeah the workshops are for the commissioners and the mayor to discuss their items the town hall is for us to discuss items that the public wants to talk about two very specific
different reasons. Yeah. Being intentional with those purposes of the commission is a decision based meeting. We're here to make decisions on these items that are on this paper. Discussions can be taped to town halls and workshops. Correct. Right. Okay. That was just something I wanted to share. All right. So, compensation, we're good with leaving. This doesn't need to be a structure change to the charter. Aside from we were saying that we wanted some guidelines. Yeah. I was just gonna I work with with really all three of us probably work together on kind of like what what a lot of other cities do is what I thought y'all asked us to do. Yeah. Okay. And as far as city commissioners as well, what other cities do. All right. Removal section 102. Can I raise something also? And I don't know if this is the right place for it, but um uh the administrative officer when we're talking about the powers of the city manager and we touched briefly on their ability to release people from the I don't think that well when you do your menu if you would look to that too Caroline Caroline the if there is any process tied to the city manager if he wants to remove somebody from office. Well, everybody else is civil service. So, they have the civil service process. Okay. Good to know. Everybody except for us three. Service. So, the civil service by definition there's a hearing notice, hearing opportunity if they request it. Yes. Perfect. I I would I don't understand the point of section one of two especially after again my concern was I maybe there was a procedural due process case or something knowing that area of law especially
because it's only upon the first 6 months or having served six months I guess I don't I don't see the need for this. Yeah, the fiveday and the 10day demand seems well below current standards. Like surely we don't demand a hearing within five or 10 days being as big of a city as we are. Like is that even necessary to be in here? How how would two points I'd like to make like to Cecil's comment on employees. We do have civil service. It's adopted by ordinance. There is a mention of civil service in the charter, but it's it's just kind of an off-handed mention in section 103 subsection two. And it said and this is under city manager. It says subject to civil service provisions to appoint remove all subordinate. There's no definition of what that means, but but there is a we do have an ordinance, but it's not required by the charter for whatever purpose information that is. But we have an ordinance for civil service, which has a variety of different due process issues. This the second point I wanted to bring up is that by contract we operate by contract when it has when it comes to removal of all three of the chartered officers. Um and all three can be removed without cause if certain provisions are followed. In other words, there's severance. U so if there's severance paid, you don't have to show cause. If there is no severance paid, then you do show cause. That's with the city manager and city clerk. With the city attorney,
it's you just give notice and then there's a you kind of work out, you know, it's 90 days and you pass off your work and all. So, it's not a severance provision. It's just a but it's all spelled out in the contract. Does the contract say for your three positions since you are basically hired by the commission that it's a majority vote, supermajority, or does that even mentioned in your contract? Oh, it's majority vote. Yeah. I mean, it's like any other contract if you want to change it. Well, no. Termination, it's a majority vote. All that is majority. anything that deals with the three of us. So there's the employment contract and then there's the charter. The charter clearly defines that he shall have 5 days from the date of removal to demand written charges in a hearing. Right. And if we are following an employment contract which rolls up to a charter and if we don't do this process, the city is at risk. No, because that is there to protect the city manager. Yeah. the city manager has agreed I don't need that protection. I've got a contract. So his contract no due process, excuse me, his contract overrides the defined due process. He's agreed to a different due process which is I can be terminated at any time provided you pay me however many weeks. Should we remove section 102 from the charter completely? That would be I would back to having basic standards that are foundational to the con the uh the foundation the most foundational document that our constitution. I think there should be some basic guidelines. Um we could put a sentence in there if the city manager clerk choose in their
contract to weigh these foundational rights that they can do that. And and Brandon, I was quick to say because I'm going to defend the contracts that we have, but everything can be clearer and and and what Cecilele has suggested does make sense that I mean this is there to protect the city manager. If the city manager agrees to something different in the contract, then that would So your employment contract supersedes the charter? No. Is that what I hear you say? No. No. within the attorneys in the room. The contract cannot is this a way to get in? You did not follow the five and it's just applies to the city management. That's the point. Listen, they get removed and then they have a second hearing and then the commission has to vote on it again. That's the way that it's done right now. The the point that the contract can't can't can't supersede just like I can't write a private contract to supersede the United States Constitution. You know, I can try but it would be void. So, so what it is, if we wanted to allow the flexibility I hear people talking about in a contract, there could be a sentence added to whatever is left of 102 after you make changes to give the city manager, the clerk, and the attorney the ability to differ from the basic minimum protection with their contract. You are delegating the possibility, the option, so to speak. you can make a better deal or a different deal. Okay, I'm gonna play the devil advocates. I've never been a city manager, but if I read, if I applied for the job and I read this fiveday thing and then my contract was something different, could I say, "Oh, no, you didn't follow the five thing in your own charter. You don't have grounds to get rid of me." If an example from JP's world, I think people have right to speedy trials. I don't know if it's constitutional
rights. state. They never take advantage of it. But guess what? They wave them every day. They wave it. They wave it. You're allowed to wave it. I view this as a waiver of this right that's in the charter to protect the city manager if he enters into a contract. That's different. I think the more basic question is, do we like this system where if a city commissioner is removed, do they get another hearing, the commission has to affirm it or not? That's the question. You mean city manager? the city the commission, right? So, the city manager is removed, commission's voted for it, they get another bite at the apple where they have to present the written charges. Do we like that system where they have to come back and confirm it or reinstate it? That's I think the initial question here. Do we like that system? I I like the idea of the employment contract. I'm going to trust the professionals in the room that we're paying for employment, right? if that has to change over 10 years because we're going to be reviewing the charter every 10 years anyhow. What I would like from a removal perspective is what's the process if a city manager is removed for an assistant city manager stepping into the position like is that process clear? What if he is removed? What do we do from there? That's a good question. Commission just appoints an interim. Yeah, that's they would call an e they would call it a called meeting or emergency meeting. You know, I don't feel like the removal portion of this is a foundation a structure concern. I think that the employment contract will cover that. But I don't think that it's an issue of the employment contract, but remember this is the most powerful person in the city. I think what the point of this process is is that someone gets fired from the position, they're unhappy with it, they want to have a public hearing where the charges have to be presented in the public so that the public is involved in the discussion and then they confirm it. And I think that's that's the idea here. This isn't just the employment portion of it. Not to mention that it's also a
protection for the person who's doing it, right? This is a this is again a political system thing here. It's not just their employment part. as the question about do we want that additional hearing or do we not think that's necessary that that'll be handled in the process where the commission chose at first time to remove the city manager. I think it's nice when people are up exercising decisions outside of normal fairness and due process to have a secondary look and he chooses to do the city manager chooses to do this. He may he may demand written by the road he gets removed he's just can leave or he can say let's go or if he thinks that something's not right with the commission's decision like to your point about the fact that you know you think a city commission he disagrees that's the point of this the point of this is in a sense the only protects the city rather than the well it's both it's a check and balance issue for the city commission when they've removed the most powerful person in the government for them to have a public hearing to saying all right give me the exact exactly what happened here and are you sure you want to do this? And I love your extra comment that it also brings in the citizens. It's not just about one one to two uh fairness between the power structure and the city manager. It's an opportunity for the whole community to understand and feel validated. I mean, if there was a process like that in some of the other cities, this might have been addressed at an earlier level. And I think the reason why that this is here and unknown is because again city manager is some powerful person from the charter that we've got. If I'm being removed here's the reason why and I'm taking this to the public% clear. That's the and then that's why that's it's kind of odd in a sense that you would figure the commission could vote but then they could also then later turn around and say no we're going to reinstate you. Well they might get more information. That's right. That's a whole
but that's what that's the system that whoever wrote this was actually professionally if somebody raises a red flag the professional thing to do is okay we're we're suspending you until pending the the 5day hearing we're going to factf find and then we can reinstate you potentially. That's that is the idea and that's the question like do we like that system or do we think that system needs to change? That's the idea here. I think it could be well better well defined. Sure. Maybe if we bring in would you like us to look once again how others have dealt with it? Yeah. And I will and this is a good exercise for me also look at u Jonathan's contract and as far as how it it goes with this you know as far as that goes. But let us see what other charters have done on this issue. If you don't mind, I would say we do the same for the clerk and for the attorney and say let's keep it consistent with a removal language for each of these primary positions. Yeah, I want a hearing. Okay, ready to move to 103, the powers of duties. Yeah, that's the I think that's the one where we got a lot of the weeds. I I think that's the thing I think a lot of the issues that people could raise would be that's it's the changing in the powers and duties of each of the each of the three. Yeah. This is what is accountable for and responsible for. Yep. This clearly defines that's it. That's the Okay. Let's jump all the way to uh paragraph nine. Mhm. Jonathan, are you the purchasing agent? Yes, I am. Okay. within. So there's ordinances that restrict these policies. There's policy set by the commission.
Do we do we adopt the purchasing and u procedure sorry purchasing and procurement manual through ordinance or just through vote? Resolution. Just a resolution. So yes. So there there's a we have a purchasing policy that sets spending limits for department heads, assistant city managers and city manager even down to the level of you know at what point do we have to get a comparative quote uh and then at what point do you have to do a competitive quote which would be an invitation event. So number seven to keep the city commission fully advised as to the financial condition and the needs of the city. and to submit for its consideration and annual budget. Those are two different things for me. Annual budget is the expectation by X date which is the end of the fiscal year whatever but to keep the city fully advised as to the financial condition. This is not clear. This provides shared responsibility between the two of you. And you'll see that under the clerk it says um shall issue What does it say? Shall recommend to talk about monthly statements. All right. And that's what I was going to add to this paragraph to to put the monthly in there. Mhm. They're in here somewhere. Under yours, but not under the Oh. city manager. If he's going to advise, if I was on the commission, I would wanted to be advised every month. And it may be in dismiss part of the charter, but it's not in Jonathan. So I think it ought to be in both places. Just I I agree. I it would be hard to hold him responsible for that
when he it's not his the finances are not his responsibility. Well, but he is accountable. So good. To the city manager at any time such a reports, data information as may be necessary to inform the latter as to the financial affair that the city that's on 124 the last section there. I know it says something about4 but I can't find. So should the city manager be advising the commission on on financial financial conditions? Yes. Yes. to me, but the way I'm hearing it is no. Well, it's it's not clear because the clerk is the one that's preparing the document and I guess because it goes on the agenda, it's going through the city manager. I'm not really sure how it's done. The financial condition is so subjective. I think the difference is is I don't really control the checkbook. She does. But you report on the condition. And what does that mean? Yeah. That's the question. Like that means he turns to Jan and says, "Give us a report." So you just get the report from her and I would say this is Yeah. This is a perfect opportunity for y'all to fix this. Yeah. It is out of whack. Making sure there's no blindfold here. Yeah. No, it's not clear. What I see, Jonathan, is like we've got two commissioners who are finance folks, right? Brian Granger and Josh Street. Josh Street on a smaller, but Brian comes from a different analytical perspective. Their strengths in that dynamic should be our city manager strengths. Like you should be the one that has foresight into our budget. If they're talking about selling this or purchasing that or doing this or doing that where you say, "Hold on,
guys. This was not in the budget. If you do this, you have autonomy to make this kind of a decision, but I have to go adjust the budget to make sure that this works cuz I'm still accountable." That's what happens. I mean, I can still I can still do that. That's what happens. But we do indicator. But we have m I mean, y'all all of y'all know that government budgeting is different than, you know, we don't have one big checkbook. You know, there's lots of different buckets and there's also the investment accounts, too. Checkbook. Well, you know what I mean. There's different accounts. Check. I call them silos. Silos. That's a better way to put it. And then, you know, then we have the investment, too. That, you know, we have that. And that's that's that's really her. So, well, that's the clerk. We want to try not to personalize it too much, but it is the clerk's code. She she manages uh the that that that investment portfolio on behalf of the city. Okay. So, we're on number seven. Um under what section? We're going through your your your section. Oh, I read you read the others and they seem fine. So, maybe being too technical. I would like to hear the city have the city commission hear directly from the clerk and this sent the way it's written it's like you give the news even if you got it from Jan it they they should have the opportunity to speak directly to the person who's keeping it check and I think that should be said here okay I disagree professionally and I manage $300 million worth of businesses a year um my CFO speaks a totally different language than the rest of the world. Jan does too. Um, and that language has been used against Jan in the past. And I understand that component because I'm the COO, which is the Jonathan of the right. It's my responsibility to I'm accountable, right? She's
responsible. We communicate peer-to-peer, but I have to go deliver that to my CEO and to my board, right? And then I close the gap on the language and how it feels and what it looks like. understanding there's a lot of different dynamics in silos and cash flow integrity money coming in money going out like investments there's a lot but that's where that respon the accountability with who runs the city financial component there's so much there's been so much lack of clarity this past year that has eroded trust because the language isn't clear right and is that because the right person's not communicating it it's not what's being communicated it's how it's being communicated. We're talking from a financial lens, which is her skill set, but that should be this the operator's responsibility to go communicate that to the board. If she gets up there talking numbers to a bunch of people and we get new commissioners, two of them that are not finance driven, it's like speaking a totally different language and it makes sense to her, but nobody else. I totally get what you're saying and it's very logical and makes good sense. again looking for the outlier situation. If we have a city manager who is twisting things around and the only person city commission hears from is the twisty city manager, it would be nice for it to be a process where they can go directly to the person who has the authority. You know what I'm saying? And I just didn't want this sentence to be potentially misused. it's my job to speak to the commission. You don't get to talk to them because there may be times when they really do want to talk to her. So, I like this idea of generally having the the CFO, I mean the C COO be the main
communicator because that's his or her job. I like that idea, but I don't want to have the ability job. I just see it from a lens that there has always been a gap in this area in our city. Mhm. There is still a gap in this area in our city and if I'm looking at one person to solve it, it would be our city manager to close the gap on how we communicate finances. I don't feel like that would be the city clerk's responsibility. Does that make sense? I do. But I don't want to foreclose the ability of commission to talk to her directly if they so chose. Yeah. And I don't think that that's not what we're discussing, right? cuz she still answers directly to the city commission and there's going to be a box for her so we could address my that's what were you in the restroom so both of these positions under the powers and duties have a financial obligation it's just not clear what does that truly look like and who's accountable and then moving forward I think we should maybe this is another area city managers across the state. What does accountability of finances look like? He's he's accountable. Yeah. I mean, he's also accountable. But should he also be responsible or should the responsibility on the mouthpiece go to the city clerk? I'm from the business world. The CEO takes the lead. Yeah. I'm I'm Exactly. I mean, and and now that I'm in the in the charter school business, my board expects out of me as CEO, they're not done. No, you have to get out of your numbers. Yeah. Do you feel do y'all feel like that's a weakness currently in our Is that a problem? I don't
perceive this as a problem. I I think the way it is now, I mean, it's I mean, I again, you you can have people with I'm going to step away from city manager and just go engineers. Okay. I mean, you got some engineers that yikes like, you know, they should not comment publicly. Yes. But then you got others that are just naturally very outgoing and communicate like like and not necessarily engineering speak. I think that applies to CPAs to, you know, to business lawyers. I mean, so I don't know if it's necessarily the position or the role. It's it's it's really the it's really the person. And so I I perceive that I feel like the commission now. And I know we keep saying, you know, you don't want to make it about who's currently in these positions because we're all going to, you know, we'll all be gone one day. But, you know, I sense that the commission appreciates being able to ask both me and Jan questions about the operations and or finances of our city and that we both are accountable to them. And I'm not worried about, you know, necessarily what Jan might do to me if I say something or vice versa. Um, yeah, I'm not if they ask me operational questions, I'm sending them to Jonathan. I'm not going to try to make something up and I would hope that he's doing the same thing when it comes to the finances. So, cuz I I mean cuz I just I mean I have I mean I I don't even have access into the accounting systems and stuff. I mean maybe I do but I don't know how to get in there which is a good thing. So if money gets spent like can't really look at me. Well I can't spend money. I mean I understand what you're saying. You don't initiate it. You're on the tail end of it. Yeah. There's been so much opportunity that gets blended with how we're performing for the fiscal year versus how we're performing
enterprise or I think some people in the public just did that for political reasons. I don't know how you completely inoculate against that. You know, true, you know, I mean, and then if you give a if you give a quarterly meeting or a quarterly update on the current fiscal financial plan and then maybe she does it two times a year against a the bigger picture. We got 12% in our reserves. We should have 10%. Let's start working to or 15%. Let's start working towards that 15% with next year's financial plan. Like eating the elephant in a smaller bite. We can come back to this, but I feel like there needs to be additional between the two additional clarity that is provided. All right. Any other comments on this one? Any other powers that should be here that aren't listed? I think. Isn't there a There's a busting cloth somewhere, isn't there? Are you interested in seeing other charter provisions? I mean, other charters, how they describe the city manager? Yeah. It's kind of like a job description that when I write, you know, the last bullet's always in any other thing. And number A kind of gets it. That's every other thing. Whatever comes up by ordinance or resolution, he has to do that. Kind of gets it all to me. Yeah, that's that's what I'm votes. Yay. He has to do it. That's all there is to it.
I think all of them have that, don't they? Yeah. In addition to the duty specified. Y do you think we can make it through the city attorney? Yeah, I think we're working on till 2:00 here. So, okay. I think, like I mentioned, I don't think it's in here anywhere that the city attorney serves at the pleasure of the commission. Unless I'm wrong. It doesn't have the buzzwords, but and there's no there's no just mirror that I think. Yeah, that's a good one. Was there a time where the city attorney was on staff and not subcontracted out? No. just uh kind of a housekeeping thing. The uh city the city attorney under 105 must be a qualified elector of the city. And there's a little difference between being a qualified elector and a resident. To be a qualified elector, you have to be a resident, but you don't have to be a voter. I guess I guess that's a distinction. Yeah, I had that on like I didn't know what that meant. It just means I'm I think if I'm I've always read it to mean I' I'm registered to vote to vote. Uh, so I I can we can just put residents, but then we ought to my point is that city manager if there to be a a if he's he or she is to be a resident within 6 months then I can ought to just make it the same city. I would agree with that. Well, and since we do subcontract out and it's great that you are the primary attorney, do you have autonomy
to does your company are contracts with your company, right, with Burke? Do they have autonomy just to throw any attorney in whenever they feel like it or is are you specifically listed? Yeah, I am the contracts with me and Burke Blue. Okay. Okay. And then uh so I I fill the role as city attorney and then but the contract I'm an employee of Burke Blue and then in the contract it explains it it um that we delegate or I control the work as far as how it gets done and uh but Nevin J. Zimmerman by name is the voted on city attorney. the city. Does that answer your question now? What? Okay. Okay. Okay. I'm just processing that. Yeah. The others just have the title of assistant city attorney. Would it be helpful? And that's and I saw that. So the the the assistant city attorneys are what about you, right? Is that your decision? Is that right? The city the assistant city attorneys are in the contract. There is one assistant city there. Okay, let me back up. Uh, we have a contract and I I don't even know that our cont What do you call the attorneys from Burke Blue that work on city work? I've just always called them assistant city attorneys because they're assisting. They're helping the city attorney accomplish the work. It is that our contract says is it um anybody I don't know what it says now I have to think about it. It's anybody at Burke Blue that has delegated that work and I'm responsible. It's my job to make sure it works. Before I forget it, it might be interesting to you all to get
to see all of our contracts. Have you have that been have they ever been sent to you? Do you want to see them? Yeah, I think it might be interesting for you. So, anyway, so we can send you all that. So, no, it's not an official city commission designation, right? It's all So just to understand how the power delegation goes, the commission delegates the all these powers to you and then it's up to you to make sure that those powers are executed and you have some leeway on how to do it, right? Is the same true for the city clerk in a sense? Well, do you want now? What's the question? She's not in this she's not a contract employee like she is a contract employee but she doesn't she's she has city employees she's also just a depart she is a department head right and you don't have any city employees I have no city employees but you could in a sense that's what the the charter as it is now no I mean they could could right okay got I mean the charter doesn't prohibit But um I guess it it does not prohibit in-house city attorneys. Don't know for sure how that work. Okay. Any other changes to article 8? Um, you mentioned the removal language. You're going to mirror the removal language here. Did you want to put something in there about transition? Because I think an attorney might be a little bit harder to transition than the manager or the clerk. Well, not since the contract is with Nevin and Burke and Blue. If something happened to Nevin, somebody's
going to be stepping in. That's just Nevin. No. If, god forbid, something were to happen to Neon, there would there there would be an emergency or a special called commission meeting to specifically name another attorney and it may or may not be someone from Burke Blue. That's up to the commission. Interesting. Otherwise, written as they have to be a voter in the city. Yes. Yeah. We're going to I think we we agree that it should just be changed to resident. No. Okay. back to everybody being in the same pot or or I guess mirroring the same language the city manager you know you should get your fingers singed if we if we have a bad process I mean I think that's so corrective if we look at the national level and congressional people voting on who gets protection with subsidies and the system of health care but they get free healthcare for the rest of their life and the people that work really hard, the same people who are there with them late at night and bringing the reports that they sign off on don't have access to it. Everybody should be subject to what they vote on for other people. I just think it just keeps a sense of honesty and a sense of trust. It will give you I think the point was if I'm just called a qualified elector, he's called a resident, the city manager. So maybe we ought to just use the same elector elector. Okay. So we can use them both as electors. We'll we'll deal with what they're putting out. We'll present something so you can make that uniform. Yeah. Should be uniform. Okay. And y'all are making notes on all of this stuff. So when we get worried about what we said six months ago. Yeah. The assistant city attorney is taking notes. We're going to tell you that's exactly. Yeah. to apprent us out a new charter. I'm going to say I didn't say that. I take a
little chicken scratching between my little Is there any specific duties similar to section 103 for the city manager? And I'm thinking through consistency having the same powers and duties for the city clerk. Is there anything specific that should be under the attorney as well? Powers and duties. I mean, it's got duty to perform service. Yes. It's all in 104 missing there. Well, it's under 106, too. Appointment and duties and then duty to perform services required by commission. Yeah. Well, yeah. Yeah, you're right. All all of it. I mean, the other and once again, it's the contract that I really go by. We'll distribute that around might get some ideas. All right. So, we finished with the attorney. Mhm. Are we done? 11. Pass due. Do we want to table the city clerk January 22? Just FYI, just just because we're on a certain level of understanding and flow, let's just take a first stab at city clerk and if we need to come back to it, we can because we, you know, we've kind of kind of gotten the dust dust legs dust and cobwebs out of our head with regards to these three special employees and we can take advantage of that clear clarity now. Keep going. Yeah. Let's hop down to 13 then. All right. You have section 124. Somebody spent some time on these section. 132. There's a lot of sections here. 124. City clerk
and collector. Is that two people or is that one person? One. What is it collect for? Yes. Now it's treasur, right? City clerk treasur. Okay. Are we pulling that language up to today's terminology? Well, I am the collector. That's still the collector. Collect I collect all the funds. Okay. Treasur is broader term. I guess treasur is a broader term because collector would be in. Are you the CFO? If you don't consider yourself CFO. Do we have a CFO? No. Is the city clerk section? Is that a I literally have everything except I have 7, 8, 9, and 10. It's in Oh, yeah. I'm talking about these. I don't have one for I have I don't have one for uh clerk. I have manager of attorney. You have I'm reading out of the book. Oh, okay. Thanks. Do you want a separate one? I would like one like you have one like that. Is it How long do you have that? Is that from today? It's very long. I didn't even I didn't even uncip my agenda today. I'm just making a point of formatting, right? We want to follow that city manager format where the powers and the numbers, the removal clear. Yeah, I think that the consistent formatting will be helpful. Caroline, did you hear that? But I also understand that the city clerk and collector has
to have more detailed parts of it. I'm sure we're buying. Well, first of all, do we think do we think it's a good idea to have the duality of the main functions of the job in one person? That's been raised before because I just heard my my neighbor here um saying I just write the check. Like there was something that was more expensive and in fact she I think you were saying that anyway. I do this other thing. So, I said I can't I can't can't write I can't send money because of my authority. Yeah. Then there was Yes. Then there was another thing that popped up that you said that you didn't do, you know, with um I'm just wondering if if it's really possible for one person to do all the things that are laid out. It's a big job to really do it. To really do it. Why does the water department fall under you instead of under operations? Because they collect money. They collect all the money. Take all the money. What's the difference between collecting money and paying money? Because all the other departments pay pay money. Spend money. I'm not the spender. I'm the collector. I don't know. I've spent I mean I review every every um check that gets written I and I have staff that review all the PECAR transactions. So from a customer service perspective and you managing the water experience you could manage funds but I'm trying to figure out how we have discussed separating those two and it's just not tenable because they there are so much overlap. It would require more employees than are necessary. That's I think was kind of the discussion. I think what I think we're not going to be able to drill down to the level because I
know my energy level is um starting to really Wayne, but um there were a couple of times that we were talking about things that fall under the clerk definition that I got the impression you did not actually do. So I think as we look through my staff that do I mean the things that I don't do my staff are doing. Okay. Well maybe we could clarify that. Yeah. So at the end of the clarification of what you do and when I say you you can clarify my staff does it and then I sign off on it. If there are elements that in fact you or your staff are not doing then that would be informative of whether if if what is not being done if there's anything that's not being done that we either see in the description or we come up with that would inform our decision of whether we need another full-time job or how we address it if at all. It could be that the things if any that are not done don't really matter. we don't care, you know, then we just roll on. But I just think that we and I don't know why your section is so wordy and none of the other sections are. That was my question. She's more legally it is, but legally is this ne is all this necessary? Can't we do the like JP suggested? Did the powers and duties similar to what the manager is just have bullets for her? She's not doing all that work. We all know that she's not doing all this, but her departments are. So, I mean, you seem like we could shorten it up to oversight there. There's some very anacronistic type terminology in here. So, it might be useful to uh let's let's pull a modern charter and and look at it. Yeah, this part is the clerk. I don't know enough about the counter signing and bonds
and it feels like this was written for a person at some point or I think they had maybe some issues. Yeah, I think so. That's why it got complicated. Very detailed. Yeah. The way it's written, you shall and you shall not. Uhhuh. It's written. If we were to say scalable scalability for hiring a new clerk and collector, this person feels like a unicorn in our system. Like, are we looking for another unicorn that's going to be able to manage this great experience and budgets and take cash and what they can and can't do and all these millions of Again, I'm putting my business hat on. This is a CFO position. Well, not really because the clerk is the record keeper for the city. So, the clerk keeps all the official records. clerk has all the official records but for the city. So that's a whole another animal than the finance section, right? So that's why I say I'm not really a CFO because one thing for one thing CFO usually manages the budget too. I don't have the budget. So I'm not I'm only like half of a CFO and I'm half of a half. Well, I have to come up with another threeletter something for you. Yes. The other thing I wanted to point out that's obvious but I think it is a critical difference. The resources that you are managing are basically the monies of the individual citizens and through their taxes primarily and that's a fundamental difference from a business and right you know a business generally it's a profit margin within professional limits. You are there to be as profitable as you can. Provide a basic service. You know, it follow the safety guidelines that the federal government came up with after 100 or plus years of people chopping their arms off and getting blinded by chem,
you know, all the workplace duty, right? But but I think that is a a very important distinction when the monies being managed are directly from the people versus a purely profit margin. So I would say that this the business model only goes so far when you're dealing with the public good. it. I' I'd be interested to see what the roles and responsibilities as clear for Jonathan and our treasurer, right? And it it feels like over the years it's gotten convoluted like you share different things, you share like and this is our opportunity to tear it apart and then put it back into a model that is scalable and prepared for growth, right? And I hear clerk manages like public records request. That's operations to me. Like if people are that's communication, that's client experience. Same as taking money. You know, money's going to go in a bank account. You're going to swipe it. It goes in through the register. It's not like we're counting and all these different checks and balances, receipts at the end of the day and uh reconciling every single day. Like a lot of our systems currently do that for us. Yeah. No. Yeah, it should. Not in the government. It should. And if we had a CF, if we had a CFO that took on those bigger picture initiatives of process improvement, what can we do? How do we improve this? How do we make this better? How do we make this more efficient? And somebody was focused on CFO for the city aside from COO or CEO, but somebody had that focus. It's scalable to say, you're accountable for this, right? What are the three things you're going to do this year that's going to make this better? What does this look like as we scale? How do we prevent operational
errors like the water management and all the billing stuff? I heard a million different things this year about it. Yeah. But there's a shared responsibility here that probably needs to be split back off. That make sense? Are you right now in the water division? Are you accountable for a plan to make sure that all the water meters are up to date and repaired or replaced across the city over the 10 years? That's the issue. There is no water division or water department. There is a utilities operational division that includes underground utilities, lift stations, two wastewater treatment plants in the lab, which is that's utilities. That's operations. Then there's a utilities billing division. Okay. Which is under the clerk. So that there is no like water department. So water department went away a few years ago. There's never been a water department. It's always it's it's always been you have operations and you have billing. They're separate. I guess the some of the meters themselves kind of used to be under the meter readers used to be the meter readers only that was but I mean but now really we don't you know we have towers and stuff so you don't I just put a bucket over my it has to be metal then we just then we just estimate you I know wear an aluminum hat too. Yeah. I wouldn't expect that to be your your skill set to make sure that we have a water meter replacement plan for the next 10 years. No. Right. And that's not what you're accountable to. But I get that's what I get that's what I'm held responsible for. And the meters don't work or the or the meter readers don't work. I'm held responsible for that. Yep. I would imagine you're only responsible for, hey, we got to we're paying for this, paying the county. The meter says you owe five units. We're going to bill you for five units. So that's what I'm responsible for. Somebody else should be accountable to the operational plan for execution. I think so. We got some work to do on the city clerk side,
but I say we wrap up and we kind of start with a different clean lens for next time. Okay. We've got a lot today and we've given you guys a lot of homework. Yes. Good. Okay. All right. I have a motion. A motion to adjourn. I guess I make a motion to adjurnn at 234. 224. I 22. Second. All in favor? I. Good deal. Good job today, guys.
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.