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410.12 MINNESOTA STATUTES 2018 2 <br />The foregoing affidavit shall be strictly construed and any afiiant convicted of swearing falsely as regards <br />any particular thereof shall be punishable in accordance with existing law. <br />Subd. 3. May be assembled as one petition. All petition papers for a proposed amendment shall be <br />assembled and filed with the charter commission as one instrument. Within ten days after such petition is <br />transmitted to the city council, the city clerk shall determine whether each paper of the petition is properly <br />attested and whether the petition is signed by a sufficient number of voters. The city clerk shall declare any <br />petition paper entirely invalid which is not attested by the circulator thereof as required in this section. Upon <br />completing an examination of the petition, the city clerk shall certify the result of the examination to the <br />council. If the city clerk shall certify that the petition is insufficient the city clerk shall set forth in a certificate <br />the particulars in which it is defective and shall at once notify the committee of the petitioners of the findings. <br />A petition may be amended at any time within ten days after the making of a certificate of insufficiency by <br />the city clerk, by filing a supplementary petition upon additional papers signed and Bled as provided in case <br />of an original petition. The city clerk shall within five days after such amendment is filed, make examination <br />of the amended petition, and if the certificate shall show the petition still to be insufficient, the city clerk <br />shall file it in the city clerk's office and notify the committee of the petitioners of the findings and no further <br />action shall be had on such insufficient petition. The finding of the insufficiency of a petition shall not <br />prejudice the filing of a new petition for the same purpose. <br />Subd. 4. Election. Amendments shall be submitted to the qualified voters at a general or special election <br />and published as in the case of the original charter. The form of the ballot shall be fixed by the governing <br />body. The statement of the question on the ballot shall be sufficient to identify the amendment clearly and <br />to distinguish the question from every other question on the ballot at the same time. If 51 percent of the <br />votes cast on any amendment are in favor of its adoption, copies of the amendment and certificates shall be <br />filed, as in the case of the original charter and the amendment shall take effect in 30 days from the date of <br />the election or at such other time as is fixed in the amendment. <br />Subd. 5. Amendments proposed by council. The council of any city having a home rule charter may <br />propose charter amendments to the voters by ordinance. Any ordinance proposing such an amendment shall <br />be submitted to the charter commission. Within 60 days thereafter, the charter commission shall review the <br />proposed amendment but before the expiration of such period the commission may extend the time for <br />review for an additional 90 days by filing with the city clerk its resolution determining that an additional <br />time for review is needed. After reviewing the proposed amendment, the charter commission shall approve <br />or reject the proposed amendment or suggest a substitute amendment. The commission shall promptly notify <br />the council of the action taken. On notification of the charter commission's action, the council may submit <br />to the people, in the same manner as provided in subdivision 4, the amendment originally proposed by it or <br />the substitute amendment proposed by the charter commission. The amendment shall become effective only <br />when approved by the voters as provided in subdivision 4. If so approved it shall be filed in the same manner <br />as other amendments. Nothing in this subdivision precludes the charter commission from proposing charter <br />amendments in the manner provided by subdivision 1. <br />Subd. 6. Amendments, cities of the fourth class. The council of a city of the fourth class having a <br />home rule charter may propose charter amendments by ordinance without submission to the charter <br />commission. Such ordinance, if enacted, shall be adopted by at least a four -fifths vote of all its members <br />after a public hearing upon two weeks' published notice containing the text of the proposed amendment and <br />shall be approved by the mayor and published as in the case of other ordinances. The council shall submit <br />the proposed amendment to the people in the manner provided in subdivision 4, but not sooner than three <br />months after the passage of the ordinance. The amendment becomes effective only when approved by the <br />voters as provided in subdivision 4. If so approved, it shall be filed in the same manner as other amendments. <br />Copyright 0 2018 by the Revisor of Statutes, State of Minnesota. All Rights Reserved. <br />