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CHAPTER 5 <br /> INITIATIVE, REFERENDUM AND RECALL <br /> Section 5.01. General Voter Authority. The people of Mounds View have the <br /> right, in accordance with this Charter, to propose ordinances [initiative] and to require <br /> that any ordinance be referred to the voters [referendum], except those that appropriate <br /> money or levy taxes. The voters also have the right to remove elected public officials <br /> [recall]. The term voter(s), as used in Chapter 5, shall refer only to residents of the City <br /> of Mounds View who first register, or who have registered and are qualified to vote. <br /> Per Minnesota Statute 200.039 (as amended), eligibility to sign the petition is not <br /> restricted to only those who were eligible to or did cast ballots in the previous election. <br /> Section 5.02. Petitions. To circulate a petition provided for under this chapter, it <br /> must be sponsored by a committee of five or more voters of the City whose names and <br /> addresses appear on the petition. A petition consists of one or more pages with each <br /> separately circulated page containing at its head the information specified in sections <br /> 5.05, 5.07 or 5.08 which apply, respectively, to initiative, referendum and recall. The <br /> committee may obtain a sample petition from the city Clerk-Administrator. All petition <br /> circulators must be voters of the City. Each separate page of the petition must have <br /> appended to it a certificate by the circulator, verified by oath. The certificate shall affirm <br /> that each signature was made in the circulator's presence and that the circulator <br /> believes them to be the genuine signature of the voter whose name it purports to be <br /> and that each signer was presented with the full petition. Each signer of a petition must <br /> be a voter of the City and must sign and print their name and give their street address. <br /> Any voter whose name appears on a petition may withdraw their name by filing a <br /> statement in writing with the Clerk-Administrator before the Clerk-Administrator advises <br /> the Council of the sufficiency of the petition. <br /> Section 5.03. Determination of Petition Sufficiency. The committee must file the <br /> completed petition in the office of the Clerk-Administrator. The Clerk-Administrator <br /> shall provide the number of total ballots cast for President in the most recent <br /> Presidential election. For a petition to be sufficient, the required number of signatures <br /> shall be a percentage of that number. <br /> • Petitions for Initiative and Referendum require at least 15 percent. <br /> • Petitions for Recall, at least 25 percent. <br /> Within 10 working days of receipt of the petition, the Clerk-Administrator shall determine its <br /> sufficiency. Upon final determination of sufficiency, the Clerk-Administer shall report the date of <br /> the determination and its sufficiency to the Council at or before the next regularly scheduled <br /> meeting. Upon receipt of the report, the Council shall immediately declare the sufficiency of the <br /> petition by resolution including the reported date of determination of sufficiency. <br /> Section 5.04. Disposition of Insufficient or Irregular Petition. If the Clerk-Administrator <br /> determines that the sufficiency of a petition cannot be declared, it shall be determined to be <br /> insufficient or irregular. The Clerk-Administrator shall deliver a copy of the petition, together with <br />