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Mounds View City Council <br />Regular Meeting <br />September 27, 2004 <br />Paae 6 <br />0 Ayes-5 Nays-0 Motion carried <br />10. COUNCIL BUSINESS <br />A. Second Reading and Adoption of Ordinance 743, Amending Chapter 5 of the <br />City Charter (Roll Call Vote). <br />Council Member Quick asked the City Attorney that if recall is contrary to the Constitution in <br />Minnesota, how could they have it in their Charter. <br />City Attorney Riggs stated that it is not entirely contrary, and that there generally has to be a <br />finding of some type of malfeasance. He stated unless there is a finding of some type of <br />malfeasance, the courts would not entertain it and allow it to move forward. <br />Council Member Quick stated that it would have to be something serious then, and City Attorney <br />Riggs stated it would have to be serious. <br />Council Member Quick stated that if a Council member is not doing what one member or a <br />group doesn't like, then they couldn't have them up for recall, and City Attorney Riggs agreed. <br />Council Member Quick stated that there is a fine line that the Constitution allows, and he wanted <br />it in the minutes. <br />• CityAttorney Riggs stated that it was a limited provision that is authorized by statute for that <br />Y gg <br />type of a situation. <br />Duane McCarty, 8060 Long Lake Road, stated that amendments are added at the end of the <br />Constitution, so this process is not necessarily entirely correct. He stated this was probably not a <br />big deal since they are a small city, and these sorts of things can be handled. <br />Mayor Linke informed the public that Duane was on the original Charter Commission and helped <br />to write the existing Charter. <br />Mr. McCarty stated that these amendments don't really improve a whole lot, and that in fact they <br />give more problems. He stated that in Chapter 410, Charter Law of the State of Minnesota, there <br />is a savings clause at Section 33, that where a Charter is silent on a matter of general law, then <br />the Council may apply general law, unless it's specifically forbidden. <br />Mr. McCarty stated that in Chapter 410 it states that the Clerk Administrator has the <br />responsibility to determine whether or not a petition is sufficient, which means was it properly <br />signed by the voters of the city as required by law and the Charter. He stated that it has nothing <br />to do with the verbiage or the content of the proposed amendment or addition and so forth. He <br />stated that state law isn't clear on what he would term immediacy, and the City Charter requires <br />• that. He stated that when the Clerk Administrator receives a petition, he has 10 days to report to <br />the City Council that the petition is either sufficient or insufficient. He stated that the Council <br />