Newport to review decision process
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Deirdre Newman
The City Council tonight will consider making it harder to call for
the review of council and commission decisions to quell the number of
second looks going on at city meetings.
It now takes only one City Council or Planning Commission member
to call for the review of a decision made by a “lower” committee or
group. A review is a more neutral way to take a second look at a
decision than an appeal, where the appellant makes an argument why
the previous decision was wrong.
The council is considering tightening the requirements because
some officials were abusing the review process, Mayor Tod Ridgeway
said.
Some residents see the effort as a means of repressing difference
of opinion.
“I think the city has survived an awfully long time having just
one [official] bring it up and it doesn’t happen that often,”
Greenlight slow-growth movement spokesman Phil Arst said. “They’re
just trying to stifle dissent.”
The present procedure has been in effect since 1998.
The Planning Commission has recommended requiring two City Council
members to ask for a review. The commission could still review
decisions with just one member initiating the process.
One possible sticking point is that while this option would
illustrate increased support by the council, it would create the
potential of members discussing the initiation of the review outside
of open meetings. This could violate the Brown Act, the state’s
open-meeting law, according to the staff report.
But Brown Act authority Terry Francke said this option would only
violate the Brown Act if the council created a committee to initiate
reviews and this committee met in secret.
“Just randomly two [council members] getting together on their own
or even three to talk about revisiting something else would not be a
Brown Act violation,” Francke said.
The proposed change would require that any request for reviews be
initiated by two members of either the Planning Commission or the
City Council at a regularly scheduled meeting to avoid potential
violations of the Brown Act, according to the staff report.
This option would require extending the review period to 21 days
to avoid cases where the next regular meeting of the Planning
Commission or City Council is scheduled more than 14 days after the
date of a decision. In 1994, the opportunity to review a decision was
limited to 14 days.
Another option is to have a review be initiated by a simple
majority vote at a regularly scheduled meting. A single member would
have the authority to extend the 14-day time limit to the next
regularly scheduled meeting so a vote could be taken.
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